People v. Tambara

219 P. 745, 192 Cal. 236, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 342
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1923
DocketCrim. No. 2577.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 219 P. 745 (People v. Tambara) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Tambara, 219 P. 745, 192 Cal. 236, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 342 (Cal. 1923).

Opinion

CONREY, J., pro tem.

The defendant was charged with the crime of embezzlement, by an information filed in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, in *238 the charging part of which it was alleged that the defendant, on or about the ninth day of October, 1920, was entrusted by one F. Hachiyama with certain bonds issued by the Japanese imperial government, the property of said Hachiyama, and of the aggregate value of $1,350, and that the said defendant having then and there received said personal property as bailee, and while he was so entrusted and in the possession of said personal property, he did unlawfully, feloniously, and fraudulently embezzle and appropriate the same to Ms own use. To this' information the defendant pleaded not guilty and was thereupon put upon trial before a jury, which returned a verdict of “guilty of the crime of felony, to wit, embezzlement by bailee as charged in the information.” The defendant’s motion for a new trial was denied and from the judgment which followed he prosecutes this appeal.

The contentions of appellant are that the evidence is not sufficient to prove that he was entrusted by Hachiyama with the bonds, or that Hachiyama was owner of the bonds, or that appellant disposed of the bonds while they were in his possession or without authority.

During the year 1920 appellant was engaged in the business of a merchandise broker in San Francisco. He had business relations with one Inouye, a retail provision dealer in Watsonville. Inouye had among Ms customers F. Haehiyama and one Mitsui, who were mutually interested in the business of raising and selling strawberries. In April, 1920, Mitsui applied to Inouye for a loan of $1,000. Thereupon Inouye negotiated by telephone with Tambara and secured the latter’s consent to make the loan. Thereupon Tambara sent down to Inouye a promissory note for $1,000 payable eighty days after date to himself or assigns with interest at twelve per cent per annum. Accompanying this note was another document in the form of a general power of attorney to be also signed by Mitsui, constituting Tambara his attorney in fact “with full authority to make all contracts and do all other acts of a business nature except a conveyance of lands.” These two documents were duly executed by Mitsui and were returned to Tambara together with the bonds, which were negotiable in form and transferable by bearer. These bonds had been delivered by Hachiyama to Mitsui with the understanding that they would be pledged *239 for this loan. Tambara, upon receipt of the note and bonds and on April 24, 1920, applied to the Anglo-California Trust Company for a loan of $1,100, offering his own note, payable in sixty days with interest at six per cent per annum. The loan was made, Tambara depositing as security therefor the said bonds received from Mitsui together with certain Liberty bonds of his own. Thereupon Tambara forwarded $1,000 to Inouye, who delivered the same to Mitsui.

At this point we will consider appellant’s contention that the evidence is insufficient to prove -that Mitsui’s note to him was paid in full on the fourth day of October, 1920, or at any time. From the evidence there is no doubt that Mitsui, through Inouye, sent checks which were paid and which were sufficient in amount to satisfy the Mitsui note. The amounts of these checks were paid to appellant or to Tambara Gumi, the name of the business house through which Tambara conducted his merchandising and brokerage affairs. An attempt was made by appellant to show that at least in part these payments were properly applied to indebtedness of Inouye to Tambara and not toward satisfaction of the Mitsui note. The evidence, as a whole, is conflicting upon this issue and under that condition, of course, the jury’s determination of the fact is conclusive here.

The subsequent conduct of appellant tends to support the contention that the Mitsui note had been paid in full. According to the testimony of Inouye he instructed Tambara that those checks were for payment of the Mitsui note. Inouye further testified that after the last payment was made, and early in November, 1920, he called on appellant in San Francisco and, after first stating that the loan had been paid in full, asked for a return of the bonds which had been deposited as collateral; that in reply Tambara said that it was the proper thing for him to deliver the bonds but that they were placed in a certain safe deposit vault; that if Inouye would return on the following morning he would be ready to deliver them; on Inouye’s return next day to Tambara’s office, Tambara was absent; in fact, the bonds never were returned. In this connection it may be noted that in making his $1,100 loan at the bank, Tambara used the Hachiyama bonds, together with some other bonds, *240 independently as collateral to his own note without including the Mitsui note as a part of such collateral.

Appellant having failed to pay his note to the Anglo-California Trust Company, that company pressed for payment. Thereupon, and on the sixth day of December, 1920, appellant arranged with another broker named Koshland to advance $1,100 for the taking up of the trust company’s loan, with the understanding that the bonds would be transferred to Koshland as security for the indebtedness of appellant to Koshland as created by that transaction. Koshland and appellant went together to the trust company, where Koshland paid over $1,100 to the trust company and at the same time appellant separately paid to the company the accrued interest due from him on the note. The bank then passed the bonds over to Koshland, but first took appellant’s receipt therefor.

The evidence of these transactions, which, in substance, is hereinabove stated, was sufficient to warrant the jury in determining that the bonds were the property of Hachiyama and were entrusted by him to appellant as pledgee thereof in connection with the Mitsui note, and that the acts of the appellant relating to the disposition of the bonds all occurred while they were in his possession solely by reason of their delivery to him as such pledgee. When he took the bonds to the Anglo-California Trust Company they were in his actual possession. When he caused them to be delivered over by the trust company to Koshland they were practically in his possession.

The only remaining question relates to the authority of appellant to pledge these bonds as security for his own debts after they had been received by him as pledgee in connection with the Mitsui note. “One who has a lien upon property may pledge it to the extent of his lien.” (Civ. Code, sec. 2990.) If appellant in giving security for his note to the trust company had pledged the Mitsui note and together therewith had pledged the Hachiyama bonds as collateral annexed to that note he would have been acting strictly within his rights under this section of the code. But in separating the bonds from the note for which they had been pledged and in thus using those bonds as collateral to his own larger obligation, he exceeded his legal rights in the use of the bonds. We are not concerned here with the *241 proposition, which may he conceded, that as to the trust company the pledge of the bonds to it was beyond successful attack. Appellant had been given possession of the bonds with all the indicia of ownership.

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Bluebook (online)
219 P. 745, 192 Cal. 236, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-tambara-cal-1923.