People v. Thal

214 P. 296, 61 Cal. App. 48, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 563
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 20, 1923
DocketCrim. No. 1108.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 214 P. 296 (People v. Thal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Thal, 214 P. 296, 61 Cal. App. 48, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 563 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

The defendant herein was convicted of the crime of violating the provisions of section 476 of the Penal Code, by making, passing, uttering, and publishing a fictitious check, with intent to defraud one Michel Marclescu. The information upon the second count of which he was tried and convicted was an amended information in two counts which had been presented by the district *50 attorney and filed by leave of court on the day upon which the defendant’s case was called for trial and prior to the impaneling of the jury in the cause. The charge in the original information against the defendant was that of obtaining property under false pretenses. It was in a single count but set forth in detail the transaction out of which the -charge arose, which was alleged to consist in obtaining from one Michel Marelescu the possession of said property, to wit, wood alcohol, by the false and fraudulent representation that he, the defendant, had a deposit in the Bank of Italy in excess of one thousand dollars available for withdrawal by check and by then and there drawing and presenting to. said Michel Marelescu his check for the sum of one thousand dollars, representing the same to be good and valid and receiving therefor said property, the said Marelescu accepting said check therefor believing said false representations to be true, whereas in truth and fact said representations were utterly false and untrue. To this information the defendant pleaded not guilty and the cause was set for trial. The district attorney on the morning of the trial moved the court for leave to file the amended information “to meet the proof which was introduced in the lower court. ’ ’ The first count in said amended information charged the defendant with obtaining money under false pretenses. It varied from the original information in the respect that it stated that the property which the defendant obtained from said Marelescu by false pretenses was glycerine. It also varied in the statement of the false representations in respect to the check offered and received for such property, the amended information stating that it was the cheek of one John R. O’Connor drawn upon the Market Street branch of the Bank of Italy, in which the defendant falsely represented said O’Connor as having an account exceeding the amount of said check, whereas he was a nonexistent person having no account at said bank, which the defendant well knew. The second count in said amended information charged the defendant with the uttering and passing of said fictitious check in violation of section 476 of the Penal Code. The defendant objected to the introduction of the second count of said amended information as prejudicial to the rights of the defendant, but consented to the amendment *51 of the original information a® to the first count. The motion for leave to file the amended information was granted. The defendant presented no demurrer or other objection at that time, but announced himself as ready for trial and only requested that both informations be read in full to the jury, which was done by the clerk, together with the defendant’s former plea of not guilty. The trial then proceeded and at its close the court, at the request of the district attorney, instructed the jury to return a verdict of not guilty upon the first count of said amended information upon the ground of the failure of proof. The defendant was convicted upon the charge embraced in the second count in said amended information. After his conviction he made a motion for a new trial upon all the statutory grounds. He also made a motion in arrest of judgment, upon the ground that he had not been arraigned nor did he plead to the amended information or either count thereof, and upon the further ground that the amended information contained a separate and specific offense from the offense attempted to be alleged in the original information, and also in the first count of the amended information; and on the further ground that the amended information was not an amendment of the original information for the reason that it set forth an entirely separate and distinct offense than that contained in the original information. Both of these motions were denied by the trial court and the defendant was thereupon sentenced to be punished by imprisonment in the state’s prison, whereupon he took and now prosecutes this appeal.

[1] The first and main contention which the appellant makes upon this appeal is that it was error of the trial court in permitting the filing of the amended information. So far as this objection relates to the first count of said amended information it has ceased to be vital, since as to that count the defendant has been acquitted under the instruction of the court and at the request of the prosecution. The contention of the appellant must therefore be confined to the second count in said amended information. By this count the defendant was for the first time charged with a violation of the provisions of section 476 of the Penal Code. His objection made upon motion in arrest of judgment that he was not arraigned and did not plead *52 to this charge is not insisted upon in this appeal, but had it been so it would have been sufficiently answered, we think, by the decision of this court in the case of People v. Tomsky, 20 Cal. App. 672 [130 Pac. 184]. The contention of the appellant now relied upon is that since by the original information the only offense with which he was charged was that of obtaining property under false pretenses, said second count in the information charging another and different offense cannot be held to be an amendment of the original information within the meaning of section 1008 of the Penal Code, permitting the amendment of informations. It is true, as claimed by the appellant, in the original information the offense "expressly charged against said defendant was that of obtaining property under false pretenses; but when we look to that information we find that in pleading the gravamen of said offense with the particularity required in such cases, the defendant was alleged to have also, and as the particular false and fraudulent pretenses by which he obtained said property, committed the further crime of uttering and passing a fictitious check. These two crimes are thus made to appear by said information as a part of the same transaction, out of which the charge of obtaining property under false pretenses arose. This being so we are of the opinion that such matter in the second count of the amended information was proper matter for the amendment of the original information, even though it charged the defendant with the commission of another crime not expressly stated in the charging part of the first information. Section 1008 of the Penal Code, providing for the amendment of informations after plea, permits by implication at least such amendments to be made, charging such offenses as are shown by the evidence taken at the preliminary examination to have been committed. We have not the evidence taken at the preliminary examination before us on this appeal and hence in support of this judgment we must assume that the evidence there taken was such as to show the offense to have been committed as charged in the second count of this amended information. The motion to amend was in fact made by the district attorney upon that express ground. The fact that another or additional offense was thus charged is not of itself sufficient to justify us in holding

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Bluebook (online)
214 P. 296, 61 Cal. App. 48, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-thal-calctapp-1923.