People v. Vickers

8 Cal. App. 2d 315
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 3, 1935
DocketCrim. No. 2567
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Cal. App. 2d 315 (People v. Vickers) 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. Vickers, 8 Cal. App. 2d 315 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

ROTH, J., pro tem.

In one action, defendants Vickers and Jackson were accused of several offenses, including grand theft as charged in count V of the information. In another action, they were accused of several offenses, including violation of the Corporate Securities Act as charged in count V of the information. Each defendant was convicted on each one of said counts V. Both defendants appealed, but the appeals of defendant Vickers have been dismissed. Therefore, we are to consider only the appeals of defendant Jackson (hereinafter called the appellant or Jackson) from the judgments against him, and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

At the trial these two cases were consolidated and tried together. The appeals are here presented on one record and on one set of briefs.

The said grand theft count charges that the crime was committed as follows: That the defendant, on or about the fourth day of May, 1932, did wilfully, etc., take away $6,700 in money, etc., “of the personal property of one Elizabeth A. Frost”.

The other count V charges that the defendants committed the crime therein named, as follows: That the defendants, on or about the fourth day of May, 1932, did wilfully, etc., “sell, and offer for sale, securities of a certain corporation [317]*317known as the Ultra-Violet Corporation, Ltd., to one Elizabeth A. Frost, without" having first applied for and/or received a permit from the Commissioner of Corporations of the State of California so to do”.

The facts as testified to by prosecution witnesses, upon which the convictions were had and which form the basis for the original ten several charges against Vickers and appellant (so far as they can be clearly crystallized from a maze of evidence confusing in the extreme, but because of the consolidation of the cases, much of it apparently relevant against one or the other of defendants, and still further complicated by the introduction and receipt of evidence on a theory of conspiracy, which evidence proved to be rank hearsay so far as appellant was concerned), appear to be as follows:

Elizabeth A. Frost, a maiden lady, seventy years old, of defective hearing and impaired eyesight, was possessed of substantial means consisting of real estate, stock and bonds, and some cash. She engaged one Whitehorne to sell one of her lots in Mesmer City. Appellant Jackson,- it appears, met Miss Frost the early part of January, 1932, while looking at one of the lots she had given Wfintehorne to sell, and although it is not clear, apparently through Whitehorne. Appellant seemed pleased with the lot and telephoned Miss Frost several times about it. But in the meantime Whitehorne brought Vickers to meet Miss Frost on or about January 28, 1932, according to her testimony, who agreed to buy the lot, which he apparently did, for nothing down and the promise of deferred payments which were never made.

What specific negotiations, contacts or conversations took place between Miss Frost and Vickers from the time of the first meeting is not clear, but it appears from an abundance of evidence that Miss Frost almost immediately invested Vickers, whom she had never met before she was introduced to him by Whitehorne, with a plentitude of trust and confidence, and told him all her troubles of a financial nature. She confided to Vickers how her estate—telling him in detail the nature thereof—had dwindled, and told him how worried she was about having enough to live on through her old age, and also about some cousin or cousins for whom she felt a financial responsibility.

Vickers had formerly been an insurance broker, whose license had been revoked. He persuaded Miss Frost that she [318]*318should sell her securities and thereby amass enough cash to purchase an annuity paying her $2,000 per year; whereupon Miss Frost took her securities, and in company with Vickers and Whitehorne, delivered them to brokers for sale. Through the sale of these securities made at periodic intervals, and perhaps from other sources, Miss Frost collected a total in excess of $17,000, and periodically, as money came into her hands, she turned the same over to Vickers, who did actually in each instance .deliver the same to the insurance company to apply on the annuity in question, until the sum required for the annuity was paid in full, and the transaction was completed, exactly when does not appear.

Returning to appellant, whether Miss Frost had just one meeting (already mentioned) with him alone, or a subsequent one in the latter part of January or the first part of February, 1932, does not appear. She recalled, however, after persistent and suggestive questioning, that when she met Jackson he made “a pleasant call” and conversed of “ultra violet”; “Doctor Strong a very eminent surgeon and scientist”; “that it certainly was a wonderful proposition, and it certainly was going to be a very paying proposition”. (What was certainly wonderful or paying cannot be gleaned from her report of her conversation with Jackson.)

Questioned specifically as to Jackson’s connection with the corporation, which she evidently meant when she used the term “ultra violet” (the nature of which will be discussed in more detail later), the record shows the following:

“Q. Did Mr. Jackson tell you what connection, if any, he had personally with the corporation? A. No, I would not say so. Q. Did he talk with you with reference to any amount you should invest? A. No. Q. Was the method of your investment discussed, as to whether you were to buy stock or an interest ? A. No, when I did— Q. No, in this first conversation, was the method of your investment discussed? A. No, I think it was just a pleasant conversation with regard to what this thing was. Q. When was the next conversation you had with anyone of these three gentlemen with reference to the Ultra-Violet Ray investment? A. I took it up with Mr. Vickers, and I asked him to look into it for me. ’ ’

To clarify the picture it should now be stated that one Dr. Frederick F. Strong was the inventor of and had obtained a [319]*319patent or patents on certain “cold mercury quartz ultraviolet lamps” (which will hereafter be referred to as lamp or lamps), which patents he assigned to Radiant Holding Corporation, a Nevada corporation, organized the latter part of 1931 (hereinafter referred to as Radiant). At the same time Radiant was organized, another corporation to act as licensee was also organized in the state of Nevada called Ultra-Violet Corporation, Ltd. (hereinafter called Ltd.). The scheme of corporate operation seems to have been that Radiant was to own the patents and Ltd. as a subsidiary and licensee under the patents was to manufacture and dispose of the lamps. The patents in question were bona fide and were actually assigned to Radiant. The persons participating (aside from dummy incorporators) in the organization of these corporate entities were Strong, a quartz technician called Carl Grimm, Bowers, an attorney, one Bristow, joint inventor with Strong, who was in charge of the manufacture of the lamps, and appellant Jackson. According to Strong (a prosecution witness), appellant was an expert in therapeutic application. This is nowhere denied, and seems to be the fact.

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Related

People v. Pace
238 P. 1089 (California Court of Appeal, 1925)
Clover v. Jackson
253 P. 187 (California Court of Appeal, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Cal. App. 2d 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-vickers-calctapp-1935.