People v. Whalen

98 P. 194, 154 Cal. 472, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 354
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1908
DocketCrim. No. 1440.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 98 P. 194 (People v. Whalen) 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. Whalen, 98 P. 194, 154 Cal. 472, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 354 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The defendant was tried-and convicted upon a charge of having by false pretenses obtained the sum of one thousand dollars of lawful money from one Urilda M. Martin.

It is claimed that there was no proof that any money was actually obtained by the defendant. It appeared from the testimony of Mrs. Martin, the prosecuting witness, that she and her sister, Mrs. Francis H. Martin, were induced to buy of the defendant 100 shares of stock in the United States Mining & Smelting Company, the sister taking 20 shares of stock at the price of two hundred dollars, and the prosecuting witness 80 shares at the price of one thousand dollars, and that the prosecuting witness gave him a check on a bank in New York for twelve hundred dollars, in payment for the 100 shares, two hundred dollars of the amount being loaned by her to her sister for that purpose. If may be conceded that if nothing more had been shown than the giving of the check, it would not prove the charge of having obtained money, but we think the jury were fairly justified in concluding from the entire evidence that the check thus given was cashed by the defendant and the money obtained -thereon. The two sisters both testified upon the trial, and both expressly stated, that they paid him twelve hundred dollars in money, and that they had “invested” in the stock. The prosecuting witness said: “Up to January, 1906, I fully believed these mines to be worth every dollar I had put into them.” The cheek was given on May 3, 1905. The defendant remained in Sacramento, where this transaction occurred, for several weeks thereafter, and, while there, hired men to go with him to the mines, which were in the state of Nevada, and for more than *474 six months thereafter he was in charge of the affairs of the mining company, either at the mines or in Sacramento. During this time the two sisters resided in Sacramento and were associating with other stockholders in the company to whom the defendant had sold other stock. There was nothing disclosed by the evidence to indicate that the defendant experienced any difficulty or delay in obtaining payment of the check. The facts concerning the payment of the money were all elicited upon the examination in chief of the two witnesses. There was no cross-examination, on that subject, nor any attempt, at any stage of the case, to show that the check had not been paid in the usual course of business. Under the circumstances the jury were justified in construing the testimony of the prosecuting witness and her sister to mean that the money called for by the check had actually been paid.

It is claimed that the following instruction by the court was erroneous:—

“A fully developed mine is a deposit of metals or minerals whose underground works or developments are of such an extent and nature as to permit of the extraction of the metals and minerals therein contained with profit without further waste work.”

The claim is that the question whether or not the mines were fully developed is a question of fact to be decided by the jury, and also that, if it is a question of law, the instruction was erroneous in stating that it was necessary, in order for a mine to be fully developed, that it be susceptible of being worked with profit. We think the question as to what in general would constitute a fully developed mine was one upon which the court might well instruct the jury, and that, if the instruction was not otherwise objectionable, it is not so because of its being an instruction upon a question of fact. Upon the other proposition, it may be conceded that if the instruction is taken alone, without reference to the facts of the ease or the crime involved, and as an abstract proposition, it would be erroneous. A mine composed of ore containing so little precious metal that it would not pay for the mere crushing of the rock after it was taken out, might nevertheless be fully developed in the sense that the ore, such as it was, would be sufficiently exposed and ready for extraction to permit active operations in the regular course of mining to begin, and in such condition it *475 might be said to be fully developed, and yet, owing to the barrenness of the ore, it would be impossible to work it with profit.

But an instruction may be incorrect as an abstract or general proposition and yet not erroneous or injurious when considered in connection with the particular case and the facts to which it relates. The statement that the mines were fully developed was made, as is alleged, to induce the prosecuting witness to buy stock of the company to which the mines belonged, and it is in this connection that the meaning of the expression must be considered. Such a statement, made for such a purpose and in connection with such a proposition, would imply that the ores of the mines referred to were of such value that profitable mining operations could be immediately begun therein without further preparatory work. The instruction, therefore, merely expresses in language what the representation, in connection with the circumstances under which it is alleged to have been made, necessarily implied. The jury was fully instructed to the effect that it must appear that the money was obtained by means of the representation or representations charged in the information. The charge was that the representations were made to induce the prosecuting witness to buy stock in the corporation owning the mines and pay the sum of a thousand dollars therefor and that, relying thereon, the prosecuting witness did buy the stock and pay the money. Taken in connection with the transaction in which the representation was made, the instruction properly defines the meaning of the term “folly developed mine” according to the meaning it must have been intended to have when it was made to the prosecuting witness, and in connection with the other instructions was a correct exposition of the law.

It is claimed that the court erred in refusing certain instructions asked by the defendant. We have examined the instructions given, and we think that in each case where a proper instruction was refused, the proposition covered thereby was included in other instructions given by the court. In such case there could be no error in the refusal complained of.

Mrs. Francis H. Martin, a sister of the prosecuting witness, was present at the time the alleged false misrepresentations were made to the prosecuting witness. In giving her testimony she was allowed to state that she herself had paid two hundred *476 dollars for the stock. This it was necessary for her to do for the reason that the check given by the prosecuting witness included two hundred dollars in payment of the stock bought by Mrs. Francis IT. Martin, and in order to give an intelligent narrative of what occurred at that time it was necessary for her to state her own purchase. Counsel for defendant appear to have conceived the idea that this put in issue the question whether or not Mrs. Francis TI. Martin had been deceived and defrauded by the false representations of the defendant. He sought in his cross-examination to ascertain whether or not she herself believed the representations and also to elicit other facts immaterial except upon the theory that the defendant was on trial for obtaining money from the witness Mrs. Francis IT. Martin. These questions were all immaterial to the ease on trial and were properly excluded by the court.

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Bluebook (online)
98 P. 194, 154 Cal. 472, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-whalen-cal-1908.