People v. White

259 P. 76, 85 Cal. App. 241, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 532
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 25, 1927
DocketDocket No. 1381.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 259 P. 76 (People v. White) 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. White, 259 P. 76, 85 Cal. App. 241, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 532 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SHAW, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by the People from an order granting a new trial. The respondent and two others were tried on an indictment containing nine counts, of which the first charged a conspiracy by the defendants to obtain money by false pretenses from Mrs. Catherine Bayne Stephens, Mrs. Lunette W. Smith, and other persons to the grand jury unknown, and set up eight different overt acts alleged to have been committed in pursuance of the conspiracy, and the subsequent counts dealt specially with the same transactions which were alleged as overt acts in the first count, charging as to each of them that the defendants had committed the offense of obtaining money -by false pretenses. During the trial the indictment was dismissed as to one of the defendants, who thereupon testified for the prosecution. No evidence being given in behalf of the defense, the case was submitted to the jury on the evidence of the prosecution, and the court advised the jury to acquit both 'defendants remaining in the case upon all of the counts. The jury followed this advice as *244 to one- defendant, but not entirely as to the respondent, who was acquitted upon the first eight counts and convicted upon the ninth count. Thereupon respondent made a motion for a new trial, specifying as one of the grounds thereof the insufficiency of the evidence, and the court granted the motion on this ground alone.

The rules governing the consideration of appeals such as this are well established. The case of People v. Knutte, 111 Cal. 453 [44 Pac. 166], is parallel with that now before the court in many respects. There the offense charged was obtaining money by false pretenses, the case was submitted to the jury on the evidence of the prosecution alone, the court advised the jury to acquit, but instead they found the defendant guilty, and the trial court made an order granting a new trial, from which the people appealed. In affirming this order the supreme court said:

“The case was argued here by both parties upon the assumption that the new trial was granted upon the ground that the evidence was deemed insufficient to sustain the verdict; and while no specific ground is stated in the order of that court, it may be safely taken, from the court’s action in advising the jury to acquit, that this assumption of counsel is correct. It has been so repeatedly held here as to become axiomatic that where a new trial is granted upon this ground, or where it is one of various grounds upon which the trial court may have based the order, its action will not be disturbed, except in a case showing a manifest and unmistakable abuse of discretion. . . . While it is the exclusive province of the jury to find the facts, it is nevertheless one of the most important requirements of the trial judge to see to it that this function of the jury is intelligently and justly exercised. In this respect, while he cannot competently interfere with or control the jury in passing upon the evidence, he nevertheless exercises a very salutary supervisory power over their verdict; in the exercise of that power he should always satisfy himself that the evidence as a whole is sufficient to sustain the verdict found, and, if in his sound judgment, it is not, he should unhesitatingly say so, and set the verdict aside. (People v. Lum Yit, 83 Cal. 130 [23 Pac. 228].)
“It can, of course, make no difference in the exercise of this power by the court that the evidence in the case *245 was wholly that of the prosecution, and stands, in the sense at least that it is not controverted by evidence on behalf of defendant, without conflict. The same duty rests upon the judge in such a case as where the evidence is conflicting, to satisfy himself that guilt has been established; and notwithstanding the evidence may be all one way, he is not required to believe it. . . .
“Nor does it affect the question that the evidence in the case may have a legal tendency to prove all the material facts. Guilt is to be established beyond a reasonable doubt; and while there may be some evidence to support each fact, this does not signify that it is necessarily such as to satisfy the conscience of the judge that a case is made which warrants conviction.”

No decision in conflict with these rules can be found, and in People v. Canfield, 173 Cal. 309 [159 Pac. 1046], which likewise involved an appeal by the people from an order granting a new trial, the supreme court said, after referring to article VI, section 4½, of the constitution:

“But this section of the Constitution was not designed to take from the trial court and transfer to the appellate courts the high discretion vested in that tribunal. The judge who presided at the trial of the cause, who heard the testimony, who observed the jurors and had an opportunity also of testing the truth of the defendant’s statements by noticing his demeanor, was in a pecúliarly favorable position for determining justly the question whether or not the defendant had been accorded a fair trial. . . . We can hardly manufacture in fancy a hypothetical situation in which a reviewing court would be justified in questioning the discretion of a trial court who should grant a new trial in a case involving a criminal charge.”

The false pretenses alleged in counts 2, 3, 4, and 5 related to the affairs of the Interstate Oil Corporation, and those alleged in counts 6, 7, 8, and 9 related to the Brown Process Company. The several counts relating to the Brown Process Company are identical as to the party defrauded and the false representations charged, differing only as to the dates and the amounts obtained by the alleged false pretenses. The eighth and ninth counts are alike, even as to the dates on which it is alleged the false pretenses were made and the money obtained. The ninth count, upon *246 which respondent was convicted, charged that the offense was committed on January 17, 1924, and that on that date the defendants, with intent to defraud Mrs. Catherine Bayne Stephens of her money and property, falsely represented to her “ (1) that they, the said defendants, had on hand for sale certain forty-six (46) gas units and interests of a corporation, by name the Brown Process Company, (2) which said gas units and interests were then and there of the value of One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00) each, (3) and that the same were then and there earning and paying a dividend of thirty-three per cent (33%) per annum, upon the basis of a value of One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00) for each of said gas units and interests of said Brown Process Company, (4) that, if she would purchase these certain gas units and interests of said Brown Process Company, she would immediately commence to receive and would continue to receive dividends of thirty-three (33%) per cent per annum, payable on the twenty-second of each month, (5) and that within three (3) years from the time of said purchase of said gas units and interests, the money she would pay them for said gas units and interests would be returned to her by the said defendants, (6) that the said gas units and interests of the Brown Process Company were secured by the total assets of the said corporation of the actual cash value of one million dollars; (7) that, if she, the said Mrs. Catherine Bayne Stephens,.

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Bluebook (online)
259 P. 76, 85 Cal. App. 241, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-white-calctapp-1927.