People v. Wieger

34 P. 826, 100 Cal. 352, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 798
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1893
DocketNo. 21007
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 34 P. 826 (People v. Wieger) 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. Wieger, 34 P. 826, 100 Cal. 352, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 798 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Temple, C.

Appeal from a judgment and from an order denying a new trial.

The defendant was convicted of the offense of obtaining goods by false and fraudulent pretenses. He was prosecuted under section 532 of the Penal Code, which denounces as criminal “ every person who knowingly and designedly by false or fraudulent representations or pretenses defrauds any other person of money or property.”

On the trial defendant testified in his own behalf to the effect that he had no intention when he obtained the goods of defrauding the Sharpless firm; that he fully intended paying for the goods, and felt perfectly sure of his ability to do so when the bill would become due.

The court instructed the jury upon the subject of criminal intent as follows:

The intent necessary to constitute the offense charged in this case is the intent to procure a credit whereby possession of property was obtained. It is not the intent to pay for such property after having thus procured it. Such intent, the one last mentioned, does not shield the defendant from the consequences of the intent first mentioned. So, if upon a consideration of all the evidence, you are satisfied beyond reasonable doubts that the defendant intended by the representations which it is admitted he made, and which he admitted he knew were not true, to Sharpless Brothers, to obtain the prop[355]*355erty alleged to have been received by him, and did receive such property, then he is guilty of the offense charged, even though he intended, when he made such representations, to pay for the goods when the bills for them became due. The obtaining of goods by such false representations is fraudulent, and the fraudulent character of such' transaction is not changed by the fact that there may have been an intention at the time to pay for the goods.
“The reason of what I have just stated to you will be apparent to your minds by considering the fact that in very few cases, perhaps in none, could a man be convicted of this act of obtaining money or property under false pretenses, if he could make it apparent that, notwithstanding his obtaining the money or property, he would make it good at some future time by restoring the property or paying the money. I have been thus particular of speaking of the intent here for the reason that I desire that you will not be led into any confusion on that subject, and I repeat that, while it may have been the intention of the defendant to pay for the goods,that intention constitutes no defense, if at the time when he made the representations he made them for the purpose of obtaining the goods or obtaining the credit on which he received the goods.

The jury had already been told that to constitute the offense there must exist the intent to defraud, that there must be actual fraud committed and accomplished by the use of false pretenses, made for the purpose, and the owner must have been induced to part with his property by the fraud.

Counsel claims that this instruction is erroneous, and contrary to the statute, which he contends does not denounce as criminal obtaining goods by false pretenses, but simply the act of defrauding another by obtaining goods in that mode. That if defendant obtained the goods with the honest intent of paying for them according to the contract, and believed himself able to do so, [356]*356he has not defrauded the Sharpless firm, although he obtained the goods by false pretenses.

In the assumption that it must be held that defendant did not intend to defraud the Sharpless firm, if he intended at the time to pay for the goods according to the contract of sale, and truly believed that he was able to do so, I think counsel is in error. Deception, deliberately practised for the purpose of gaining an unfair advantage of another, is fraud. Goods obtained by such practices are obtained by fraud. One deprived of his property by such means is defrauded.

By the false pretenses the Sharpless firm was made to believe that defendant had a capital of $12,000 cash, and owed nothing, whereas he had at the most not more than $4,500, and owed $10,000. Relying upon this false statement they parted with their goods. They were unwilling to do this upon his mere promise to pay without proof of his ability to do so. His intention to pay, the law presumes from the fact of the purchase. The crime consists in the false statement in regard to ability to do that which the law would compel him to do if he possessed the financial ability.

Although sufficiently obvious upon reason, there" are abundant authorities for this position.

In England the rule was declared in Queen v. Naylor, L. R. 1 Cr. Cas. 4. In that case a special verdict was rendered, in which the jury found, among other facts, that defendant, when he obtained the goods, intended to pay when it should be in his power to do so. The case having been reserved for consideration before the court of crown cases reserved, the opinion was as follows:

“We are all of the opinion that this conviction must be affirmed.” There was no essential difference in the statutes. The condition of the cases in this country upon this subject is well stated in Buntian v. State, 15 Tex. App. 515, as follows:
Again it is contended: ‘ If defendant intended to refund the money and redeem the pledge at the time he obtained the money, then he is not guilty of swindling,’ [357]*357and that it was error in the charge of the court that the jury were not so instructed. The crime denounced by the statute is the obtaining by false pretenses. As was said in State v. Thatcher, 35 N. J. L. 445: ‘The defendant’s ability or his ultimate intention to do what the law would compel him as the principal debtor to do cannot save him.’ And the language of the supreme court of Massachusetts is equally explicit: ‘The intent to defraud is the intent by the use of such false means to induce another to part with his possession and confide it to defendant, when he would not otherwise have done so. Neither the promise to repay, nor the intention to do so, will deprive the false and fraudulent act in obtaining it of its criminality.’ (Commonwealth v. Coe, 115 Mass. 481; Commonwealth v. Mason, 105 Mass. 163; 7 Am. Rep. 507.) ‘The offense is complete when the property or money has been obtained by such means, and would not be purged by subsequent restoration or repayment. Evidence of the ability to make the repayment is therefore immaterial and inadmissible. The possession of the means of payment is entirely consistent with the fraud charged.’ ”

I think, therefore, the court did not err in giving the instruction. In holding this it is not necessary to agree with the reason given by the learned judge for the rule. That statement could not have injured the defendant.

It will follow, also, that defendant’s objection to the information cannot be sustained.

Upon the trial the prosecution offered in evidence a copy of a deposition of the defendant in the proceeding in insolvency.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 P. 826, 100 Cal. 352, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wieger-cal-1893.