People v. Zarate

201 P. 955, 54 Cal. App. 372, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 552
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 26, 1921
DocketCrim. No. 791.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 201 P. 955 (People v. Zarate) 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. Zarate, 201 P. 955, 54 Cal. App. 372, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 552 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

WORKS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction of the crime of forgery. Joseph L. Thing and Charles E. Thing conducted a mercantile business under the name of Thing Bros., in the little town of Tecate, part of which place is in San Diego County and part in the republic of Mexico. On account of the lack of banking facilities in the village, it was the custom of Thing Bros, to issue their checks on a San Diego bank to the people of the place in exchange for cash, the paper then being used in the transaction of business with the outside world. The checks were always drawn by the brothers themselves, one being accustomed to write them by hand, while the other used a typewriter for the purpose. The typewritten paper was drawn from a red and a black ribbon, each of the colors being used, invariably, on a certain and definite portion of each check. Appellant procured one of these typewritten checks in the sum of five dollars, through a third person, paying that amount for it. Next, through a conductor on the railroad running from Tecate to San Diego, he procured both a black and a red typewriter ribbon from the latter place, and also a pad of blank cheeks upon the bank on which Thing Bros, were accustomed to draw their paper. Appellant then wrote a letter, purporting to be signed by one E. E. Snyder, to another bank in San Diego, inclosing two checks and asking the bank to make collection of them. The checks were, respectively, for the sums of $1,010 and $992, were drawn on the bank with which Thing Bros, did business, were payable to E. E'. Snyder, were signed ‘ ‘ Thing Bros., by J. L. Thing, ’ ’ and were typewritten in two colors, in exact accord with the custom followed by Joseph L. Thing, the brother whose practice it was to draw the typewritten paper issued by the firm. The bank was instructed, after collecting the proceeds of the checks, to send $1700 in currency to the alleged Snyder at Tecate by the railway conductor above mentioned. It was stated in the letter that the money was to be used for the purpose of paying Snyder’s men. The remaining $302 was directed to *374 be deposited in the bank to which the letter was addressed, in the name of Snyder. The currency was sent to Tecate, not by the conductor, however, but by registered mail, and was delivered to appellant, who receipted for it in Snyder’s name, by himself, as agent. The balance of the proceeds of the two checks, $302 dollars, was placed on deposit in the bank as directed, and $300 of it was later withdrawn on a check bearing the signature of the alleged Snyder, but the money was, as before, delivered to appellant as Snyder’s agent. It was shown at the trial that neither of the two checks sent to the San Diego bank was signed by either of the brothers Thing, and appellant made written confession that the signature was appended to each of them by him. No such person as E. E. Snyder appeared at the trial, and several witnesses from Tecate testified that they knew of no such person. Some days after procuring the original check for five dollars from Thing Bros., which paper the prosecution, of course, claims appellant used as an exemplar, he endeavored to sell it to one Blanco for four dollars, but Blanco did not buy it. This check must have been finally destroyed, as it was never presented for payment. The charge against appellant was for forging the check for $1,010.

[1] Appellant makes at least eight points upon rulings during the trial, each of them stated in this manner: “The court erred in overruling defendant’s objection,” followed by a reference to the transcript. Not only, in each instance, does counsel fail to state the question to which objection is made, or the objection itself, but none of the points is argued and no authority is cited in support of any of them. Such a casual presentation of points, if followed up, would impose upon us a labor which is within the peculiar province of counsel, and which does not come within the range of our duty. We are not called upon to consider points so presented (Gray v. Walker, 157 Cal. 381, [108 Pac. 278]).

In more than a half dozen instances appellant charges error in the refusal of the trial court to give instructions, contenting himself with a reference to the transcript for the text of the requested instructions, and citing cases in each place without giving us any information as to what principle or rule the cases enunciate. Points so presented will *375 not be considered. In a case in which counsel referred to instructions in a similar manner and cited sections of the code by number in support of his claim that they should have been given, the supreme court said: “If counsel will not take the time to point out the particular instruction or instructions upon which he predicates error, and the law which he invokes, we will not do so” (People v. Chutnacut, 141 Cal. 682, [75 Pac. 340]).

There are other questions which are stated in appellant’s brief by mere reference to the transcript, without attempt to acquaint us with their nature by anything whatever shown upon the face of the brief; and there are still others which, even though they are more fully stated, are not supported by the slightest argument. Under the authorities already cited, we are bound to consider none of these.

[2] It is contended that the trial court erred in instructing the jury that a “confession, in criminal law, is a voluntary declaration made by a person who has committed a crime, to another one.” This definition is, indeed, fragmentary and incomplete, but it does not appear to us that its presentation to the jury could have prejudiced appellant. In his written confession, after acknowledging the authorship of the letter to the San Diego bank with which the two checks were inclosed, appellant says: “I also forged the signature of Thing Brothers by J. L. Thing, to the two checks mentioned in said letter aggregating 2002” With this plain and direct statement before the jury, it made little difference whether any instruction was given upon the meaning of the word “confession,” It must have been obvious to them, without definition from the court, that a positive confession of the commission of the crime, not to be misunderstood by an intelligent mind, was before them. Appellant could have suffered no substantial injury from the instruction given.

[3] The next claim made by appellant is that the trial court erred in stating to the jury that the court had passed upon the question of the free and voluntary character of the confession of appellant. In order that this point may be intelligently considered, it is necessarry to set forth the entire instruction to the jury concerning the confession, as it is in that instruction that the alleged erroneous statement occurs. The instruction follows:

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Bluebook (online)
201 P. 955, 54 Cal. App. 372, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-zarate-calctapp-1921.