People v. Zelver

287 P.2d 183, 135 Cal. App. 2d 226, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1352
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 25, 1955
DocketCrim. 3099
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 287 P.2d 183 (People v. Zelver) 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. Zelver, 287 P.2d 183, 135 Cal. App. 2d 226, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1352 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

The defendant was tried and convicted on an indictment charging him with three counts of felony. The first count alleged a violation of Penal Code, section 448a, arson, for the wilful and unlawful burning of a warehouse at 1225 Spring Street, Redwood City. The second count charged a violation of Penal Code, section 548, the burning of goods at 1225 Spring Street in Redwood City with intent to defraud and prejudice the insurer. The third count charged a violation of Insurance Code, section 556, subdivision (b), the preparing of a writing to be presented and used in the presentation of a false and fraudulent claim for payment of loss under an insurance contract. The jury found defendant guilty on all three counts. On motion for a new trial, the court held that the offenses in Count I and Count II were not severable, granted a motion for a new trial as to Count II, and then dismissed Count II of its own motion. The defendant was then sentenced to the term prescribed by law on Counts I and III, the sentences to run concurrently. The defendant appeals from the judgment of conviction on Counts I and III. The respondent seeks a review of the propriety of the order granting the new trial as to Count II.

The defendant was president of Danzer Sales Company which, in 1951, was leasing, at 1225 Spring Street, Redwood City, a warehouse from which the defendant conducted a wholesale furniture business, handling some of the goods on a consignment basis. On the night of May 26, 1951, a fire completely destroyed the building and its contents. The fire was concentrated in the center of the building, and, according to the Redwood City fire chief, was of a suspicious nature. Moreover, the fire department had found one of the doors of the building open upon their arrival.

At the time of the fire, Danzer Sales Company had a policy of insurance with the United States Fire Insurance Company. *230 This policy was of the “stock provisional” type, that is, it covered fluctuations in inventory evaluation and required the insured to file monthly reports of value from which the premium was computed. It provided for a penalty on failure to file such reports by limiting the amount recoverable on loss to 75 per cent of the face value of the policy. The face value of the policy at the time of the fire was $50,000. For a period of eight months prior to the fire no inventory reports were received by the insurance company, but, on May 28th, two days after the fire, an inventory report dated May 26th, the day of the fire, on the letterhead of the Danzer Sales Company and signed by the defendant, was received by the insurer covering the past eight months. The inventory valuation reported as of May 26, 1951, was $48,863.45.

On June 5, 1951, the defendant, at the insurer’s office in San Francisco, executed a proof of loss on behalf of Danzer Sales Company. The insurer then issued its draft in the amount of $37,500 (computed, on the basis of 75 per cent of the face value of the policy for failure to file inventory reports) in payment of the claim.

The defendant, in April of 1951, had purchased “use and occupancy” insurance effective May 21, 1951, five days before the fire. This policy was taken out on the solicitation and advice of the defendant’s insurance agent.

The defendant’s conviction is based primarily upon the incriminating testimony of Donald Stoner. Stoner testified that he was employed part time by the Danzer Sales Company. About two months before the fire, the defendant approached him, told him of his financial difficulties, and told him that he had sold some furniture on consignment and did not have the money to pay for it. Defendant then suggested that Stoner help him burn the warehouse and collect the insurance. This same suggestion was made by defendant to the witness on several later occasions, and finally, on the day of the fire, Stoner agreed to burn the building and its contents. Stoner testified that on that day the defendant told him that it was “now or never,” and that “some men were coming up from Los Angeles to take their stock, and he didn’t have it.” Stoner then agreed to burn the warehouse, motivated, he said, by both a previous promise by the defendant to help him purchase a house, and his friendship for the defendant. Stoner testified that that afternoon he had helped stack in the center of the warehouse three or four hundred wooden chairs, wrapped in excelsior, in a stack *231 8 feet wide, 15 feet long, and 10 feet high, and that he and the defendant had discussed the best way to ignite it, and decided that it would be best to move a waste box over against the pile and start the fire in it. Stoner stated that at around 8:30 or 9 p. m., he and his brother-in-law, John Higgs, also an employee of Danzer Sales Company, went down to the warehouse. They entered with a key the defendant had given Stoner that afternoon, and Stoner then lit the fire by setting fire to the waste in the waste box. He testified that Higgs did not know his purpose in going to the warehouse, nor did he participate in the setting of the fire. After setting the fire, Stoner told Higgs of his conversations with the defendant. The next day, Stoner, his wife, and Higgs went over to the defendant’s home and returned the key.

Stoner’s testimony was corroborated by -that of Higgs who testified about going with Stoner to the warehouse on the night of the fire, going in with Stoner, and seeing Stoner light the fire. Higgs testified that he was unaware of Stoner’s purpose in going to the warehouse and did not participate in setting the fire. Higgs also testified that after the fire he was present at a conversation between Stoner and the defendant at which time he heard the defendant tell Stoner that he “would take care of” him.

Richard Walker testified that on May 11, 1951, some two weeks before the fire, at the defendant’s request, he had loaned Stoner $2,500 so that Stoner could buy a home, and that he had received a deed of trust on the home as security.

Danzer Sales Company at the time of the fire was in precarious financial straits. An attorney had been retained by several creditors to collect some $15,000 in debts, and had pressed defendant for payment previous to the fire. The defendant admitted that Danzer Sales Company was $40,000 to $50,000 in debt, and that just prior to the fire he was embarrassed for cash, and that on September 4, 1951, Danzer Sales Company had gone into involuntary bankruptcy.

The trial court instructed the jury that as to Count III, the preparation of a writing with intent to present the same in support of a false and fraudulent claim of loss under an insurance contract, Higgs and Stoner were not accomplices as a matter of law, but that as to Counts I and II, Stoner was an accomplice as a matter of law. The court properly defined the term “accomplice,” and further instructed the jury that a conviction could not be had upon the testimony *232 of an accomplice unless it was corroborated by such other evidence tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense.

It was clearly error to instruct that as to Count III, Stoner was not an accomplice as a matter of law. Under Penal Code, section 1111, an accomplice is defined “as one

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 P.2d 183, 135 Cal. App. 2d 226, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-zelver-calctapp-1955.