State v. Casperson

262 P. 294, 71 Utah 68, 1927 Utah LEXIS 7
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1927
DocketNo. 4584.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 262 P. 294 (State v. Casperson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Casperson, 262 P. 294, 71 Utah 68, 1927 Utah LEXIS 7 (Utah 1927).

Opinion

CHERRY, J.

The defendant, John M. Snyder was tried by a jury, found guilty, and sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison, upon a charge of obtaining a check worth $1,000 from Freed Finance Corporation by false pretenses. He appeals from the judgment and contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict and judgment against him. The *71 controversy arose out of a transaction whereby the accused sold and assigned to the Freed Finance Corporation, for $1,000 paid to him therefore, a conditional contract of sale for an automobile to one Levi Waldron, in which contract the title to the automobile was purported to be vested in a corporation of which accused was an officer. The gist of the accusation is that the accused falsely represented ownership of the automobile described in the contract, and thereby unlawfully and fraudulently obtained the money paid therefor. Defendant asserts that, according to the uncontradicted evidence, there was no false pretense, and that the prosecutor was not defrauded, but got a valid, enforceable contract, good in all respects for what it purported to be, and precisely what it bargained for. Upon the essential facts in the case, there is no substantial conflict in the evidence. Casperson & Snyder, of which defendant was manager, was a corporation engaged in selling automobiles at retail at Salt Lake City. Its business was financed by two finance corporations, the Auto Securities Company and the Freed Finance Corporation. Money was furnished to the retail dealer by these finance corporations, from time to time, upon particular automobiles in the retailer’s possession or those sold by it to others upon conditional sale contracts.

The form of the transaction in the ordinary case of automobiles in possession and for sale by the retailer was called the “floor plan,” and, so far as disclosed by the evidence, consisted of lending money upon automobiles which were to be placed on the retailer’s floor for sale purposes. With respect to “demonstrator” cars or salesmen’s cars, the form of the transaction was a conditional sale contract between the retailer and its salesman by the terms of which the title to the car was retained by the seller until the purchase price, payable in installments, was paid, which contract was, by the seller, sold at a discount, and indorsed and guaranteed, to the finance company. Notwithstanding a provision in the contract that the vendee should not sell the car, it was the understanding by all three parties that *72 the salesman, or nominal vendee, should have the possession of and sell the car within 90 days, and take up the contract with the finance company. In the case of sales made to purchasers in the ordinary course upon deferred installment payments, conditional sales contracts, by which title was retained by the seller until the purchase price was paid, were taken from the purchasers by the retailer, which contracts were sold, indorsed, and guaranteed by the retailer to the finance company at a discount. The understanding and practice of the finance company and the retailer in this latter case was that if default was made by the purchaser in the payment of any installment, upon any contract, when due, the finance company looked to the retailer which had guaranteed the contract, and permitted it to repossess the car described in the contract, and allowed it 30 days’ time in which to sell the car for the purpose of “taking up the contract.” The retailer was permitted to make such sales, and the finance company relied and depended on the retailer in such case making payment to it out of the proceeds of such sale. Such was the practice and course of business as between the Auto Securities Company and Casperson & Snyder, involving many automobiles and a large sum of money, and extending over a considerable period of time during and preceding the acts complained of.

The particular transactions relied on by the state to establish the crime charged were as follows:

On March 30, 1926, Casperson & Snyder executed a contract with E. A. Child, a salesman then employed by it at its branch agency at Ogden, Utah, specifying that a certain described automobile was sold conditionaly to Child upon his paying the sum of $1,552.86 in monthly installments of $86.27 each, commencing April 30, 1926. The contract provided that the title to the car described should be retained by the seller until the purchase price was paid in full, and that the vendee should not sell or dispose of the same.

This contract was, by Casperson & Snyder, shortly after its execution, indorsed, guaranteed, and assigned to the *73 Auto Securities Company for the sum of $1,300. It satisfactorily appears from the uncontradicted evidence that the Auto Securities Company knew that Child was a salesman of Casperson & Snyder, that the car described was a “demonstrator” or salesman’s car, and that under the arrangement Child was authorized and expected to exhibit the car for sale and sell it within 90 days. Two payments were made to the Auto Securities Company on this contract by Casperson & Snyder, one on June 15th, of $173.40, and another on July 14th, of $87.13.

On June 4, 1926, Casperson & Snyder, through its agents at Ogden, Utah, agreed to sell the same car described in the Child contract to Levi Waldron for a used car, valued at $825, and $1,114.24 in money. The car was delivered to Waldron upon his delivery of the used car and executing and delivering to Casperson & Snyder a conditional sale contract, with the usual provisions for retention of title by the seller and the promise to pay $544.18 on September 4,1926, and $572.06 on December 4, 1926, etc.

Thereupon, John M. Snyder, the defendant, presented the Waldron contract to the Freed Finance Corporation, told its officers that his company had sold the car to Wal-dron, and offered to sell and did sell and assign the contract to it for the sum of $1,000, which was paid to him by the Freed Finance Corporation in the form of a bank check.

The defendant was convicted upon the theory that by the transaction mentioned he falsely pretended to the Freed Finance Corporation that Casperson & Snyder, by virtue of the Waldron contract, had the title to the automobile therein described and by such false pretense obtained from the Freed Finance Corporation the sum of $1,000, when in truth and in fact the title to the automobile described had been previously transferred to and was then owned by the Auto Securities Company by virtue of the Child contract, thereby defrauding the Freed Finance Corporation of the ■ money so obtained.

*74 Whether upon these facts the verdict and judgment against defendant can be sustained is the question to be decided.

The crime charged is defined by Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 8344, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
262 P. 294, 71 Utah 68, 1927 Utah LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-casperson-utah-1927.