State v. Mellenberger

95 P.2d 709, 163 Or. 233, 128 A.L.R. 1506, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 120
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 95 P.2d 709 (State v. Mellenberger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Mellenberger, 95 P.2d 709, 163 Or. 233, 128 A.L.R. 1506, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 120 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by W. L. Thompson and Fred Mellenberger, two of the three indictees, from a judgment of the circuit court which found them [235]*235guilty of the crime of obtaining money through the use of false pretenses in violation of 1937 Session Laws, Ch. 107. The indictment names Florence Tyler as the victim. A third defendant, Thompson’s wife, was acquitted. None of the defendants testified.

The appellant Mellenberger contends that, if the evidence discloses that he obtained money from Miss Tyler through the employment of false pretenses she was a particeps criminis and that, therefore, he should have been acquitted. The appellant Thompson argues that the state presented no evidence indicating that he had any connection with the crime described in the indictment.

A brief review of the evidence is the following: November 26, 1938, Miss Tyler was an employee in the Depoe Bay Tavern in which was kept and used a gambling device known as a punchboard. The parties agree that the operation of this board constituted a violation of our laws and cite $ 14-801, Oregon Code 1930. The board had provision for 1440 punches. Its patrons paid 10 cents for each play. A punch forced from the board a slip of paper bearing a number. Upon the face of the board was a statement that the following were the winning numbers and prizes:

101,102 $10.00 105.106 $ .50
102.103 .50 106.107 .50
103.104 .50 107.108 .50
104.105 .50 108.109 .50

November 26, 1938, about noon, Thompson entered the tavern and, after paying 10 cents to Miss Tyler, punched from the board a number. It won nothing, and he then left. Two hours later Mellenberger, who had never been in the place before, entered and paid for four punches. Miss Tyler testified: “About the [236]*236third punch he opened it up and said it was the winning number, calls for $10.00, and pushes it out towards me.” Miss Tyler hesitated for a few moments while she compared the slip of paper which Mellenberger had handed to her with another slip which had won a previous prize. Mellenberger evidenced impatience during the delay and declared that he had won the $10.00 prize “fair and square.” He demanded its payment. Shortly Miss Tyler handed to him $10 and he then left. The occurrence attracted the attention of H. O. Youngblood and D. K. Smith, who, upon Mellenberger’s departure, examined the slip of paper which he had handed to Miss Tyler and discovered — at least they so said — -that the number had been altered so as to make it read 101,102. Upon this discovery Miss Tyler, Youngblood and Smith began a search for Mellenberger. The latter had already left Depoe Bay, but the three after driving 14 miles north along the Coast highway found Mellenberger and the other two defendants in another tavern. Young-blood thus described what occurred when he spoke to the defendants: “I tried to talk to .them, but they wouldn’t talk. They just said it was too bad and got in the car and pulled right out.” At this point Miss Tyler left the car of her two companions in order to seek a police officer. Youngblood and Smith followed the automobile in which the defendants proceeded north. At Otis, 19 miles from Depoe Bay, a police officer was encountered and after Smith and Young-blood had told him what had happened he took in pursuit of the three defendants. He arrested them some distance beyond Otis. The defendants were brought to Newport where a search was made of their car. The evidence does not indicate which of the three owned the car nor which was its driver. In the car were found [237]*237hundreds, if not thousands, of small pieces of paper which had been punched out of punchboards. In it were also found an ink eraser and several rubber type. The evidence indicates that the paper presented by Mellenberger to Miss Tyler had been altered.

The defendants argue that Miss Tyler was particeps criminis in the commission of the crime averred in the indictment, and that therefore the state cannot maintain this prosecution. Their brief says: “A case that is on ‘all fours’ with the case at bar is State v. Alexander, 76 Or. p. 329.”

State v. Alexander was an appeal by the state from an order of the circuit court which sustained a demurrer to an indictment which charged that the defendant, an Indian woman, obtained $1,150 from a man named Bannister by untruthfully representing to him that she had a lawful right to lease, without first obtaining the approval of a federal official, a tract of land owned by her and located in the Umatilla Indian Reservation. A federal statute provided that land in the reservation was held in trust for the allottee by the federal government, and that transactions in regard to it were null and void unless approved by the reservation superintendent or the Secretary of the Interior. Another federal law rendered it a misdemeanor for anyone to induce an Indian to execute a contract or other instrument transferring an interest in his land. In sustaining the circuit court’s order, this court, after mentioning these statutes, declared that Bannister was as much charged with their knowledge as was the defendant. Next, the decision, referring to Bannister, stated:

[238]*238“He was particeps criminis in the fraud to obtain these lands in violation of the particular language of the statute, which was a violation of the criminal law.”

The opinion mentioned People v. Stetson, 4 Barb. 151, State v. Crowley, 41 Wis. 271, 22 Am. Rep. 719, and McCord v. People, 46 N. Y. 470, but no others. Prom the Stetson and McCord decisions the opinion quoted statements that statutes penalizing the use of fraud as means of obtaining money were enacted for the protection of innocent persons and not for the benefit of participes criminis. Prom the Crowley decision a similar observation was quoted and also a statement that the court (Wisconsin) had been unable to find any decision holding that a transaction in which the defrauded party’s conduct was not lawful was within the purview of such legislation. State v. Alexander also quoted the concluding part of the Crowley decision in which the court said that the New York decisions were “supported by better reasons,” and that it was adopting the New York rule “with reluctance because the acts of the defendants as disclosed by the evidence were outrageous and indefensible and the perpetrators richly merit punishment.”

It will be noticed that the Alexander decision developed two reasons for its conclusion: (1) Bannister was charged with knowledge of the federal statutes which withheld from Indians the right to lease their land without the approval of the appropriate federal officials; therefore, he had notice that the defendant’s representations were unwarranted. (2) He was a particeps criminis with the defendant, and therefore her 'illegal conduct shielded him.

If the fact that a defrauded party’s conduct in the •-challenged transaction in any way violated a criminal [239]*239law excuses the defendant, then the judgment now before us must be reversed. That being true, we studied State v. Alexander very carefully. We observe that that appeal was presented to this court without oral argument. Professor Orfield, in his excellent volume entitled Criminal Appeals in America (p. 158), declares :

“One of the -most important stages of a criminal appeal is the oral argument.

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Bluebook (online)
95 P.2d 709, 163 Or. 233, 128 A.L.R. 1506, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mellenberger-or-1939.