State v. Vangen

433 P.2d 691, 72 Wash. 2d 548, 1967 Wash. LEXIS 830
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1967
Docket39464
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 433 P.2d 691 (State v. Vangen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Vangen, 433 P.2d 691, 72 Wash. 2d 548, 1967 Wash. LEXIS 830 (Wash. 1967).

Opinion

Hill, J.

The defendant, Dean Allen Vangen, appeals from a judgment of conviction after a jury verdict of guilty on five counts of first-degree forgery. He contends there was no forgery within the purview of the forgery statutes, RCW 9.44.010, 9.44.020, and 9.44.070; 1 and that his confession should not have been admitted into evidence because it was the fruit of a poisoned tree, i.e. an unlawful arrest.

The appellant, accompanied by a companion (Lincoln Brummett), had registered at the Holiday Inn (Spokane), hereafter referred to as Holiday, under the name of Elmer J. Johnson. He gave his address as “5833 Sheridan S., S. Mpls., Minn.” (Actual address, as testified to by Mr. Johnson, was 5833 Sheridan Avenue, South, Minneapolis, Minnesota.) The appellant had American Express, carte blanche, and other credit cards belonging to Elmer J. Johnson. During a 3-day sojourn at Holiday, which maintained a restaurant and bar as part of its accommodations, the appellant had signed restaurant and bar sales slips or “res *550 taurant checks” and “bar checks,” as Holiday chose to denominate them, as Elmer J. Johnson. Guests at the Holiday, in lieu of paying cash for food and drinks purchased, may sign the restaurant and bar slips or checks and the amount thereof is then placed on the guest’s account.

The five counts on which the appellant was convicted were based on three restaurant and two bar checks, and the appellant—conceding that he signed them and that he is not Elmer J. Johnson—urges that such checks do not constitute an instrument that can be made the basis of a forgery charge, i.e. that they are not a

writing or instrument by which any claim, privilege, right, obligation or authority, or any right or title to property, real or personal, is or purports to be, or upon the happening of some future event may be, evidenced, created, acknowledge [sic], transferred, increased, diminished, encumbered, defeated, discharged or affected, . . . or thing which may be the subject of forgery, shall be guilty of forgery in the first degree, and shall be punished by imprisonment in the state penitentiary for not more than twenty years. RCW 9.44.020

The same contention has heretofore been made and decisively answered contrary to the position taken by the appellant. See Annotation: “Signing credit charge or sales slip, as forgery.” 90 A.L.R.2d 822 (1963).

In People v. Searcy, 199 Cal. App. 2d 740, 743, 18 Cal. Rptr. 779 (1962), the court says:

Signing a credit sales slip constitutes an implied promise to pay for the merchandise described on the slip. The delivery of the merchandise (in this case, the gasoline and tires) is the consideration for the implied promise. Moreover, the stealing of the gasoline or tires would be larceny; hence the false signing of the implied promise to pay therefor is forgery.

The appellant attempts to draw a fine distinction between the restaurant and bar checks involved here, and “charge slips” or “credit slips.” The significance of the distinction eludes us. There is, however, such a “guest check” case squarely in point, People ex rel. Arter v. Foster, 199 Misc. 900, 104 N.Y.S.2d 39 (1951). It involves a guest at *551 “Runds Oyster Bar and Grill” who signed such a guest check as “R. Hichoh.” In answer to the contention that the so-called “guest check” could not be the subject of a forgery, the court said:

We cannot agree with this contention. The instrument forged by relator purported to be the act of one, “R. Hichoh” whose name was signed thereto by relator. If the instrument had been genuine, it would have operated to create a liability on the part of Mr. Hichoh to pay the amount of the check and also certainly purports to affect the property rights of the person whose name was forged. This writing alleged in the indictment on which the forgery is predicated would be operative, if genuine, and the facts sufficiently state a crime and the court had jurisdiction to render the judgment. (See People v. Drayton, 168 N.Y. 10; People v. Rising, 207 N.Y. 195.) (p. 902)

The bar and restaurant checks were well within the purview of RCW 9.44.020. Had the signature of Elmer J. Johnson been genuine, or had appellant been authorized to sign it, it would have evidenced an obligation on the part of Mr. Johnson, which he would subsequently have been required to pay. If the instrument itself did not create the obligation, it constituted an acknowledgment of an obligation already created at the time appellant placed his order for the food and beverages.

Another novel, but unconvincing, contention is that if the restaurant and bar checks were promises to pay, they were no more than the promises of the person who signed the slips to pay or make arrangements for their payment at the time he checked out of Holiday; and that, after all, they had never been presented to him for payment, and if they had been, they might have been paid or arrangements made for their payment.

It is urged that the state failed to prove the spurious nature of the instruments inasmuch “as the record is devoid of evidence that they were ever presented to anyone for payment.”

This contention must have been made with tongue in cheek in view of the evidence that the appellant and his *552 companion terminated their residence at Holiday without the formality of checking out, and owing their host almost $200.

When the appellant placed the name of Elmer J. Johnson on the instruments, they became spurious instruments.

It was the notification of the Spokane Police Department by Holiday that appellant and his companion had left without paying their bill which resulted in the unusual situation which gave the appellant the basis for the contention that his confession should not have been admitted into evidence. The information given by Holiday to the police led to a charge on the police records of defrauding an innkeeper.

The officers who made the arrest knew that the amount claimed by Holiday was about $200. They also knew something about the extent of appellant’s credit-card binge because his companion, Lincoln Brummett, had been arrested on a forgery charge and had “talked.” Indeed, the officers who arrested the appellant secured the information as to where he might be located from Brummett. These officers had knowledge of several felonies for which appellant might have been arrested; however, they erroneously assumed that defrauding an innkeeper of $200 was a felony 2 and advised the appellant that this was the offense for which he was being arrested.

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Bluebook (online)
433 P.2d 691, 72 Wash. 2d 548, 1967 Wash. LEXIS 830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vangen-wash-1967.