219 P. 756 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1923
This cause was prosecuted under an indictment by the grand jury for conspiracy. The action was never tried as to defendant Cook and was dismissed as to defendants Breitkreutz and Cullen. The jury disagreed as to the guilt or innocence of defendant Tune, and defendants Currier and M. C. Barnard were acquitted. Defendants Dunn, Dennison, and W. L. Barnard were convicted and each appeals from the judgment of conviction. There is also an appeal from each of the orders denying the respective motions of the convicted defendants for a new trial.
The portion of the indictment alleging the formation of the conspiracy, with immaterial matters indicated by ellipses, is in the following language:
"The defendants . . . are accused by the grand jury . . . of the crime of conspiracy to commit a felony committed . . . as follows, to wit:
"That . . . the said defendants did willfully, unlawfully, fraudulently, feloniously and corruptly conspire, combine, confederate and agree together and each with the other that they would procure the charter of a corporation known as the Los Angeles Kern River Improvement Company and all of the stock of said corporation which said corporation was then and there wholly insolvent and change the name of said corporation to the Huntington-Hawthorne Oil Gas Company and change the par value of the stock of the said Los Angeles Kern River Improvement Company from One Dollar ($1.00) per share to Ten Cents (10) per share, and change the number of shares of said corporation from Five Hundred Thousand (500,000) to Five Million (5,000,000) shares and to represent and pretend to the public *564 to whom they then and there and thereafter were intending to offer stock for sale that the said Los Angeles Kern River Improvement Company was then and there possessed of and owned assets and bills receivable in the sum of One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,000.00), and that by reason of the said Los Angeles Kern River Improvement Company owning the said assets of One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,000.00), the same would be used by its successor, the Huntington-Hawthorne Oil Gas Company for the drilling of oil wells, one of which was to be drilled upon certain oil leases near the town of Moneta . . . and the other on an oil lease at and near the town of Hawthorne . . ., both of the said leases being the property of the Huntington-Hawthorne Consolidated Oil Company, an unincorporated association theretofore organized and controlled by the said defendants. The rights and interests in and to said leases and the properties of the said Huntington-Hawthorne Consolidated Oil Company was divided into Two Million Five Hundred Thousand (2,500,000) units, about Two Million (2,000,000) of which said units had theretofore been sold and issued . . .; that the said Two Million (2,000,000) units so theretofore issued were to be received from unit holders or owners presenting them and were to be received and the stock of the corporation issued therefor on the basis of One (1) share of stock of the corporation known as the Huntington-Hawthorne Oil Gas Company of the par value of Ten (10) cents for each unit held by unit holders in the Huntington-Hawthorne Consolidated Oil Company so presented and offered to be converted into such corporation stock and that the trustee for the benefit of the said unit holders and then and there one William F. Welling, who was then and there under the domination and control of the defendants, W. L. Barnard and Joseph V. Cullen, would assign and set over to the said Huntington-Hawthorne Oil Gas Company all of the leases, properties and rights of the said Huntington-Hawthorne Consolidated Oil Company and the unit holders holding units of ownership in and to said Huntington-Hawthorne Consolidated Oil Company to the said Huntington-Hawthorne Oil Gas Company, and that as a consideration for the said assignment, the said defendants would, as a part of said agreement and plan to defraud the public and to *565 defraud the unit holders theretofore purchasing units in the Huntington-Hawthorne Consolidated Oil Company, set aside and directed [sic] that One Million (1,000,000) shares of said stock would be set aside for delivery to such unit holders who presented their units in the Huntington-Hawthorne Consolidated Oil Company for conversion into the stock of the Huntington-Hawthorne Oil Gas Company, and further that they, the said defendants, as a part of the said conspiracy, scheme and plan so entered into and agreed upon by the said defendants as aforesaid, willfully and feloniously, corruptly and fraudulently then and there agreed as a part of the said scheme and plan to procure one L. H. Scott, who was then and there wholly insolvent, to execute and deliver to the said defendants Thirteen (13) promissory notes of the aggregate face value of One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,000.00), three (3) of said notes being for the sum of Twenty-five Thousand Dollars ($25,000.00) each, being dated March 19th, 1921, and Six (6) of said notes being dated March 26th, 1921, four (4) of which being for the apparent face value of Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00) each, two (2) of the apparent face value of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00) each, and four (4) of said notes being dated March 29th, 1921, three (3) of which were for the face value of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00) each and One (1) of the face value of Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00), all and each of said notes being signed by the said L. H. Scott, and upon the understanding and agreement with the said L. H. Scott that he would not be held responsible for the payment of said notes, nor would he be expected to pay them, and that the said defendants and agents employed by them would represent and pretend to the public and the unit holders of the Huntington-Hawthorne Consolidated Oil Company that the said Huntington-Hawthorne Oil Gas Company then and there was financed and had money on hand sufficient to drill a well upon the property and leases heretofore mentioned at Moneta, . . . and to drill and complete an oil well upon the lease heretofore mentioned near the town of Hawthorne . . ., and with the intent upon their part to deceive the State Corporation Commissioner of the State of California having supervision of the sale of corporate securities in the State of California and brokers selling such *566 securities, to deceive the said Corporation Commissioner into believing that the said Huntington-Hawthorne Oil Gas Company was a solvent corporation and were then and there able to carry out its contracts and representations made to the public, and as a part of said common plan, scheme and conspiracy aforesaid and to deceive those of the public inquiring as to the assets of the corporation and said defendants agreed and entered it upon the minutes of the said corporation that the said payment of the notes aggregating One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,000.00) was secured by certain collateral security, to wit, Three Million (3,000,000) shares of the capital stock of the Huntington-Hawthorne Oil Gas Company; it was further agreed as a part of said common scheme and plan that One Million (1,000,000) shares of the capital stock of said corporation should be divided up among the said defendants without payment upon their part, and that the said defendants should sell the stock of said Huntington-Hawthorne Oil Gas Company, and that where the stock of said corporation which was represented to be attached as collateral security was sold for money that five (5) cents only of the sums which said stock was sold for would go for the benefit of the corporation, and the balance would be taken by the said defendants for their own use and benefit, and it was then and there a part of said common scheme and plan as aforesaid that only such stock for the benefit of such corporation would be sold as would be required by the said defendants to pay the expenses of advertising and sale of said stock, and such other sums as the said defendants might consider would be an appropriate charge against the corporation."
The enactment which in this state denounces the crime of conspiracy, section
Appellants make the contention that the indictment does not state a public offense with that certainty which is requisite to the validity of a true bill found by the grand jury. More specifically, the point made is that the indictment attempts to state several offenses, with the result that the persons indicted are not by its language apprised of the fact that they are charged with any particular one. The indictment was demurred to, not only on the general ground, but on the ground of uncertainty as well. Appellants, or at least some one of them, see in the indictment an attempt to charge them with each of the following crimes: First, a conspiracy to obtain money and property by and through the commission of the crime of obtaining money or property by false pretenses, which latter crime is defined by Penal Code, section
It is evident from a casual examination of the indictment that it contains allegations tending toward a charge of the commission of each of the seven crimes tabulated above, some of those allegations going but a little distance toward a complete charge, others proceeding to greater lengths. These circumstances place before us, as a question for our consideration: Is the indictment so uncertain that it did not apprise the persons charged that they were to be tried for the commission of any single and particular crime?
In making answer to this question it is interesting to note the view of the indictment entertained in the trial court, by both the district attorney and the trial judge, as contrasted with that advanced by the attorney-general on this appeal and already mentioned. At the request of the district attorney the jury was told, in an instruction which we shall designate as A, that the defendants were charged "with criminal conspiracy, a felony," and that "the particular offense charged against the defendants is a violation of section
It will be observed that these instructions reflect the view that the indictment contained language tending toward a preferment of several of the charges already listed by us under seven numbers, that is to say, those designated by us as the first, second, fourth, fifth, and sixth seen in the indictment by the appellants, and possibly the third also. Of these the first and second are touched by instruction A, the fourth and fifth by instruction B, the sixth by instruction C, and some language in instruction B appears to contemplate the third. It is especially to be observed as to the charges designated first and second that instruction A *570
paraphrases subdivision 4 of section
Appellants insist that there is a further uncertainty, and in effect an insufficiency, in the indictment. Considering the pleading as a charge of conspiracy to obtain money by the commission of the crime of obtaining money by false pretenses — and it appears to us to bear that construction more readily than any other — appellants insist that it is defective in that there is present in it no allegation as to the amount of money which the defendants conspired so to obtain. The importance of this omission is apparent when it is remembered that two separate and distinct schemes of punishment are provided by section
[2] We cannot avoid the conclusion that the indictment now before us is uncertain in two respects: First, in that it contains matter tending toward a charge of the commission of several offenses, and presents that matter in such manner as that the defendants were not advised that they were accused of the commission of any single and particular offense; second, that, if the charge be regarded as one denouncing a conspiracy to obtain money by the commission of the crime of obtaining money by false pretenses, the indictment is uncertain and defective in that it cannot be ascertained from its language whether the defendants are sought to be charged with a conspiracy punishable under the first or under the second scheme of punishment provided by section
In defending against the points made by appellants, the attorney-general advances a variety of arguments which do not apply under section
The judgment as to each of the appellants is reversed. Each order denying the motion of the respective appellants for a new trial is reversed.
Finlayson, P. J., and Craig, J., concurred.