Opinion
— Aрpellant Marshall Edward Mikels was convicted on numerous charges of grand theft and the making of false financial statements; appellant Michael Gregory Counts was convicted on charges of receiving stolen property. All the charges against both appellants arose from multiple thefts of lumber from lumber companies. Apрellants raise numerous contentions of error.
We conclude there was no prejudicial error and affirm the judgments of conviction. In the published portion of this opinion, we hold that Mikels could properly be convicted of theft, on a theory of theft by false pretenses, despite the fact a security interest was retained in the stolen property by the victim; and that the abstruse technical question of whether this crime might also have been theft on a theory of larceny by trick could not result in reversal of the theft conviction.
I. Facts and Procedural History
Appellants were construction contractors who joined together in acts designed to steal lumber from lumber companies.
In early Februаry 1992, Mikels was in deep financial difficulties, and county records showed he owed more than $800,000 to creditors. He filed a petition for writ of mandate and request for stay with this court (Division Five) on February 18, 1992, seeking relief from creditors; we denied the petition the same day (Mikels v. Superior Court (Feb. 18, 1992) A056562 [nonpub. opn.]). Two days later, he filed for federal bankruptcy protectiоn.
In the days immediately before these events, Mikels ordered large amounts of lumber on credit from a number of different lumber companies, supposedly for use on a Caltrans job which in fact did not exist. Instead, *788 once the lumber was delivered to the supposed jobsite, Mikels moved the lumber and “sold” it for 50 cents on the dollar to his friend and partner, Counts. Counts hid the stolen goods in his lumberyard, and the identifying tags or markings which would have allowed it to be easily traced by the lumber companies were sanded off or removed. Counts planned to use the lumber to build fences for his own company, Peninsula Fence. Eventually, one of the lumber companies became suspicious and investigated; Mikels said hе had used up the lumber on various jobs; but the company’s representatives saw their lumber sitting in Counts’s lumberyard, together with a lot of other lumber stolen from other companies by the same methods. The company contacted the authorities.
Most of the stolen lumber was recovered, and charges were filed against appellants. Mikels was charged with four counts of grand theft by false pretenses. Mikels was also charged with three counts of making a false financial statement. Counts was charged with three instances of receiving stolen property, in violation of Penal Code 1 section 496.
After a jury trial at which the evidence summarized above was adduced, the jury returned verdicts which convictеd the appellants as charged, except the jury found that one of the charged thefts as to Mikels was in fact only an attempted theft. The trial court sentenced both appellants to probation. They timely appealed, and we ordered the appeals consolidated.
II. Discussion
A. Mikels’s Contentions
1. Theft by False Pretenses
Mikels contends one of the counts of grаnd theft, which pertained to the theft of lumber from Empire Lumber Company, should be reversed because Empire retained a security interest in the lumber. He claims the conviction should be reversed because the crime he committed was theft on a theory of larceny by trick, rather than theft by false pretenses. Mikels contends that since the viсtim retained a security interest, it could not have been intended that he acquire full and complete title, rather than mere possession, of the lumber. Mikels bases this argument in part upon his misinterpretation of language taken out of context from a recent decision by Division Three of this district,
People
v.
Curtin
(1994)
We reject this contention. A thief may be convicted of theft by false pretenses, even though a security interest is retained in the stolen goods by *789 the true owner. Our research shows that for at least the past 100 years, our Supreme Court and the Courts of Appeal have rejected similar claims that a retained security interest prevents the passage of title so as to convert a thеft by means of false pretenses to theft on a theory of larceny by trick. Nothing in Curtin, supra, alters this rule.
In the oldest case in which we can find a similar claim was made,
People
v.
Martin
(1894)
In another Victorian case,
People
v.
Bryant
(1898)
The high court relied upon
Bryant, supra,
and resolved a conflict in the case law to hold that one is guilty of theft by false pretenses, even though the
*790
victims still had an interest in the stolen property by virtue of being partners with the thief, in
People
v.
Jones
(1950)
The succeeding year, in
People
v.
Nor Woods
(1951)
These principles were invoked by the Second District in
People
v.
Aiken
(1963)
*791 Under these cases, Mikels was properly convicted of grand theft based upon false pretenses in connection with the Empire Lumber transaction, even though Empire retained a security interest in the lumber. Despite that security interest, obviously the victim intended Mikels to obtain, and he did obtain, sufficient title under California law to support a conviction for false pretenses.
We аre not cited to, and our own research has not discovered, any published California case which actually holds it is impossible to steal property by false pretenses when the property is also encumbered with a security interest. Mikels relies in part upon ambiguous dicta from a decision by the Fourth District, Division One, which has been ordered not to be published in the Official Reports. Obviously, the cited case is not persuasive authority.
Further, there are compelling policy considerations in favor of the rule enunciated by our Supreme Court and the Second District. It obviously would be irrational to hold that any item which is being bought on time and is the subject of a security interest is fair game fоr thieves who use false pretenses.
Moreover, Mikels’s reliance upon the decision of Division Three in Curtin, supra, 22 Cal.App.4th at pages 531-532 is also misplaced. Curtin concerned a situation contrapositive to this one; there, the defendant contended his conviction for theft on a theory of larceny by trick should be reversed because he had obtained title to the money, and his crime was in fact theft by false pretenses. While Mikels draws our attention to the Curtin court’s perhaps technical holding on this point, even if Curtin were correct, this would not aid him; Mikels is forced to argue illogically that a theft conviction must be reversed where the evidence in fact showed theft, which is not the proper interpretation of Curtin. Curtin reversed a theft conviction because the instruction as to larсeny by trick required the presence of evidence which did not exist in the record, and there was insufficient evidence of corroboration to sustain the conviction on a theory of false pretenses. (Ibid.) Corroboration was abundant in the present case, and Mikels does not argue to the contrary; it is also obvious from the record that he intended to permanently deprive the victims of their property through an unlawful taking.
Mikels also contends, again citing
Curtin, supra,
that reversal of a theft conviction is always required if the defendant is found guilty of theft on the wrong theory. However, Mikels reads much too broadly, and out of its true precedential context, the
Curtin
dictum that “the offense shown by the
*792
evidence must be one on which the jury was instructed and thus could hаve reached its verdict.” (
Moreover, the only California authority on this point, not cited in
Curtin,
squarely holds such an error is harmless. In
People
v.
North
(1982)
The defendant’s contention in
North
was stated as follows: “Because there was a transfer of both possession and title in the proceeds of the cashed checks, the court erred in instructing the jury on larceny by trick or device while refusing to instruct on obtaining property by false pretenses.” (
Presiding Justice Roth aptly rejected the defendant’s contention that he was entitled to reversal on those facts: “[Defendant’s] final contention hаs the complexion of merit but does not withstand analysis. Over his objection, the jury was instructed on larceny by trick or device even though obtaining property by false pretenses is a more accurate description of the crime committed. [<][] The necessity of corroboration distinguishes false pretenses from trick and device and adds to the burden of proof the People must carry. Corroboration was present at bench .... In
People
v.
Kagan
(1968)
We agree with North, despite the potential tension between the North holding and certain dicta in Curtin. Further, here the argument for harmless *793 error is even stronger than in North. In the present case, even under appellant’s theory, the error caused the People to carry the unnecessary burden of proving corroboration in order to establish false pretenses. It is impossible to understand how an error which increased the People’s evidentiary burden could have prejudiced appellant.
Nor is Mikels aided by another ambiguous dictum cited by the
Curtin
court, which is contained in the opinion of one justice pro tern, not concurred in by the other two justices, in
People
v.
Smith
(1984)
In Cаlifornia, the ancient common law distinctions between the theories of larceny by trick and theft by false pretenses no longer exist by statute; under section 484, there is simply one consolidated crime of theft, which the jury may find upon either theory, if there is an “unlawful[ taking]” (§ 952). As stated by our Supreme Court in
People
v.
Ashley
(1954)
It would obviously be very hard to explain why a theft conviction should be reversed on the grounds that the evidence showed the defendant was indeed guilty of theft, but would have been guilty of a differently denominated type of theft under a common law system which has been repealed by statute. In the words of Justice Traynor, “it is immaterial whether or not [the jurors] agreed as to the technical pigeonhole into which
*794
the theft fell.”
(Nor Woods, supra,
2., 3. *
B. Counts’s Contentions*
III. Disposition
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
King, J., and Phelan, J., † concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 15, 1995.
