151 P. 747 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1915
Defendant was convicted of the crime of obtaining property by false pretenses, contrary to the provisions of section
The information alleges that one George Yost, being the owner of seventeen tons of hay of the value of one hundred and fifty-three dollars in gold coin of the United States of America, delivered the same to the defendant under an agreement of purchase, receiving in payment a certain lease-note purporting to be secured upon two mules described therein. The misrepresentations of fact need not be recited herein, but they related to facts affecting the value of the note and the value of the mules. The verdict of the jury stated that "We the jury in the above-entitled action find the defendant Arthur Keach, guilty as charged in the information, and find the value of the property $150." *195
Appellant refers to section
The statement in the verdict concerning the value of the hay was an immaterial addition so far as the requirements of a verdict are concerned. (People v. Millan,
While the evidence of value of the hay obtained by the defendant from the witness Yost might well have been presented in a more definite form, we think that it is sufficient to support the verdict. The testimony shows an agreement of the defendant to buy a quantity of hay from Yost at the price of nine dollars per ton. Yost did not state the amount of the hay, except by saying that "there was supposed to be seventeen tons, more or less"; but other evidence of weights of different loads of the same hay, as weighed out in the course of the transactions described, shows that the total value at nine dollars per ton would be considerably in excess of fifty dollars, which is all that would be necessary for the purposes of this case. It has been held in a case involving the question of conversion of personal property that the defendant "having converted it to his own use, we think the price stipulated in the agreement is some evidence of the value of the property at the time of the conversion." (Lehmann v. Schmidt,
Appellant complains that the court erred in denying his motion to acquit the defendant "because of the fact the elements *196
of this crime have not been proved. To substantiate this crime it is necessary for four distinct averments to be proved (reading from section
No other point being suggested in support of the appeal, it is ordered that the judgment and order appealed from be and they are hereby affirmed.
James, J., and Shaw, J., concurred.