Robert W. Phillips and Thomas P. Rose were convicted of two counts of grand theft and one count of conspiracy to commit grand theft. Both appealed and presented a joint opening brief. However, on April 14, 1960, this court upon Rose’s request dismissed the appeal as to him. We now have before us the appeal of Phillips.
He claims the evidence to be insufficient to sustain the conviction of conspiracy (Count I) or to sustain the convictions of grand theft. (Counts II and III.) The basis of the convictions is the obtaining from one Barz his equity in certain real property through false pretenses. In addition to the attack upon the sufficiency of the evidence appellant Phillips claims error in (1) the court’s instruction concerning the responsibility of one who joins an existing conspiracy, (2) error in receiving certain testimony designed to show common plan, scheme and design, and (3) error in refusing certain instructions concerning common scheme and design. We have concluded that appellant’s points are not well taken.
So far as sufficiency of the evidence is concerned we must deal with a reporter’s transcript of 3,186 pages and briefs aggregating 295 pages. Having found the evidence to be sufficient we are not under obligation to review the same in an effort to convince counsel or others of the soundness of our conclusion.
Pores
v.
Purity Milk Co.,
We have examined the evidence in the light of the rules laid down in
People
v.
Daugherty,
Count II charges Phillips and Rose with grand theft (Pen. Code, § 487, subd. 1), through inducing Peter Barz and Aurora Barz to part with their equitable interest in real property of a value exceeding $200, which inducement was brought about by false pretenses. Peter Barz owned the Shore Motel representing an investment of $95,000, and advertised it for sale. He thus met appellant Phillips who was engaged in dealing in real estate. Phillips endeavored without success to interest Barz in various properties, including Holiday Motel, an orange grove, a Colorado River ranch, a Russian River resort, a Chinchilla farm and a Clear Lake resort. Finally he offered a three-way deal which Barz accepted and which involved Rex Dettre’s obtaining the Shore Motel,
On February 12, 1954, Phillips was informed that the second trust deed on Rancho Motel, upon which he and one Lindemann had a third lien, had been foreclosed. He thereupon asked Barz to come to his office. Barz had previously complained, “I did not receive any payment which I was supposed to receive on the 1st of January. I did not receive the two thousand dollars that I was supposed to receive on the 10th of January. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘be patient; everything is going to straighten out by itself. ’ . . . ‘Well, I hope so, because I am broke, I have got to have some money. ’ That was that.” When Barz arrived on February 13th and asked for the money, Phillips said: “ ‘I haven’t got the money, but you can get it in a couple of days. ’ ‘ On what ? ’ I said to him. He said, ‘On the Rancho Motel,’ he said. Then I said to him, ‘I thought you were going to give me the trust deed on the Hopi.’ He said, ‘But this is the better,’ he said, ‘and all you have to do,’ he said, ‘is just sign this paper that you accept this trust deed. In a couple of days the local bank is going to refinance that motel and you are going to get the full amount what the trust deed calls for.' ” Barz signed, and Phillips said: “ ‘In a few days everything will be straightened up, then you are going to get the $10,000.00,’ or whatever the amount of the trust deed called for.” Thereupon Barz took over a $10,000 third trust deed on the Rancho Motel. Upon returning home he found a letter advising him of the fact that the second mortgage on the Rancho Motel had been foreclosed. He telephoned Phillips, saying: “ ‘Tomorrow morning I am coming over to your office and see if you can repair it.’ I said, ‘Up to now I trusted you wholly,’ I says, ‘but from now on I doubt if you are honest,' and he repeated, he says, ‘ Come over to the office, maybe we can do something. ’ ” “ Mr. Phillips told me that there must be some misunderstanding because the local bank was going to refinance and I was going to get my money in full, so to be patient, and that the following day I shall go to his office and he is going to explain it to me more in detail. ’ ’ When seen on the following day Phillips “said there must be some misunderstanding. He said, ‘Don’t worry,' he says, ‘we are going to take care of it and stop the foreclosure and have the thing refinanced. ’ . . . Then I said to him, ‘Well, let’s forget the whole thing, and give me the original trust deed that you promised me from the Hopi House.’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘maybe we can work it out.’ ” Then
Barz relied upon the various representations, express and implied, made to him by Phillips. It is not essential that he rely upon them exclusively. “The false pretense or representation must have materially influenced the owner to part with his property, but the false pretense need not be the sole inducing cause.”
(People
v.
Ashley,
Count III. After Phillips told Barz he could not give him the Hopi House trust deed as above related, Barz brought a lawyer, Mr. Pitts, into the situation. He told Phillips, among other things: “ ‘You’d better do better here with Mr. Barz because everything that is here, I can’t make from head to tail.’ ” Phillips offered “ ‘to reverse the Clear Lake resort to Mr. Barz.’ ” Pitts said: “ ‘Well, at least it is close by, you can go over and look at it, and it will be better than in Texas with all this paper that is not worth the ink it is written on. ’ ’ ’ Phillips declared that he had a first mortgage of $30,000 against the resort and was willing to wipe it out and make an exchange for it. “So I told him all the trust deeds I got, I would give him, and he would give me the Clear Lake. . . . Mr. Phillips said he is going to make an
At this point Rose was introduced into the conspiracy (discussed
infra)
as an active participant. About February 19, 1954, Barz called Phillips saying he was worrying because his lawyer and the Merced [Mercedes] bank had told him “the frozen bank in Merced, was also in foreclosure.” Phillips opined it could not be as he knew nothing about it. When Barz remarked that he was coming over tomorrow Phillips replied: “ [H]e said, ‘you come over there. I got something good for you, some good news for you. ’ ’ ’ When Barz arrived on the 20th Phillips said, “ ‘Don’t worry, don’t worry anything about it, I got a rich man in the next office.' ” “I says that I was very much worrying about it, worrying about what the lawyer told me, and I said I was so upset I did not want to see my 30 years of hard labor disappear into thin air. And he calmed me down, ‘Don’t worry,’ he says, ‘next door in the main office,’ he said, ‘this man is a millionaire,’ he says, ‘He is very much interested about your—about the freezer because he used to have a freezer himself, and he wants to make a present to his brother-in-law. ’ ” Barz was then introduced to Rose who in Phillips’ presence made a proposal to exchange Wawona Lodge at Big Bear Lake for the trust deeds held by Barz, saying, “ ‘I have got the motel so-and-so,’ he said, ‘I am willing to make an exchange with your trust deeds because I know all about the freezer plant and I want to make a present to my brother-in-law, which he is a butcher by trade. ’ ” But Barz replied: “ ‘ I am not interested because I have got my head full already with motel. ’ ’ ’ Later, in April, Barz met with Rose and Dettre in Phillips’ office. Phillips said “that Mr. Rose has got a lodge, Malibu Lodge, which consists of a restaurant and a few cabins, it is a beautiful location, that I should go there and take a look, that it was a going concern. . . . He said that he had a good income and that he hated to part but there was some difference between Mrs. Rose and the present tenants, that they couldn’t get together, that is the reason they wanted to get rid of it. ... I said, ‘If it is
Count I charges conspiracy between Phillips, Rose, Gluskin, Ryan and others, to commit the crime of grand theft. Overt act number 6 alleged in the indictment is the obtaining of the agreement for exchange of the Shore Motel, and number 11 is obtaining the exchange agreement upon the Malibu Lodge.
“The gist of a criminal conspiracy is a corrupt agreement of two or more persons to commit an offense prohibited by statute, accompanied by some overt act in furtherance of the objects of the agreement. [Citations.] The existence of the conspiracy may be established by circumstantial evidence. [Citation.] The agreement may be inferred from the acts and conduct of the defendants in mutually carrying out a common purpose in violation of the statute. [Citations.] It is not necessary that the overt acts be criminal. [Citation.] If such acts are done as a step toward the furtherance of the conspiracy they are
“If in their endeavors to achieve the same end, the defendants pursued a common purpose by their several, respective acts, each contributing his part, the jury is warranted in concluding that all were involved in a conspiracy to effect a common object.”
(People
v.
Frankfort,
It is not necessary that all the alleged conspirators be found guilty, but it is enough that unlawful concert of action on the part of two of them be established.
(People
v. Calhoun,
Appellant complains of an instruction given to the effect that one who joins an existing conspiracy “is liable for every act, and is bound by the acts and declarations of each and all the conspirators, done or made in pursuance and furtherance of the said conspiracy.” (CALJIC Instruction No. 932.) This instruction was held in
People
v.
Weiss,
“It is settled in this state, however, that except when it shows merely criminal disposition [citations], evidence that is relevant is not excluded because it reveals the commission of an offense other than that charged. ‘The general tests of the admissibility of evidence in a criminal case are; . . . does it tend logically, naturally, and by reasonable inference, to establish any fact material for the people, or to overcome any material matter sought to be proved by the defense ? If it does, then it is admissible, whether it embraces the commission of another crime or does not, whether the other crime be similar in kind or not, whether it be part of a single design or not.' ”
(People
v.
Peete,
The foregoing remarks apply to the evidence of Elizabeth K. Jones, Helen Beilsten and Daisy Storms. That of Fred Packard relates only to uncompleted deals between the witness and Phillips and is entirely innocuous. John Plalberg merely testified to his appraisal of the Lake Wood Resort, which testimony does not remotely fall within the Albertson doctrine.
Finally, complaint is made of the court’s refusal to give two proffered instructions concerning proof of other offenses. The following instruction, modeled on CAL JIG 33, was given: 11 Evidence was offered in this case for the purpose of showing that the defendants made similar representations concerning the properties which are the subjects of the grand theft counts in this indictment. This evidence [was] presented by the witnesses, George D. Elliott, Fred M. Packard, Elizabeth K. Jones, Helen Beilsten, John Holberg, and Sergeant Daisy Storms.
“Such evidence was received for a limited purpose only: not to prove distinctive offenses or continual criminality, but for such bearing, if any, as it might have on the question whether the defendants are innocent or guilty of the crimes charged against them in this action. You are not permitted to consider that evidence for any other purpose, and as to that purpose you must weigh such evidence as you do all other in the case.
“The value, if any, of such evidence depends on whether or not it tends to show that there existed in the minds of the defendants a plan, scheme, system or design into which fitted the commission of the offenses for which they are on trial. ’ ’
This covers the subject of defendant’s requested instructions as far as they correctly state the law. However, both were properly refused because they contain improper versions of the governing rule. Specifically, one of them, number 27, contains the following language: “Before you can consider such evidence for any purpose, you must find that the trails-
The authorities above quoted and cited establish the erroneous nature of the restrictions contained in these passages. There was no error in the refusal of the said proposed instructions.
The appeal is taken from the “judgment and sentence” which are one, constituting the judgment.
(People
v.
Perkins,
The judgment is affirmed.
Fox, P. J., and Nourse, J. pro. tem., * concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied December 6, 1960.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
