THE PEOPLE, Respondent, v. GUS PHOTO, Appellant.
Crim. No. 612
Fourth Dist.
June 13, 1941
45 Cal. App. 2d 345
Moore, P. J., and McComb, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied by operation of law, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 11, 1941.
Earl Warren, Attorney-General, and Eugene M. Elson, Deputy Attorney-General, for Respondent.
GRIFFIN, J.—Appellant Gus Photo, also known as Constantine Photopoulos, and Pete Adams were each charged in separate informations with the crime of grand theft in that they did on November 14, 1940, wilfully and feloniously steal, take and carry away 398 boxes of oranges of the value of $398, the personal property of Mrs. J. A. Prescott. Gus Photo was also charged with a prior conviction of a felony which he admitted. After a plea of not guilty a jury was waived by both Photo and Adams. The two cases were consolidated for trial by stipulation. Both defendants were found guilty by the trial court and sentenced to state’s prison. From the judgment and the order denying them a new trial each has perfected a separate appeal. The facts involving each of the appellants may be thus summarized:
James Plakos resided in Los Angeles and was engaged in the business of buying and selling citrus fruits. He knew the appellant Photo and on November 10, 1940, at the latter’s request, he went with one Peter Regis and appellant Photo to Orange County with the end in view of obtaining oranges which Photo might purchase. These parties all called at the home of a Mrs. Prescott. Plakos went inside the house and found Mrs. Prescott to be ill in bed at the time. He had a conversation with her about oranges and thereafter came outside the house where Regis and Photo were waiting for him. Plakos told Photo that Mrs. Prescott knew somebody else who
“November 10, 1940. Sold to Constantine Photopoulos, address 2445 Clement Street, San Francisco. 500 (more or less) boxes of oranges at 75¢ per box. All oranges to be paid for before hauling from grove. (Signed) CONSTANTINE PHOTOPOULOS.”
And
“November 10, 1940. Received of Constantine Photopoulos $30.00 on oranges as down payment. Balance to be paid as they are picked not later than November 13, 1940. boxes “Signed F. R. HOLMES. “500/ (more or less) of oranges at 75¢ per box to be paid road side. “Signed F. R. HOLMES.”
Appellant Photo told Holmes that Mrs. Prescott was going to pick the oranges, and after some conversation they all left. Plakos went back to Mrs. Prescott’s home and had a conversation with her and then returned to Los Angeles. Upon arriving in Los Angeles Plakos phoned Mrs. Prescott and told her that Photo had told him to tell her not to wash the oranges; that she did not have the right equipment. Mrs. Prescott then said that she would take 25¢ a box in any event, whether she washed them or not, or she would not “give the fruit”. Plakos forwarded this information on to appellant Photo. Photo returned on November 11th and consulted with Mrs. Prescott, who was still ill in bed, about the oranges. Photo informed her he was the man who bought the oranges and wanted enough to make up 450 boxes. Photo then examined the fruit in the packing house. 40 boxes had been washed. The foreman and Photo returned to her room. He left a draft drawn on the Western Union for $125. $120 of it was to apply on the payment for the fruit. Holmes had previously refused to accept the check in payment for his fruit and referred Photo to Mrs. Prescott. Photo argued
F. J. Oxnard, assistant court reporter in Orange County, testified that he saw appellant Photo on November 14th in the court room in Santa Ana; that appellant Photo walked in and talked to him; that he asked how soon he could contact a Mr. Burke, an attorney; that he wanted the advice of an attorney and Oxnard told him that Burke was engaged in trying a case and that it would be an hour or so before he would be free to talk to him; that appellant Photo then told the witness that he had bought some oranges and that there was a dispute as to the price; that he claimed he had to pay so much and the other party was to pay so much; that he was anxious to get the advice of an attorney so he could take the load to San Francisco that night; that appellant Photo then asked him if he could impound the money with the sheriff for the amount that he was supposed to pay and take the fruit; and that Oxnard replied that he probably could and then afterwards fight it out as to the price. Appellant and Adams were not permitted to take the stand and testify at the trial upon advice of counsel. Although appellant’s brief recites the fact that Photo did go to the sheriff’s office and endeavor to impound some money and that the sheriff refused to accept it due to the fact that it was a civil case, the evidence does not disclose this fact. It was stipulated that no money was impounded with the sheriff. It was also
Some time after 9 p. m. on November 14th, Photo, with Adams, returned to the Prescott ranch. Photo had a duplicate set of keys for the truck. He drove the truck and oranges to Los Angeles. Adams drove the Chevrolet to that city. Adams then rode on the truck with Photo to San Francisco. Their arrest on the charges herein specified followed. On their return to Santa Ana they were questioned by the officers. Appellant Photo, it is claimed, stated that he had not taken Mrs. Prescott’s fruit; that he had taken his own fruit; that 25¢ a box was too much for handling it; that before leaving with the fruit he had consulted with an attorney in Santa Ana to get his advice on procedure before removing the fruit so he could keep out of trouble; that he wanted to put up a bond or cash equivalent to a bond; that he saw a man outside of the court room where Burke was then engaged in trial who told him that it was all right to go ahead and move the fruit, and let them make the first move; that he then started out for the Prescott ranch but had trouble with his car and didn’t arrive until later in the evening; that Adams was driving the car and when they arrived at the ranch appellant Photo had another key to the truck and Photo drove the truck out; that Adams drove the Chevrolet; that Photo was willing to pay for the fruit if Mrs. Prescott would cancel the charge of 25¢ a box for hauling and washing; and that with reference to the 16 boxes belonging to her and which the packing house man had loaded on the truck, he had made no deal to purchase any oranges from her.
Mrs. Prescott’s packing shed was about 400 feet back from her house and a road ran in front of the shed cutting through the premises to the highway. The truck was parked on this roadway in front of the shed and the fruit was loaded onto the truck while in this position. Upon this evidence the trial court found both defendants guilty as charged.
On a motion for new trial appellant offered, under the ground of newly discovered evidence, an affidavit showing that Mrs. Prescott did not, during all the times herein mentioned, have a license to act as either a produce dealer or a commission merchant, as required by
It is first argued: (1) That under the charge, appellant did not “take the property of another”; (2) that the oranges were fully paid for and were the property of appellant Photo; (3) that the only interest Mrs. Prescott could have had in and to the oranges purchased from Holmes was a special interest created by virtue of a lien under
The allegation in the information that appellants “took the personal property of another”, as that term is used in
People v. Eastman, 77 Cal. 171 [19 Pac. 266], involved the taking of a mare, which was pledged by the owner with another party for a disputed unpaid claim for wages. The defendant took the mare openly and without any concealment and pledged her to another party. The court there said: “It is one thing to take and carry off personal property with the intention to steal, and another to take it away under a mistaken idea of legal rights honestly entertained, . . .”
Felonious intent is an essence of the crime of larceny. The general rule stated in 36 C. J., section 105, page 764, is: “If one, in good faith, takes the property of another, believing it to be legally his own, or that he has a legal right to its possession, he is not guilty of larceny, although his claim is based on a misconception of the law or of his rights under it, for although ignorance of law and honest intentions cannot shield a man from civil liability for a trespass committed by him, yet they do protect him from criminal liability, by divesting the act of the felonious intent without which it cannot be a crime. It is necessary, however, in all cases that the claim of right to be a bona fide one, and not a mere cover for a felonious taking, and must be something more than a vague impression; it must amount to an honest conviction. Knowledge of the existence of an adverse claim by another person does not negative the existence of good faith.”
From the evidence it appears that Photo apparently took the fruit, under a claim of title in himself, and if done in good faith after receiving what he thought was legal advice though it might have been erroneous, a presumption arose in his favor that the taking lacked the elements necessary to constitute larceny. This theory is upheld in Groover v. State, 82 Fla. 427 [90 So. 473, 26 A. L. R. 375], and cases there cited. However, in view of the following determination this point becomes unnecessary to decide.
Respondent endeavors to uphold the felony conviction solely on the theory of the lien claimed by Mrs. Prescott on the Holmes fruit at the time of the alleged taking. All
It is therefore ordered that the judgment and order denying a new trial are and each is reversed.
Barnard, P. J., concurred.
MARKS, J., Concurring.—I concur.
I concur in the judgment and agree with that portion of the opinion which holds that Mrs. Prescott had waived her lien on the oranges by unconditionally delivering them to Photo when her agents loaded them on the truck.
The only lien Mrs. Prescott could have claimed on the oranges was under the provisions of
It is clear that Photo became the owner of the Holmes oranges when he paid for them in accordance with the terms of his written contract. Mrs. Prescott was never the owner of that fruit. Her lien, therefore, was extinguished when she delivered unconditional possession to Photo and it could not be revived by her subsequently taking possession of the property. (See, Davis v. Young, 75 Cal. App. 359; Covington v. Grant, 82 Cal. App. 749; Lundblade v. Pierce, 95 Cal. App. 192 [272 Pac. 329]; Jewett v. City Transfer & Storage Co., 128 Cal. App. 556 [18 Pac. (2d) 351]; C. I. T. Corp. v. Biltmore Garage, 3 Cal. App. (2d) (Supp.) 757 [36 Pac. (2d) 247].)
