195 P. 456 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *429 The defendant was found guilty of embezzlement upon an indictment; was adjudged thereon to be imprisoned in the state prison, and appeals from this judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.
The indictment charges that the defendant Riccardi was bailee of one Alberto Rolatti; that by virtue of his employment as such bailee there came into the possession, care, custody, and control of him, the said Riccardi, one thousand dollars in lawful money of the United States of America and of the value of one thousand dollars in gold coin of the United States of America, and of the personal property of the said Alberto Rolatti, and that he, the said Riccardi, "after the said personal property had come into his possession, care, custody, and control, as aforesaid, did then and there . . . willfully, unlawfully, fraudulently, and feloniously convert, embezzle and appropriate the same to his own use and to uses and purposes not in the due and lawful execution of such trust as such bailee as aforesaid."
This indictment is attacked as not complying with the provisions of section
"Section
[1] It is true, as claimed, that the indictment charges the conversion by Riccardi as bailee, and that the term "bailee" is not found in section
The indictment contains all of the specifications necessary to charge the defendant under section
[3] The defendant claims that the evidence is not sufficient to support the verdict; that there is in the record only slight evidence supporting the charge of embezzlement. He admits a conflict in the evidence, but contends that the verdict finds support only in the evidence of Rolatti, the prosecuting witness, and that as Rolatti was shown to have been twice convicted of a felony his evidence is discredited to such an extent as not to furnish more than a slight proof of guilt. The evidence of Rolatti, if believed, clearly establishes the guilt of Riccardi. It is simple and may be briefly narrated: Rolatti was arrested for a felony in March, 1918, and lodged in the city prison of the city and county of San Francisco. He was presently called to the reception-room of the prison and there met Riccardi. Rolatti did not know Riccardi at all, but the latter introduced himself as a lawyer, and told Rolatti that the latter was in great trouble. After Riccardi had advised Rolatti not to employ an American lawyer on the ground that the latter would not be able to assist him, the two agreed upon a fee of four hundred dollars for Riccardi for his services in the latter's behalf. Rolatti had fifteen hundred dollars in bank. Riccardi received all of the fifteen hundred dollars of Rolatti's money. One thousand of this was retained by Riccardi for the purpose of procuring the release of Rolatti on bail, and was obtained upon a representation of Riccardi, who informed Rolatti that he could be liberated on bail in the sum of one thousand dollars in cash. Rolatti had this sum on deposit in the bank. *432 Riccardi, under Rolatti's direction, obtained the latter's bank book from a suitcase belonging to Rolatti. Riccardi thereupon showed Rolatti what purported to be an order for bail signed by a police magistrate of the city and county of San Francisco. Thereupon Rolatti signed and delivered to Riccardi a blank check. Riccardi presented this check to the bank. When so presented it was filled out for one thousand dollars, and marked on the face in Riccardi's handwriting "Paid as fee." The check was cashed, and Riccardi did not use the money to procure the release of Rolatti on bail, but claimed at the trial that the one thousand dollars was paid as a fee and not as bail money. Riccardi kept the one thousand dollars and also the other five hundred dollars.
It is clear from the foregoing, if the jury believed the testimony, that the complaining witness Rolatti intrusted the one thousand dollars of his funds to the defendant for the sole purpose of being deposited as bail money. That it was never used for this purpose, but was appropriated by the defendant Riccardi, is conceded by the very nature of his defense, wherein he admits that he received fifteen hundred dollars from the complaining witness Rolatti, but contends that he so received it upon an understanding had with the complaining witness that it was to be his fee. There was certain testimony which, if believed, corroborated Riccardi in this contention. The jury, however, evidently rejected this evidence of the defense, and chose to believe that of the prosecuting witness to the effect that the money was not paid to the defendant Riccardi as a fee, but was delivered to Riccardi to be deposited as bail. There was also the evidence of circumstances, and some evidence arising out of the contradictory nature of the testimony of Riccardi, which tended to corroborate Rolatti. The evidence was sufficient, if believed by the jury, to sustain the verdict. It was the function of the jury to pass upon the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witness Rolatti.
It is conceded by the appellant that there is a conflict in the evidence, and that upon such conflict this court will not interfere with the verdict of the jury where the evidence is substantial as contradistinguished from slight. [4] The fact that Rolatti had twice been convicted of a felony should have been given great weight by the jury in determining *433 his credibility; nevertheless, to the jury is left by the law in such case the question of determining whether or not the testimony of the witness with his felonious record was to be believed as against that of Riccardi and other witnesses. The jury saw the witness Rolatti; had an opportunity to observe the other witnesses; and upon the jury the law lays the burden of determining whether Rolatti or Riccardi should be credited. If any other rule obtained, the felon would be helpless against any rogue who might find himself in a position to swindle him. The evidence of Rolatti cannot be said to have been slight as a matter of law, and the question whether it should be believed was one for the jury. That body determined it against Riccardi, and he must abide that determination.
[5] The appellant also contends that the evidence, if believed, established the commission by him of grand larceny and not of embezzlement. This contention is based upon an admission that the defendant obtained the one thousand dollars through the instrumentality of a forged, false, and fictitious order admitting the latter to bail in the sum of one thousand dollars. No evidence was introduced, however, to show whether the paper, purporting to be an order for bail, submitted to Rolatti, was forged or false. Neither the justice whose name was attached to it, nor anyone else, was called to testify that such order, or the signature of the magistrate thereon, was false or forged. The paper itself was not in existence; and there is nothing whatever in the evidence to show or indicate that the order was not genuine.
[6] The appellant further contends, at least inferentially, that what he embezzled, if anything, was the check and not the cash. But he did with the check exactly what it was intended he should do; he cashed it; and the obtaining of the check was only a circumstance in the chain of facts. He embezzled, if anything, the cash and not the check. As to when the defendant formed the intent to convert the money to his own use, the evidence was quite sufficient to support the conclusion that it was after the money came into his possession that he formed and executed that intent. A similar construction was given to similar evidence in People v. Gordon,
The appellant argues that he was not the bailee of the money but only of the check, if anything. As the record above quoted shows, he obtained the money for a specific purpose. He was the agent of Rolatti to execute that purpose by depositing the money as bail, and as such he was the bailee of the money until it was deposited. He failed to so deposit it; he converted it to his own use, and claims it was paid as a fee, a claim which the jury discarded. He was the bailee under such circumstances not only of the check, but of the money. (People v. Walker,supra.)
[7] It is contended that the instructions in the case were incorrect because the court, so it is said, did not instruct the jury concerning embezzlement by a bailee, nor give any instructions predicated on section
[8] It is claimed that the trial judge committed prejudicial misconduct in stating that a lawyer who acts as his own attorney has a fool for a client. The statement of this adage of lawyers, which has in it as much of truth as of humor, could have done the defendant no harm, because the judge expressly disavowed any personal imputation of folly to the defendant.
[9] The refusal of the court to give the instruction offered by the defendant, that a preponderance of the evidence is sufficient to establish a fact favorable to the defendant's innocence, was not error. In the first place, the proposition as stated might have misled the jury into supposing that the defendant must establish his innocence by a preponderance of the evidence; whereas all that was necessary to his acquittal was that the evidence, taken as a whole, should leave a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury as to his guilt. Courts should be careful of giving such instructions, even when requested by the defendant. The court, upon the other hand, clearly instructed the jury with emphasis that the defendant need prove nothing; that all presumptions were in his favor, and that every fact necessary to a conviction must be established by the people *435 beyond a reasonable doubt. This was all that should have been given in the way of instructions.
The other strictures upon the conduct of the trial judge are not such, we think, as to call for comment. If they were, there is no record of any exception to them; or if there is such record, our attention has not been called to them, and no request was made of the court to instruct the jury to disregard them. [10] A trial court is entitled, if it is the intention of counsel to rely upon an appeal on the conduct of the trial court, to have the alleged transgressions called to the trial judge's attention, so that he may in a proper case, by an admonition to the jury or by some other suitable mode, immediately remove the prejudice possibly caused thereby.
[11] It is finally contended that the plea of the defendant was not stated to the jury. The clerk's minutes of the trial contain these words: "Thereupon an indictment was read and the plea stated to the jury by the Clerk." In the reporter's transcript the following appears:
"A jury having been selected and sworn to try the case, the following proceedings were had:
"Clerk, to the Court: Shall I read the indictment, your honor?
"The Court: Yes.
"The Clerk thereupon read the indictment."
Under the circumstances, in support of the verdict, we must hold that the clerk's version, showing that the clerk's duty was properly performed, is controlling.
The judgment is affirmed.
Waste, P. J., and Richards, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on February 14, 1921.
All the Justices concurred. *436