In Re Knight

144 P.2d 882, 62 Cal. App. 2d 582, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 853
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 1944
DocketCrim. 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 144 P.2d 882 (In Re Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Knight, 144 P.2d 882, 62 Cal. App. 2d 582, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 853 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

ADAMS, P. J.

Petitioner herein was convicted in Los Angeles, October 8, 1940, of the crime of robbery of the first degree and assault with a deadly weapon, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the State Prison. Seeking his release from such imprisonment by writ of habeas corpus, he contends that his conviction was obtained by the use of the testimony of one Alvin M. Cowart, whose testimony was perjured and was known by the prosecuting attorneys to be false at the time it was presented. The petition is accompanied by copies of affidavits of Roy Galbraith, a witness at the original trial, dated May 22, 1943, Selma K. Ellner, who was petitioner’s attorney at one stage of the proceedings prior to his trial, dated May 18, 1941, Alvin M. Cowart, dated October 1, 1940, and Tom O’Brien, a Deputy Sheriff of Los Angeles County, dated October 27, 1943.

The writ having issued, respondent Clyde I. Plummer, Warden of Folsom Prison, filed herein an answer and return denying that the testimony of Cowart given at Knight’s trial was false, or that it was given under duress, coercion, fraud or promise of reward. Said answer is supported by the affidavit of George H. Johnson, a Deputy District Attorney of Los Angeles County, who was in charge of the prosecution of Knight, the original of which affidavit has been filed herein, in which affiant alleges that at no time was it suggested to Cowart by him or by anyone with his knowledge or consent, what Cowart’s testimony should be, nor were any threats or promises made to Cowart either in connection with his testimony or otherwise.

To this answer petitioner has filed a traverse which consists of an affidavit by petitioner, dated November 1, 1943, in which he sets forth in argumentative form his version of the circumstances attending the commission of the crime of which he stands convicted, copies of the same affidavits of Roy Galbraith, Selma K. Ellner and Alvin M. Cowart which were attached to the original petition, the original of the affidavit of Tom O’Brien, copy of which was attached to the original petition, the affidavit of A. Brigham Rose, petitioner’s attor *584 ney, who attacks the fairness of Knight’s trial in the trial court and the review thereof by the District Court of Appeal of the Second District (People v. Knight, 44 Cal.App.2d 887 [113 P.2d 226]), and an affidavit of one Braulio Galinto, án inmate of Folsom Prison, dated November 1, 1943.

There has also been filed in this court, in this proceeding, the entire reporter’s transcript in People v. Knight, and a transcript of the proceedings on said defendant’s motion for a new trial. This latter transcript shows that in support of his motion for a new trial Knight presented and relied upon the same affidavit of Cowart which is presented in support of the petition before us. It also shows that in opposition to the said motion for a new trial the affidavits of George H. Johnson, Alfred S. Colgrove and Daniel Beecher, Deputy District Attorneys of Los Angeles County, were filed, together with a statement made by Cowart in the district attorney’s office in Los Angeles on September 18, 1940; also an affidavit of the chief clerk of the district attorney’s office relative to payments made to Cowart as a witness at the trial of Knight, and affidavits of Bay L. Marchant,' Glenn Lamkin, Samuel Angier and Earl Gilmore, Deputy Sheriffs of Los Angeles County. No other evidence was offered.

Considering first the affidavits presented by petitioner in support of his petition, that of Knight himself consists of nothing more than an argument that he was not guilty of the offense charged. It throws no light upon the matter relied upon to secure his release, to wit, that his conviction was the result of perjured testimony, which testimony was known to be false by the prosecuting attorneys who convicted him.

The affidavit of Galbraith also presents nothing in support of the petition herein, but only alleges matters tending to discredit the testimony of Kast, the victim of the robbery. Kast’s veracity was a matter for the jury. The affidavit of Selma K. Ellner furnishes nothing but a purported statement made to her by Cowart prior to the trial which is inconsistent with his testimony there given. This same statement was read at the trial in cross-examination of Cowart by Knight’s present counsel, and Cowart at that time testified that this statement had been induced by promises that he would be “taken care of” if he made it, and that it was untrue.

The affidavit of Tom O’Brien alleges that two deputy sheriffs who worked in the township in which Knight resided *585 disliked Knight because it was known that he had been convicted of murder, and had been proceeded against in the justice’s court of said township, and that on May 14, 1940, one of said deputies had said that the next time they would “book” Knight “by fair means or foul”; also that the deputies who “worked up the case” against Knight were prejudiced against him, and that the reputation of one of them, Angier, was that “you wouldn’t believe him under oath.” This affidavit also has nothing to do with the question now before this court, and throws no light on whether Cowart’s testimony was perjured or that it was known to the prosecuting attorneys to be false. Angier was a witness at the trial and his veracity was not then put in issue.

The affidavit of A. Brigham Rose, petitioner’s counsel, avers that prior to the preliminary hearing of Knight and Cowart in the justice’s court, the “co-defendant” informed affiant that Knight was innocent of the charge. The remainder of his affidavit consists mainly of assertions as to the alleged unfairness of Knight’s trial, the alleged misconduct of the prosecuting attorney, and a charge that on appeal the justice who wrote the opinion was prejudiced against affiant, and that therefore Knight was deprived of fair consideration on said appeal. Except for this affiant’s allegation that Cowart stated before the trial that Knight was innocent, this affidavit contains nothing pertinent or persuasive in support of the petition before us, and much of it is entirely improper. Obviously the alleged statement made to this affiant by Cow-art was known to affiant before- Cowart testified at the trial, but we find no reference to it in the record, and Cowart was not asked about it on cross-examination by this affiant. Also it is not alleged that the prosecution was informed of such statement prior to the trial.

As for the affidavit of Cowart himself, in which he alleges that Knight was not implicated or involved in the robbery or assault, and that his testimony at the trial was untrue and was “inspired at the insistence and solicitation” of the Deputy District Attorney George Johnson and Deputy Sheriffs Angier and Lamkin—that they suggested the testimony he gave at the trial, under threat that if he did not so testify they would send him to San Quentin or keep him in jail, and that the office of the district attorney “as an inducement for my false testimony, gave me six checks” which approximated $100, this *586 affidavit is dated October 1, 1940, and, as the record before us shows, was used by defendant and his present counsel on motion for a new trial.

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238 Cal. App. 2d 585 (California Court of Appeal, 1965)
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Knight v. People
60 F. Supp. 164 (N.D. California, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
144 P.2d 882, 62 Cal. App. 2d 582, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-knight-calctapp-1944.