In Re Marvich

165 P.2d 241, 27 Cal. 2d 503, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 327
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1946
DocketCrim. 4490
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 165 P.2d 241 (In Re Marvich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Marvich, 165 P.2d 241, 27 Cal. 2d 503, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 327 (Cal. 1946).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

Mike Marvich was charged with two crimes of robbery and a judgment of conviction was affirmed. (People v. Marvich, 44 Cal.App.2d 858 [113 P.2d 223].) In the present original proceeding, by writ of habeas corpus, Marvich is endeavoring to obtain his release from the state prison upon allegations that he was held to answer and convicted upon the perjured testimony of Edgar J. Black procured by and given with the knowledge of the prosecuting officers.

Following the denial of a writ, the Supreme Court of the United States, upon certiorari, remanded the cause for further proceedings (320 U.S. 712 [64 S.Ct. 193, 88 L.Ed. 418]) which were initiated by an order appointing Honorable A. L. Pierovieh, Judge of the Superior Court of Amador County, a referee to take testimony and make findings of fact upon the issues presented by Marvich’s allegations. The order fixed the scope of the reference by the following questions: “(1) Did any witness who testified against Mike Marvich in the trial which led to his conviction on the charges for which he is now deprived of his liberty, commit perjury as defined in section 118 of the Penal Code of the State of California; that is, did such witness testify to any material matter which he knew to be false? (2) In the event that any witness did commit perjury, did the representatives of the State of California, the District Attorney, or any of his deputies or assistants cause or suffer such testimony to be introduced knowing that such testimony as given was perjured?”

It appears that two complaints were filed against Marvich. In one of them, he was accused of robbing Chester E. Slocum on March 31, 1940, and taking $2,300 from him. By the other complaint, he was named with James W. Gibbons as one of the persons who, in June of the same year, robbed Virgil White of $850. At the times of these robberies, Slocum and White, as partners, were engaged in the business of distributing the Los Angeles Examiner in the city of Long Beach and each robbery occurred at the office maintained by them.

A week after the second robbery, Marvich was arrested near San Diego. Gibbons was later taken into custody at Omaha, Nebraska. Following a preliminary examination upon each complaint, Marvich and Gibbons were held to answer. *506 In the superior court, by stipulation of counsel, the two cases were consolidated for trial. The jurors being unable to agree upon a verdict, the court declared a mistrial. At the second hearing, each of the defendants was convicted.

As grounds for relief by habeas corpus the petitioner asserts that he was held to answer upon the testimony of Black who, as a witness for the State at the first trial, repeated that testimony and then told a different story more directly implicating Marvich in the robbery of March 31st. The petitioner alleges that in explanation of the change in testimony, the witness stated that during a recess he had been talking with the prosecutor and Deputy Sheriff Mason. At the second trial, Marvich declares, the witness repeated his last version of the occurrences of March 31st and during the trial, “out of hearing of the jury and petitioner, the trial Judge, prosecutor and petitioner’s attorney all conceded that said State’s witness was giving perjured testimony. ’ ’ Notwithstanding these facts, the petition concludes, the prosecutor in his argument to the jury vouched for the truthfulness of the testimony of Black, knowing that it was perjured.

Marvich’s petition also includes the allegations that after he and Gibbons were convicted, Harry Keeler, the Deputy District Attorney who represented the State, asked them for certain data to be presented to the Board of Prison Terms and Paroles in their behalf. When Marvich asked Keeler why he wished to do this after having used perjured testimony, the petition continues, Keeler replied that he did not like the way he secured the convictions; that he had made Black, who could be sent to prison for life as an habitual criminal because of two prior convictions, change his testimony; “that petitioner and Gibbons should have accepted the prosecutor’s offer to plead guilty to a lesser offense, for petitioner and Gibbons did not have a chance to win the case as long as the prosecution had Eddie Black for a witness.”

Pursuant to the order of reference, several hearings were held at which Edgar J. (Eddie) Black and eight other persons testified. The record of the proceedings also includes the transcripts of the testimony taken at the preliminary examinations and the transcript of each of the trials in the superior court. According to these transcripts, at the first trial, Black testified that he first met Marvich about the middle of March, 1940. Meyer Kroll, Black’s half-brother, lived with Black and brought Marvich to their home. Late on a Sunday evening, *507 about a week after the first meeting, Black and his wife were in their home at San Diego. Hearing conversation, Black investigated and found Kroll and Marvich in another room. They showed him a suitcase with money in it. Some of the rolls of silver were marked, “Los Angeles Examiner.” Black asked, “My God, where did you get it? He says, ‘shut up. Just got this from the Los Angeles Examiner. ’ ” At a later time, which Black fixed as June, 1940, Marvich left a package containing silver coin at Black’s house.

Black also told the jury that before March, 1940, he had bought a gun and given it to Kroll. Later he saw the same gun in the possession of Marvich.

According to the record of this trial, immediately following a recess, Deputy District Attorney Keeler reported to the court that Black had asked him for an opportunity to correct certain errors in his testimony given upon direct examination. Recalled to the witness stand for that purpose, Black changed his testimony and admitted that his prior statements were untrue. He then declared that on March 31st, he accompanied Marvich and Kroll from San Diego to Long Beach. The trip was made in Black’s automobile which he had loaned to them with the knowledge that they were going to rob the office of the Los Angeles Examiner.

After reaching Long Beach, the trio continued on to Los Angeles, Black doing the driving while Marvich and Kroll looked for a car to steal. Later they went back to Long Beach and, at a skating rink, Black left his companions, who continued on their way in his automobile. They returned for him three or four hours later and he got into the car with them. The trio started for San Diego but seeing a lot of money in the ear, Black became frightened and left the automobile. He then went back to Long Beach and, later in the evening, returned to San Diego by bus. Eventually he received ninety dollars out of “this haul.”

At this trial there was no inquiry as to how Marvich was dressed on the night of the robbery, and Black did not testify that Marvich, at any time, put on or took off a sailor’s uniform. When asked if he brought a sailor from San Diego to Long Beach, Black replied, “No.” But in the second trial Black told the jury that when he met Marvich and Kroll at the skating rink, Marvich was taking off a sailor’s uniform which he tossed out of the car as they drove away from Long Beach.

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Bluebook (online)
165 P.2d 241, 27 Cal. 2d 503, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marvich-cal-1946.