People v. Acosta

290 P.2d 1, 45 Cal. 2d 538, 1955 Cal. LEXIS 343
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1955
DocketCrim. 5742
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 290 P.2d 1 (People v. Acosta) 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
People v. Acosta, 290 P.2d 1, 45 Cal. 2d 538, 1955 Cal. LEXIS 343 (Cal. 1955).

Opinions

[539]*539SCHAUER, J.

— Defendant was charged by information in count 1 with grand theft of an automobile (Pen. Code, § 487, subd. 3), in count 2 with violation of section 503 of the Vehicle Code,1 and in counts 3 and 4 with manslaughter (Pen. Code, §192).2 A jury found defendant not guilty of count 1 and guilty of counts 2, 3, and 4. Defendant appeals from the judgment as to count 2.

Defendant contends: (1) the evidence of the prosecution establishes defendant’s want of criminal intent; (2) refusal of defendant’s requested instruction as to misfortune and accident was prejudicial error; (3) even if defendant had not requested such instruction, it was the trial court’s duty of its own motion to instruct on the subject. We have concluded that contention (1) is without merit; that contention (2) requires reversal; and that contention (3) need not be discussed.

Evidence of Guilt

The events which resulted in this prosecution occurred on April 3, 1954. Defendant, a Mexican agricultural worker legally in the United States, could not speak English. He had been in this country since March 19, 1954. On April 3 defendant went with fellow workers to a café in Torrance. Defendant drank five or six bottles of beer. He and an acquaintance then went to a café in Redondo Beach. There defendant drank no more. He began to dance by himself. The proprietor, who spoke Spanish, led him out of the café. Defendant left politely. However, he returned and again danced by himself. A waitress called the police and the proprietor called a cab for defendant. The proprietor interpreted for the police and defendant. When the cab arrived the police directed the driver to take defendant to the ranch where defendant was employed, and explained that defendant had no money but that the fare would be paid at the ranch or by the proprietor of the café.

After the cab driver had driven defendant for a few [540]*540minutes, defendant spoke to him in Spanish, which the driver did not understand. About a year before a passenger had attempted to rob the driver and the driver had escaped by opening the door and rolling out of the cab; he recalled this incident and it influenced his conduct when defendant began to behave strangely as hereinafter described. Defendant denied any violent conduct and testified that his purposes were innocent; the following description of the events is taken from the testimony of prosecution witnesses.

When the driver did not comprehend defendant’s Spanish, defendant reached into the front seat of the cab, seized the driver’s clip board and struck the driver. The driver struck at defendant with his flashlight. Defendant pinned the driver’s arm back and struck at his neck with defendant’s hand. The driver avoided the blow, opened the cab door, and rolled out. He had slowed to 10 or 15 miles an hour and pulled to the left side of the road. He left the car in high gear and did not turn off the ignition switch.

Other persons on the highway observed that the cab slackened speed, the passenger stood over the driver striking him, the driver rolled out of the car, the passenger got from the back seat into the front seat behind the wheel, the cab accelerated to about 60 miles an hour, ran through a red light, and hit another car broadside.

According to defendant’s testimony and extrajudicial statements, he did not hit the driver with the clip board and did not get into the front seat of the cab, but attempted to steer it by reaching over the back of the front seat to the wheel. However, a prosecution witness observed that when the cab came to rest defendant was in the front of the car, having been partially thrown to the floor, with his hips on the seat beneath the steering wheel and his head to the right.

Two passengers in the car which was struck by the cab were killed and the driver was seriously injured. Defendant was assisted from the cab. His right arm was injured. He got into another automobile, in which the driver had left the keys, and attempted unsuccessfully to start it. The police then removed defendant from the automobile.

Defendant concedes that if the People’s case consisted solely of the testimony of the cab driver and other prosecution witnesses as summarized above, criminal intent could be inferred from defendant’s conduct. But, says defendant, the People’s case in chief included “primary and direct” proof of defendant’s state of mind by a transcript of an extra[541]*541judicial statement of defendant to a police officer which assertedly “explicitly disproves criminality.”

In the questioning of defendant as to his previous statements to another officer, the following was said: “Captain Ashton: You told Officer Gonzales that the taxi driver was going to rob you.

“The Defendant: I said that but I did not mean that at the time as there are lots of crimes happening in that manner and that as he was going in the wrong direction I thought something might happen to me. ’ ’

This statement, defendant says, establishes that his intent and purpose during the events leading up to and immediately following the driver’s abandonment of the cab were not to deprive the owner of the cab of possession thereof. Defendant relies upon what he considers to be an analogous situation in People v. Salaz (1924), 66 Cal.App. 173, 181 [225 P. 777]. There defendant, charged with murder, admitted the killing but claimed that it was in necessary self-defense. A jury found him guilty of manslaughter and he appealed. The appellate court said (p. 181 of 66 Cal.App.) :

“The jury could not have found, from the evidence for the people, that the killing was done by appellant except upon the latter’s admission, which carried, in close and immediate connection with proof of the killing, circumstances of necessary self-defense. Since, therefore, the proof on the part of the prosecution tends to show that the act of appellant was justifiable, there was, at the close of the people’s case, no presumption against the accused, that he had committed an unlawful homicide. No presumption of guilt weighed against the presumption of innocence. ‘Upon a trial for murder, the. commission of the homicide by the defendant being proved, the burden of proving circumstances of mitigation, or that justify or excuse it, devolves upon him, unless the proof on the part of the prosecution tends to show that the crime committed only amounts to manslaughter, or that the defendant was justifiable or excusable.’ (Pen. Code, § 1105.) [Italics of the District Court of Appeal.]

“But it does not necessarily follow that appellant’s account of the killing, though uncontradicted by direct evidence, should control the jury. If there be any well-established circumstance in the ease which may reasonably be regarded as incompatible with the theory of the defense that the killing was justifiable, then the jury, from a consideration [542]*542of all the evidence, was warranted in finding that the act amounted to an unlawful homicide.”

The court concluded (p. 183 of 66 Cal.App.) that “if it cannot be said, as a matter of law, that the evidence in this case is insufficient to support the verdict, the question is a close one,” and that certain error was prejudicial.

Cited by defendant to the same effect are People v. Toledo (1948), 85 Cal.App.2d 577, 580-581, 582 [193 P.2d 953

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Bluebook (online)
290 P.2d 1, 45 Cal. 2d 538, 1955 Cal. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-acosta-cal-1955.