People v. Albritton

294 P. 76, 110 Cal. App. 188, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 88
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 4, 1930
DocketDocket No. 1984.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 294 P. 76 (People v. Albritton) 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
People v. Albritton, 294 P. 76, 110 Cal. App. 188, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 88 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

By an information filed in the superior court, three men named respectively Albritton, Smith and Shiraishi were charged with the commission by them of the crime of murder. In the same information the defendant Shiraishi was also charged with the commission of a prior felony. Shortly, following the date of the arraignment of the three defendants, Shiraishi presented a motion that he be granted a trial separate from either or both of his co-defendants—which motion was by the court denied. Two days after the trial of all the defendants had commenced, Albritton and Smith each withdrew his former plea of “not guilty” and in lieu thereof entered a plea of “guilty as charged in the information”. The trial then proceeded as against Shiraishi only, and following his conviction of the crime of murder and the finding of the jury that theretofore he had “suffered a prior conviction of a felony”, he has appealed to this court from the judgment and the order entered by the superior court by which his motion for a new trial was denied.

*191 From the evidence received on the trial of the action it would appear that the murder in question occurred following an unsuccessful attempt made by the three defendants to rob an alleged Chinese gambling establishment. Each of the defendants Albritton and Smith testified fully regarding the plan of the robbery and the preliminary arrangements which he stated had been made by the three defendants in anticipation of its commission; and which included the purchase of a police badge by Shiraishi for the use of Smith in order that he and Albritton, who also had a police badge, might pretend to- be police officers at and during the time that the robbery was taking place. It also appeared that Albritton and Smith had gone to the scene of the attempted robbery and resulting murder in an automobile owned by Smith; while Shiraishi repaired thither in a Ford coupe. The testimony given by Albritton and Smith also shows that they were expected to enter the room or rooms where several Chinese were engaged in gambling and thereupon commit the robbery—during which time Shiraishi was to remain outside and act as a “lookout”. The plan of operation was but partially completed. Almost immediately after Albritton and Smith had obtained an entrance into the place where the proposed victims of the robbery were congregated, Smith apparently abandoned his former intention to commit any crime; at least he left the room by the same door at which he had entered it, at which point (according to his testimony) he encountered Shiraishi to whom he gave the police badge and a pistol which he (Smith) theretofore had had in his possession, and thereupon left the scene of the crime. Seeing that Smith was leaving the premises, Albritton also decided to make his “get away” by a rear door; and it was while making his escape from the premises and in the course of a pistol fight between Albritton and some of the Chinese that Albritton fired the shot from his revolver which caused the death of the person for whose murder the defendant Shiraishi was on trial.

Appellant first complains that the testimony given by the accomplices Albritton and Smith was not sufficiently corroborated.

Section 1111 of the Penal Code provides that: “A conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice *192 unless it be corroborated by such other evidence as shall tend to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense; ...”

In that regard, among other incriminatory facts which were introduced in evidence, was testimony that shortly preceding the time when the crime occurred Shiraishi was seen in the immediate neighborhood of the alleged gambling establishment where the attempted robbery and subsequent murder took place; that Albritton and Shiraishi were seen together in a Ford coupe in the afternoon of the same day; that on that day Shiraishi had purchased a police badge similar in appearance to the one used by.Albritton at the time the crime was committed; that on the day in question Shiraishi had borrowed from a friend of his a Ford coupe; that one or two hours after the murder had taken place Shiraishi telephoned to the wife of Albritton and told her that Albritton had been shot, and in effect that the murdered man had been shot by a Japanese or a Chinaman and said that he (Shiraishi) “was there”; that following the arrest of Shiraishi, in the upholstering of the automobile in which he had been transported from the place of his arrest to the jail, the arresting officer found a police badge which resembled the police badge which Shiraishi had purchased on the day when the crime was committed.

No useful purpose would be served by an exhaustive review of legal principles contained in the many authorities of this state which both define the word “corroboration” and relate to the sufficiency of evidence introduced for the purpose of corroborating testimony given by an accomplice. It may be conceded that the law does not contemplate the conviction of a person accused of the commission of a crime where the attempted corroboration of the testimony given by an accomplice rests upon such evidence as should merely create a suspicion of the guilt of the defendant on trial. On the other hand, in order that it meet the requirements of the statute, it is not imperative that the corroborating evidence be absolutely convincing, or that it be complete as to each item of evidence to which the accomplice has testified. It may be but slight and, if standing alone, entitled to but little weight; provided always that it “tend to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense”. *193 (People v. Kelly, 69 Cal. App. 558, 570 [231 Pac. 767, 772], and authorities there cited.)

From a consideration of the evidence adduced on the trial of the instant action in corroboration of the testimony given by the accomplices of defendant Shiraishi, it would seem manifest that it was ample not only for the purpose of satisfying the demands of section 1111 of the Penal Code, but as well to justify the jury in its apparent conclusion that the crime in question was committed with the intentional criminal consent, co-operation and participation of the defendant Shiraishi therein. However, in the same connection, appellant presents the point “that even if there was a conspiracy or common design to commit robbery, the same was abandoned before any homicide was committed”.

As hereinbefore indicated, the evidence upon which appellant relies for his conclusion that before the murder was committed the conspiracy which theretofore had existed among the three defendants had been abandoned, was to the effect that almost immediately following the entrance of Albritton and Smith into the alleged gambling-house Smith retreated therefrom, delivered his pistol and police badge to Shiraishi, who accepted the same, and that it was only thereafter, while Albritton likewise had abandoned his intention to commit a robbery and was endeavoring to effect his escape from the premises, that the fatal shot was fired.

That the principle for which appellant contends is untenable, is decided in each of the cases of People v. Woods, 147 Cal. 265 [109 Am. St. Rep. 151, 81 Pac. 652], and People v. Kauffman, 152 Cal. 331 [92 Pac. 861], where a situation was involved similar to that presented in the instant case.

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Bluebook (online)
294 P. 76, 110 Cal. App. 188, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-albritton-calctapp-1930.