People v. Ashrawy

19 P.2d 536, 130 Cal. App. 145, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 946
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 1933
DocketDocket No. 2231.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 P.2d 536 (People v. Ashrawy) 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. Ashrawy, 19 P.2d 536, 130 Cal. App. 145, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 946 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

ARCHBALD, J., pro tem.

Defendant was charged with the crime of grand theft in an information containing two counts, the first of which charged the theft on or about August 7, 1930, of merchandise of the value of $3,200 belonging to the firm of Dibbs & Maloof, and the second, the theft of merchandise of the value of $1750 belonging to the firm of Haboush Brothers & Kaydouh, on the same date. The plea was not guilty and not guilty by reason of a previous acquittal, to both counts. The jury returned a verdict of not guilty on the second count and of guilty on the first. Motion for new trial as to count I was denied, and judgment of conviction having been entered thereon, defendant has appealed.

Appellant was charged in a prior indictment with three counts of grand theft, such indictment being the same as in the instant case except that here the theft of different merchandise belonging to two firms not mentioned in the first instance is charged. At the present trial counsel for appellant offered a stipulation, which was accepted by the prosecution, to the effect that the People offered testimony at the first trial in support of substantially the following facts: That during the year 1928 defendant obtained mer *147 chandise of the value alleged and under consignment agreements similar to those in the instant case from the three firms named in the first indictment, of the general character of laces, linens, fancy table-cloths, tapestries and imported merchandise of like character; that thereafter and on August 7, 1930, he left the city of Los Angeles in his automobile in the company of one Soby Hallas; that about twenty miles east of Needles, California, he was held up and robbed of all the merchandise he had taken in his machine; that defendant returned to Los Angeles and reported his loss to the police; that certain of such merchandise was insured against loss by the owner, and defendant told an insurance adjuster, prior to the time same was recovered by the police and while it was on display where it was found, that he had not heard anything of his merchandise; that in October of 1931 defendant went with two police officers to a place in Pasadena, owned and operated by one Alita Dulane, and found merchandise of the description theretofore given as that of which he had been robbed, which was segregated into three piles and a part of which was afterwards identified as being a portion of the merchandise mentioned in the first indictment.

Appellant in his brief says that the evidence was the same in both cases with the exception of that with reference to the ownership of the goods and the fact that at the first trial Soby Hallas testified for the prosecution that the robbery actually occurred on the desert and that the merchandise was taken, while on the second trial he testified that it was a fake robbery and that appellant left his goods at the Appleton Apartments in Los Angeles and had none with him at the time. Respondent does not deny that otherwise than as stated the evidence was the same in each case, but does state that the theory in the first proceeding was that an actual robbery had been committed and that the goods were thereafter bought back from the robbers by appellant, who thereafter converted them.

It appears from the evidence introduced in the instant case that appellant was living in apartment 501 of the Appleton Apartments; that he told the manager, one Mac-Lane, that he intended to make' a business trip by automobile to New York, and that on August 6, 1930, he surrendered apartment 501 and rented another, No. 104, in the *148 same building, not under his name but under one which he asked MacLane to select for him, which was “Harrison”. Appellant then had the merchandise in his possession, stored in his apartment, and asked MacLane to assist him in making the transfer. This the latter did, and the change was made on the night of the 6th, appellant having his own lock put on apartment 104. Appellant apparently left early the next morning, although he evidently slept in apartment 501 the preceding night. The merchandise was piled on the floor of apartment 104 at the time of the change above noted. The next day MacLane’s attention was called to the fact that a light had been burning all night in apartment 104, and he thereupon called the locksmith who had previously changed the lock at Ashrawy’s request and had him make a key for the room. He then opened it and found that “all the articles which were stored in the room the night before, that is, in the center of the room, were evidently removed, and either back in the closet and the bathroom, the stall shower, which it was—-had evidently been packed in there, which there was a plug key placed in the door”. MacLane said of the articles which he had helped carry into the room: “Some were in traveling cases and some were loose tapestries, folded up”; also that there were a number of laces similar to those introduced in evidence, “wrapped up in a sheet, which sheet was tied into four knots, the four covers tied, which I could see them, though”. Some time after this occurrence MacLane was changed to the Harvard Terrace Apartments in Los Angeles, and on January 3, 1931, Ashrawy moved into an apartment in that establishment and later, in February of 1931, moved the goods from apartment 104 of the Appleton, which he had kept rented until then, to his new location. MacLane said appellant told him he had moved in everything from the Appleton Apartments, and that he afterwards helped appellant move the merchandise from his apartment to a locker room in the basement of the building; that, again, there were “some of the same cases, some of the same type of linen, draperies and tapestries”; that appellant took a sheet in which some of them were wrapped to cover a window, and that “it was one of the Sheets from the Appleton Apartments which the stuff had been stored in at the Appleton Apartments”.

*149 With the weak identification by MacLane and with Hallas and appellant both testifying that the merchandise in question was in the car and was stolen, the district attorney had no alternative, at the first trial, but to rely on an embezzlement of the goods after they were recovered from the robbers as claimed by Ashrawy.

In the instant case the trial court treated the question of former acquittal as one of fact and left it to the jury under appropriate instructions, which, among other things, charged them that if they found as a matter of fact that the merchandise involved in the case before them was taken by the defendant at the same time and place and as a part of the same act and transaction as the merchandise involved in the first trial, and with the same intent, they then must find for the defendant as to his plea of former acquittal. The determination of this plea was undoubtedly left to the jury, for the reason that if the jury believed there was an actual robbery there was evidence from which it might also find that the merchandise in the instant ease was not placed in the automobile, but remained in the Appleton Apartments until it was moved to the Harvard Terrace Apartments. In our opinion the verdict of the jury as to such plea was correct. The first trial was based entirely on a taking after the alleged robbery, and in view of the very indefinite description of the goods remaining in the Appleton Apartments a jury could not be expected to find which of them were involved in the robbery and which remained at appellant’s apartment.

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Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 536, 130 Cal. App. 145, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ashrawy-calctapp-1933.