People v. Baker

183 Cal. App. 2d 615, 7 Cal. Rptr. 22, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1799
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 8, 1960
DocketCrim. 6788
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 183 Cal. App. 2d 615 (People v. Baker) 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. Baker, 183 Cal. App. 2d 615, 7 Cal. Rptr. 22, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1799 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

WOOD, P. J.

In a trial by jury defendant Baker was convicted of first degree robbery. He appeals from the judgment and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

*618 Appellant’s contentions are to the effect that his counsel at the trial did not represent him property and in good faith; the information was defective; the judge indicated prejudice against defendant in asking questions of prosecution witnesses ; the court erred in rulings as to admissibility of evidence ; the court erred in giving, and in failing to give, certain instructions; the deputy district attorney was guilty of misconduct.

On December 12, 1958, about 5 :50 p. m. when Mr. Reed, a taxicab driver, was driving a cab out of a company garage in Los Angeles, two persons hailed him for a ride. One of the persons was the defendant and the other one was a man by the name of Lewis. They entered the cab—defendant sat in the rear seat, directly behind the driver, and Lewis sat in the front seat beside the driver. They said they wanted to go to Covina. While they were traveling, Lewis asked questions regarding the driver’s family. The driver replied by stating that he had five children and that it was difficult to support them on his salary. The driver also talked about his church and the Bible. After the cab had gone about ten blocks, Lewis said: “ [T]his is not the right man, I think we will let him go. He seems to be a pretty good fellow.” Then Lewis told the driver to take them to 4th and Crocker Streets. When the cab arrived there, Lewis said that they had done the driver a favor, and they did not “want to hear anything more about this” or the cab expense or “what had happened tonight.” They got out of the cab about 6 p. m.,—after having traveled about ten minutes. Lewis also said he would pay the fare when he got the money. While they were in the cab, the driver “glanced over in the back seat” and saw defendant Baker “placing a revolver back into his pocket.”

Also on December 12, 1958, about 7:25 p. m., when Mr. White, a taxicab driver, was driving a cab near 6th and Crocker Streets, a man, the defendant Baker, hailed him for a ride. Baker opened the rear door, entered the cab, sat behind the driver, and said that he wanted to go to El Sereno. As the cab started to move, Baker said, “Wait, my buddy is coming.” Then the cab was stopped, and Lewis opened the front door and sat beside the driver. The driver tried to adjust the rear-view mirror in order to see what Baker was doing as he sat in the corner of the cab back of the driver. Baker told the driver to turn onto Soto Street. While the driver was making that turn Baker placed a cold object against the back of the driver’s head, and told him to take it *619 easy and keep driving “slow and easy.” Lewis, who was in the front seat, said, “Where is the money?” Then he took a $5.00 bill and five $1.00 bills from the driver’s pocket. After Baker asked where the driver’s wallet was, the boy took the wallet from the driver’s pocket and removed a $20 bill therefrom. Soon thereafter, Baker told the driver to stop the cab, get out of it, and go away. While the driver was getting out of the cab he saw a pistol in Baker’s hand. Baker got into the front seat with Lewis, and drove the cab away. The driver went to a nearby house, telephoned the police, and reported the robbery. Soon thereafter, while the driver was in the police car making a report, a radio announcement was made that two suspects had been apprehended. When the police and the cab driver arrived at the place where other officers had the suspects in custody (which was about 15 minutes after the robbery), the suspects were standing near a police car. When the cab driver saw the two suspects he said that they were the persons who had robbed him. The officers searched them and took a $20 bill from Baker, and took a $5.00 bill and five $1.00 bills from Lewis. The suspects, who were apprehended in response to a police radio broadcast, ran in different directions when the arresting officers approached them. Before Lewis started to run, he dropped his overcoat. The officers found an unloaded gun in the coat. At the police station officers had a conversation with Lewis in the presence of Baker. In that conversation Lewis made statements to the effect that he and Baker committed the robbery. Then the officers told Baker that he was being accused of the robbery, and that Lewis had said that the gun (which was found in the coat) belonged to Baker. When confronted with those accusations, Baker did not say anything.

Bach taxicab driver testified that defendant Baker was the man who was in the rear seat of the taxicab the driver was operating.

Baker did not testify.

Appellant asserts that his counsel did not represent him properly and in good faith. Some of appellant’s specifications, with reference to such alleged representation, are in substance as follows: When appellant told his counsel that the information was defective (in that it did not apprise appellant of the facts necessary to constitute the crime charged) his counsel did not object to the information in “the way appellant told him to do.” Although appellant had told his *620 counsel that $27.61 was the amount of money taken from him by the police and placed to his credit on the jail records, his counsel did not “subpoena the records” to prove that Officer Neustatter was “lying” when he testified that only $20 was taken from appellant. Although the transcript of the preliminary examination was in the possession of appellant’s counsel, he did not use it to prove that White (cab driver) committed perjury when he testified at the trial that he saw appellant and the boy “at that spot” (standing on the sidewalk) when the officers had them. (According to appellant's brief, the preliminary transcript shows that White testified that appellant and the boy were standing in the street or that the officers were putting them into the car.) After two women (witnesses for appellant) had told appellant’s counsel that White had made a statement to Reed (cab driver) which refuted testimony of White at the preliminary examination, appellant’s counsel asked one of the women if “Reed” had made that statement, and she answered, “No”; and when appellant called his counsel’s attention “to the mixup” of names (Reed instead of White), counsel for appellant said he “wanted her off the stand because she had hurt the case already. ’ ’ When appellant told his counsel that White admitted that he gave hearsay testimony, his counsel said he would use it for impeachment, but he never referred to it again. Appellant’s counsel did not object when the deputy district attorney called defense witnesses liars. When a witness for the prosecution testified that appellant had said that he left “his home in Buena Park,” the counsel for appellant could have proved that appellant “has never lived in Buena Park”—that the federal parole officer could have proved that testimony false because appellant had to register as an ex-convict and report his address to the parole officer.

Two photographs of appellant which were taken after the arrest, were placed in evidence by appellant’s counsel, but he did not “elaborate” on them or give any indication why he introduced them. (According to appellant’s brief, the photographs would show that he did not have a moustache or need a shave; whereas, White has testified that appellant had a moustache and needed a shave.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 Cal. App. 2d 615, 7 Cal. Rptr. 22, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-baker-calctapp-1960.