People v. Barrow

145 P.2d 42, 62 Cal. App. 2d 590, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 855
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1944
DocketCrim. 2269
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 145 P.2d 42 (People v. Barrow) 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. Barrow, 145 P.2d 42, 62 Cal. App. 2d 590, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 855 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

SPENCE, J.

Defendant, a colored woman, was convicted upon a trial by jury of the crime of grand theft and was sentenced to imprisonment in the California Institution for Women at Tehachapi. She appeals from the judgment and from the order denying her motion for a new trial.

On this appeal, defendant makes several contentions, among which is the claim that the evidence was insufficient to support the judgment. It will therefore be necessary to set forth the evidence upon which the prosecution relied to show that defendant had stolen the wallet of the complaining witness.

The complaining witness, a garage man, had attended the Fox Theatre in San Francisco on the evening in question. After leaving the theatre around 10 o ’clock he walked up McAllister Street to a point near Gough Street. As he passed Latham’s Storage House he heard a noise or groan coming from the entrance way. He went into the entrance way, which was dark, and there found the defendant. He testified, “She put her arms around me, and her arms came down back of me, around my back. I thought it was sort of funny so I pushed her away. . . . Then I thought it was rather funny that she would do that. ... I was standing over there, and I started to walk out. I felt for my wallet. Right away I saw my wallet was gone and I grabbed her by the shoulders and I yelled, ‘You have got my wallet.’ And I pulled her out on the sidewalk . . . she said she never had it, when I pulled her out on the sidewalk. And so I yelled, and there was a colored gentleman on the corner that came running down. And I did not know what it was. He yelled out; he said, ‘What is going on here.’ ... I let her go and she went behind him. ’ ’ He further testified that he was carrying his wallet in his right hip pocket. The colored man did not speak to defendant and after defendant had left, the colored man told the complaining witness that he did not know the defendant. The complaining witness followed defendant down McAllister Street and then *593 stopped at a store to telephone the police. He abandoned this idea as he feared he would lose sight of defendant. He again located defendant on Turk Street where he found her in company of the same colored man. He then ran to a police station on Ellis Street and returned to the vicinity with the police in a police car. Defendant and the same colored man were then found at the corner of Ellis and Gough Streets and were taken from there to the police station. A search of these parties did not result in the finding of the wallet. The police therefore searched the entrance way of Latham’s Storage House but failed to find the wallet. On the following morning at about 4 a. m., the wallet was found by a 15-year-old boy while delivering papers. As the boy raised a hanging “No Parking” sign, attached to the doors in the entrance way of Latham’s Storage House, for the purpose of inserting the morning paper in the mail slot, the wallet dropped to the floor of the entrance way. The wallet contained identifying papers as well as money and the boy returned the wallet and contents to the complaining witness on the same day.

Defendant’s testimony concerning the events of the evening was quite different. She testified, “Well, I stopped in a doorway for private reasons, and just as I went to get up this white man walked in on me. And I jumped up because he frightened me, it happened so sudden. So he says ‘Don’t be afraid, I just want to spend some money with you.’ I said, 'You don’t want to spend any money with me.’ Then he offered me five dollars to be with him. I said, ‘No, I don’t want any of your five dollars or you either.’ And he grabbed me and I wrassled with him. He got me by the arms as though he was going to force me to restrain. And I grappled with him. I got away from him and I screamed, and then he fled, and I went on about my business.” She denied taking the wallet and denied that the colored man came up while she was there. She testified, however, that the colored man, who was with her at the time of arrest, had met her about half a block from the place of her arrest, and that she was talking to him about her arthritis at the time of the arrest. She denied that she had previously known the colored man or his name and denied having seen him after the night of her arrest. Other evidence showed, however, that the same colored man had been in court on both days of her preliminary *594 hearing and that he and defendant had been seen together at the Civic Center on a later occasion.

It was the theory of the prosecution that defendant and the colored man had cooperated in planning the commission of the offense; that defendant had attracted the complaining witness by her groans into the dark entrance way for the purpose of consummating the plan; that defendant had taken the wallet from the hip pocket of the complaining witness when she had her arms around his back; and that she had concealed the wallet under the hanging sign on the door during the confusion which followed the taking. While there was a conflict in the testimony, the jury was entitled to disbelieve the unconvincing story told by defendant and to believe the testimony of the complaining witness. There can be no doubt concerning the sufficiency of the evidence given by the complaining witness to sustain the judgment. Defendant claims that there was no evidence to show that the complaining witness had his wallet on his person at the time he entered the entrance way and further claims that there was no evidence to show that the wallet was taken without the consent of the complaining witness. Assuming without deciding that there was no direct evidence on the subjects to which these claims relate, the only reasonable inference to be drawn from the complaining witness ’ testimony was that the wallet was on his person at the time and was taken by defendant without his consent.

It is also contended that “defendant was not represented by counsel at all stages of the proceedings.” The record discloses that defendant’s attorney of record was Mr. Hennessy. At the opening of the trial, Mr. Coghlan appeared and stated, “Mr. Hennessy asked me to appear for him and select the jury.” After the selection of the jury, Mr. Coghlan stated, “I will have to remain in this case until Mr. Hennessy comes. I don’t want to delay it.” The record does not definitely disclose the time of Mr. Hennessy’s arrival but it shows that objections were made by both Mr. Hennessy and Mr. Coghlan on the direct examination of the complaining witness, who was the first witness called to the stand. The cross-examination of the complaining witness, which started at the opening of the afternoon session, was admittedly conducted by Mr. Hennessy who represented defendant throughout all subsequent *595 proceedings. No claim was made in the trial court that defendant had not been represented by counsel at all times and the record does not sustain the claim now made on this appeal.

Defendant further contends that there was prejudicial misconduct on the part of defendant's counsel, on the part of the district attorney and on the part of the trial eoxirt. A reading of the record discloses the possibility that there were some side remarks of counsel on both sides which were not heard by the court reporter and therefore do not appear in the record. Without any apparent provocation, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 P.2d 42, 62 Cal. App. 2d 590, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-barrow-calctapp-1944.