People v. Bassett

156 P.2d 457, 68 Cal. App. 2d 241, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 759
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 1945
DocketCrim. No., 3847
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 156 P.2d 457 (People v. Bassett) 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. Bassett, 156 P.2d 457, 68 Cal. App. 2d 241, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 759 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

In an information filed by the district attorney of Los Angeles County, defendant was accused of a violation of section 11160 of the Health and Safety Code, which, among other things, denounces as a felony the possession of narcotics, except as otherwise in said code provided. Upon her arraignment, defendant moved to set aside the information pursuant to section 995 of the Penal Code, which motion was denied. Following the entry of a not guilty plea and waiver of a jury, the cause proceeded to trial before the court, resulting in the conviction of defendant of the offense as charged in the information. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was denied and judgment was pronounced. From such judgment and order defendant prosecutes this appeal.

As the sole ground urged by defendant for a reversal of the judgment is that the evidence is insufficient to support the same, it becomes necessary to epitomize the testimony introduced at the trial. In that regard, the record discloses that about four o’clock on the afternoon of April 29, 1944, two federal narcotics inspectors, accompanied by two detectives from the Narcotic Division of the Los Angeles Police Department, went to the apartment occupied by defendant in the city of Los Angeles. Federal Inspector Marsh knocked on the door and thereupon defendant looked through a small opening in the door. The federal agent then attempted to gain admission to the apartment by advising the defendant that his name was “Pat” and asking her if she “didn’t remember him.” Defendant advised him that she was unacquainted with him and closed the little opening in the door, through which she had been looking. Immediately thereafter Inspector Marsh knocked again upon the door and informed the defendant that he and his associates were officers, that they had a complaint that she was “hustling” and desired to make an examination of the premises. Defendant admitted them into the apartment where, in addition.to herself, there was present a man and another woman.

*243 The apartment occupied by the defendant consisted of a single bedroom with living room, bath, hallway, kitchen, and in the latter place was a dining space. While the other officers were examining and searching the premises, Inspector Marsh searched the hallway. Later'he went into the bathroom and noticed that the window therein was standing open. He reached out of this window in the bathroom and placed his hand under the metal hood in the lightwell, where he felt a paper sack. He thereupon stepped through the window, took his flashlight, observed the paper sack under the metal hood, removed it and took the same and the contents thereof back into the apartment. At that time one of the police officers and the defendant were in the bedroom. Inspector Marsh testified that in order to touch the paper sack he had to reach out about two and a half feet, but that he still had his own feet on the bathroom floor. He estimated the distance from the floor of the lightwell to the lower level of the bathroom window as twenty inches. When Inspector Marsh showed the sack to the defendant “she wanted to know what it was.” The inspector testified that the defendant said “What is it?” to which he replied “You know very well what it is,” and defendant said “Let me see it.” It might here be noted that the bathroom windows from both the apartment No. 101, occupied by the defendant, and the adjoining apartment No. 102, opened on the same lightwell where the aforesaid sack was found. The contents of the manila paper sack, which Inspector Marsh testified he found under the hood in the lightwell, were introduced into evidence and consisted of a black jar, three white jars, a bottle with a tube fastened with a rubber nipple over the top, a piece of newspaper, a piece of tissue paper, a piece of paper cut and folded in cone fashion and held by a needle, an English oval Philip Morris cigaret box. At the trial it was stipulated that, if an expert witness was called, he would testify that the contents of the jars aforesaid consisted of opium and would testify that the box contained yen shee.

A small metal lamp was discovered by one of the federal agents on a knickknack shelf in the kitchen under a red colored water tumbler. The inspector testified that he did not notice the lamp under the red glass until he lifted the latter. This witness further testified that he did not smell the odor of alcohol on the lamp, but what he smelled appeared to him *244 to be peanut oil. He testified that upon further examination he discovered that the wick in the lamp was oily.

After making the arrest the federal and city officers took the defendant and her two guests to the United States Narcotic Bureau in the Federal Building, where the defendant had a conversation with Inspector Marsh and Supervisor Manning of the Federal Narcotics Bureau. In this conversation, according to the officers, defendant stated that her guest Dorothy Martin did not know anything about the opium. According to the federal inspector, the defendant, when asked by Supervisor Manning if she would say that the opium belonged to her, replied, “Well, what else can I say? You found it right in my apartment, didn’t you?” When asked if she was trying to protect the person from whom she received the opium, defendant replied “No, I would just rather not say any more about it.” It was also testified that in the foregoing conversation the defendant stated she had smoked opium for some twelve or fifteen years “off and on.” Inspector Marsh further testified that the defendant stated to him that apartment 101 was hers; that no one else shared it with her, but that she permitted Dorothy Martin to come there occasionally. It might here be noted that the aforesaid manila paper bag containing the opium and yen shee was found about five feet from the sill of the window to apartment 102 and approximately three feet from the sill of the window to apartment 101 occupied by the defendant. It was further testified that an examination of the contents of the paper sack was made to determine .the existence thereon of any fingerprints. When the defendant attempted to ascertain whether or not any fingerprints were found, an objection to such question was sustained by the court with the statement “If they were found, we will hear about it, and if they weren’t we will presume—if we don’t hear about it, we will presume there were none found.” No evidence was introduced at the trial to show that the defendant’s fingerprints were found upon any of the exhibits. Appearing as a witness in her own behalf, defendant testified that on the afternoon in question, when the officers announced who they were, she immediately admitted them into the apartment; that when they started searching the premises she asked “What in the world are you looking for?” to which one of the city police officers replied “Oh, I thought maybe you had some guns around here.” The defendant testified that she continually asked “What *245 is this all about ?” until finally Federal Inspector Marsh came in with, the aforesaid paper package, saying “Well, this is it,” or “I found it,” to which, according to the defendant she stated “What is it?” She also testified that she did not know what it was. That when Inspector Marsh said “You know what it is” she replied “I beg your pardon, I don’t know what it is.” With reference to the lamp found under the red glass by one of the federal agents, defendant testified that when she was asked “Is this yours?” she replied “That is a little' blackout' lamp.

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Bluebook (online)
156 P.2d 457, 68 Cal. App. 2d 241, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bassett-calctapp-1945.