People v. Black

238 P. 374, 73 Cal. App. 13, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 308
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1925
DocketDocket No. 1154.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 238 P. 374 (People v. Black) 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. Black, 238 P. 374, 73 Cal. App. 13, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 308 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

WORKS, J.

Defendants were charged with the crime of “burglary with explosives” under an information of three counts. The designated crime is thus defined and denounced: “Any person who, with intent to commit crime, breaks and enters, either by day or by night, any building, whether inhabited or not, and opens or attempts to open any vault, saie or other secure place by use of nitroglycerine, dynamite, gunpowder or any other explosive, shall be deemed guilty of burglary with explosives” (Pen. Code, see. 464). The first count of the information charges an entry into a store, building, or room of one Solomon, the second count related to an entry into property of a similar character of one Tarter, and the third count charged the offense by way of entry into like premises of one Fares. These several charges will hereafter be referred to, respectively, as the Solomon count, the Tarter count, and the Fares count. Defendants were found guilty as charged under the Solomon and Tarter counts. Upon' the Fares count the verdict as to each of the defendants reads that the jury finds him “guilty of burglary, a felony, a lesser offense contained within the charge of burglary with explosives as charged in count three of the information, and find it to be burglary of the first degree.” As one of the points made for a reversal of the judgment of conviction renders necessary an examination of the statute defining burglary of the first degree, we here set it forth: “Every burglary of an inhabited dwelling house or building committed in the night-time, and every burglary, whether in the daytime or night-time, committed by a [person armed with a deadly weapon, or who while in the commission of such burglary arms himself with a deadly weapon, or who while in the commission of any such burglary as *17 saults any person, is burglary of the first degree” (Pen. Code, see. 460). The defendants appeal from the whole of the judgment of conviction and from an order of the trial court denying their motion for a new trial.

The trial court received in evidence certain confessions made by appellants. It is contended that these confessions should not have been received, that they were not free and voluntary, in fact, that they were secured through duress and coercion. There was much testimony by appellants, it is true, upon which the trial judge might justly have reached the conclusion that the confessions were not free and voluntary, and he might therefore justly have excluded them, but there was evidence directly to the contrary, and in our opinion the whole question resolves itself into one merely of conflicting evidence, the determination of the result of the conflict resting finally in the trial court. Both appellants testified upon the point. The alleged coercion was said by them to have arisen from the claim by officers of the law that France had committed a murder at Deming in the state of New Mexico, and was being sought for extradition upon a charge in that regard. It was also said that the officers had insisted that Black had knowledge of the Deming affair, or was in some complicity concerning it. France testified: “I asked them [the officers] if I signed a confession to that job on Spring street [involved in one of the charges here] what would I get out of it. They said they would clear me up on Deming, if I would sign a confession in this one, and I said ‘Well, that would be all right with me.’ That was all that was said. I gave that statement to keep out of [New] Mexico, that was all.” Black testified that one of the officers said they had evidence against France in the case at Deming and asked, “Would you rather go back there and stand trial for murder or take a few years here, arid we will have that dropped?” He also said that one of the officers “said he would drop that murder charge and they would have it fixed up so it would only be one charge come into court.” The testimony of both the appellants was controverted by the officers. They admitted that the Deming affair was mentioned in conversations they had with appellants, but they denied that any inducements whatever were held out to appellants in connection with that event. The evidence upon the point being in conflict, it must be *18 assumed that the confessions were properly admitted (People v. Castello, 194 Cal. 595 [229 Pac. 855]).

Notwithstanding the fact that the ruling of the trial judge in admitting the confessions must be upheld, there yet remains to be discussed a question of great moment in "connection with the same matter. Throughout the trial the judge evinced an incorrect understanding of the respective functions of judge and jury when dealing with evidence touching the question whether confessions' are free and voluntary; but upon the heels of this declaration attention must be drawn to the fact that counsel for appellant long labored under the same misapprehension, and encouraged, aided, and abetted the judge in perpetuating it. Before we exhibit the state of the record upon this situation it may be well to state the rule which regulates the respective functions of judge and jury when the question of the admissibility of a confession arises in a criminal case. The judge must determine, first and as a matter of course, whether the confession was free and voluntary and whether, therefore, it is to be heard by the jury. Notwithstanding, however, the settlement of this question, which is merely preliminary and which bears solely upon the matter of the admissibility of the confession, as already indicated, there is yet a function to be exercised by the jury concerning it. In allowing the confession to go to the jury the judge has ruled, it is true, that it was freely and voluntarily made, but the ruling in no way binds the jury. That body, now considering the matter substantively, may disregard the view of the judge made evident by his permitting the confession to be heard, and may, as the trier of all final questions of fact in the case, conclude that the confession was not free and voluntary and may therefore refuse to consider it.. We may therefore have this situation when a confession is sought to be used in a criminal prosecution: The judge may decide that the confession was freely and voluntarily made and, if he does, will allow it to be received in evidence; but the jury may, upon the same evidence, determine that it was not so made and may refuse to consider it. Without going into the list of earlier cases on the subject, the rule is sufficiently indicated in People v. Zarate, 54 Cal. App. 372 [201 Pac. 955], and People v. Fouts, 61 Cal. App. 242 [214 Pac. 657], in which latter ease we said that the jury “is always to de *19 termine in. the last analysis whether a confession is freely and voluntarily made.”

We now come to a statement of those portions of the record showing not only the extent to which the trial judge departed from this well-settled rule, but the degree in which appellants aided him in the fault. Early in the trial the question arose as to the circumstances under which the confessions had been given. A police officer testified that appellant France had made a statement to him at a certain time and place. The officer said that the statement was free and voluntary, and that it was not induced by threats or violence or by offers of reward or immunity. He was next asked to state his conversation with France. Then the following transpired: “Mr. Cruzan [of counsel for appellants] : One moment . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 P. 374, 73 Cal. App. 13, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-black-calctapp-1925.