People v. Bob

175 P.2d 12, 29 Cal. 2d 321, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 299
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1946
DocketCrim. 4722
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 175 P.2d 12 (People v. Bob) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Bob, 175 P.2d 12, 29 Cal. 2d 321, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 299 (Cal. 1946).

Opinions

CARTER, J.

Defendant Bob has been adjudged guilty of the crime of murder of the first degree and sentenced to pay the extreme penalty. His appeal is automatically before this court by virtue of the provisions of section 1239 of thé Penal Code.

After his arrest Bob told the officers freely of the circumstances leading to the homicide, and at the trial he repeated his story on the witness stand.

It appears' that in the early evening of November 16, 1945, Bob and an acquaintance named Johnson met in a pool hall in Stockton and decided to go out “hustling,” which in the vernacular means “to roll a drunk, strong-arm somebody.” According to the testimony of Bob, they walked by the Elks Club, where Johnson went in a doorway and picked up a piece of iron pipe. The two then continued walking until they noticed a Japanese man across the street talking to a boy. Johnson intruded upon this conversation and found that the Japanese,. George S. Yoshioka, who had served in the United States Army, was inquiring where he could find some girls. [323]*323Johnson stated that he knew where girls -were to be found. He and Yoshioka and Bob walked down the street. They paused near a hotel on South Center Street, and then rounded the corner of the building into a vacant lot. Bob stayed a few feet away. Johnson and Yoshioka talked awhile and then Johnson suddenly hit Yoshioka on the head with the iron pipe,' repeating the blows until unconsciousness resulted. Bob went through Yoshioka’s pockets and extracted a wallet. Johnson took Yoshioka’s wrist watch.

Bob and Johnson then went to the hotel room of Johnson’s wife, where Johnson proceeded to clean up and prepared to flee the state. The sum of $37, found in the wallet, was divided equally by the two men. Johnson also found a $50 bill which he did not mention to Bob. Bob went back into the street, met one Simmons, and told him of the crime. He and Simmons returned to Yoshioka and Simmons took Yoshioka’s shoes. Soon thereafter Yoshioka’s body was observed by a passer-by, and the police were notified. Yoshioka passed away in the hospital without regaining consciousness, the cause of death being a fractured skull. The bloodstained pipe was found on the ground near the spot where Yoshioka’s head had rested, but its rusty surface gave forth no fingerprints.

Johnson was taken into custody in Texas and returned to California. On December 1, 1945, in the early morning, Bob was arrested for “causing trouble” in a cafe, and was booked as a suspect vagrant. When the police took him to the fingerprinting desk, he there saw Johnson: This led to his voluntary confession of complicity in the robbery and murder of Yoshioka. He was questioned by an assistant district attorney in the presence of police officers and a court reporter, and the entire conversation was reduced to writing. Johnson was then brought in, and in the presence of the same officers and of Bob, his statement was taken in the same manner. It differed from the statement of Bob in this: That whereas Bob accused Johnson of being the man who picked up the pipe, lured the Japanese to the lot, and struck the fatal blows, Johnson claimed that he was the bystander and that it was Bob who procured the pipe, talked and walked with the victim, and then killed him. At the close of the questioning of Johnson, Bob stated that it was Johnson who used the pipe. A colloquy then ensued between Johnson and Bob, wherein each made accusations against the other. This was also re[324]*324duced to writing and together with Johnson’s statement was read in evidence.

The two men were tried separately. On the trial of Bob his confession to the police was introduced in evidence. Johnson’s statement contained the assertion that Bob struck the lethal blow. As above stated, that was denied by Bob. The balance of the statement was in accordance with Bob’s confession and he did not deny it. Under those circumstances Johnson’s statement was clearly hearsay evidence and was not admissible under any exception to the hearsay rule. (People v. Simmons, 28 Cal.2d 699 [172 P.2d 18].) The error in the admission of that evidence, especially the part to the effect that defendant struck the deadly blow is conceded by the prosecution, hence it has waived any claim to the sufficiency of defendant’s objection to the evidence in the court below. ‘ ‘ If the adverse party does not oppose the consideration of a question for want of an objection in the trial court, the point will often be considered waived, on the ground that the appellate court is not bound on its own motion to invoke the rule requiring objection to be made in the court below.” (4 C.J.S., Appeal & Error, § 245.)

Moreover, under all the circumstances defendant’s objection was sufficient. The record shows that when Johnson’s statement was offered, defendant’s counsel stated: “We object to any statement made by Johnson.” Later defendant’s counsel stated: “I believe that Johnson could be brought here as a witness and I renew my objection to this statement inasmuch as he can be produced, and should be produced, to make his own statement before the jury rather than relying upon his statement that was made some time ago, and his statement having been transcribed, the best evidence is from the lips of the witness, let the jury see him and determine from his attitude before the jury whether or not he is speaking the truth. This is certainly secondary evidence.” [Emphasis added.] The court stressed the point (justifying its ruling of admissibility) after both objections, and on other occasions, that if the statement was made in the presence of defendant it would be admissible. After the court made such remarks following the last mentioned objection, defendant’s counsel stated: “This [referring to Johnson’s statement made out of court] is not a judicial proceeding. It’s an ex parte affair, and we have a .right to have him produced, and that evidence certainly might be of very much greater advantage [325]*325to the jury in determining whether he is speaking the truth than merely the recital of a statement that’s been reduced to writing by somebody else.” [Emphasis added.] The proper ground of objection to the evidence would have been that it was hearsay, and ordinarily that ground should be specified in the objection, but it is manifest that although the word “hearsay” was not used in giving the grounds of the objections, the whole tenor of them was plainly directed to that ground. The essence of the hearsay rule is that the witness is not in court and subject to cross-examination and is not available for the jury to judge his credibility. Those were the very things urged by defendant’s counsel. That the court understood that the objection was grounded in hearsay is evidenced by its remarks about the presence of defendant when the statements were made. It is many times erroneously assumed that the mere presence of the other party when a statement is made will erase its hearsay character. The presence of the other party is ordinarily no test. It becomes important only when the statement is offered for the purpose of showing an admission of guilt by defendant. It is apparent from the remarks of the court that even if hearsay (using that word) had been specified as the ground of the objection the trial court would have overruled it.

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Bluebook (online)
175 P.2d 12, 29 Cal. 2d 321, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bob-cal-1946.