People v. Borello

119 P. 500, 161 Cal. 367, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 441
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1911
DocketCrim. No. 1616.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 119 P. 500 (People v. Borello) 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. Borello, 119 P. 500, 161 Cal. 367, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 441 (Cal. 1911).

Opinions

LORIGAN, J.

This appeal was ordered here for further consideration after judgment rendered by the district court of appeal for the third appellate district affirming the judgment of conviction and the order of the trial court denying a motion for.a new trial, from both of which the defendant appealed.

Defendant was accused and convicted of the crime of arson, and during his trial a purported confession made by him was admitted in evidence, and the principal point on this appeal is as to the correctness of the ruling of the court in that respect.

The crime of which the defendant was accused was the felonious burning, on February 5, 1908, of the “Summit House Hotel,” situated on the road leading from the town of Jackson to the town of Sutter Creek, Amador County. It appears that this property was for several years and at the date of its destruction owned by one G. B. Vicini, who, in April, 1905, leased it at a monthly rental of sixty dollars, and for a term of six years, to C. Lepori and L. C. Bertin, who then, and at the time of the fire, were engaged in business in San Francisco under the firm style of Bertin & Lepori. These lessees placed this defendant and a man named Faracone in possession of the property who thereafter conducted it as a hotel and saloon. In July, 1906, defendant executed a chattel mortgage covering all the hotel and kitchen furniture, bar fixtures, etc., in the hotel and saloon in favor of said Bertin & Lepori to secure a promissory note for five hundred dollars executed by defendant to them; in March, 1907, defendant took out two policies of insurance on the personal property in the hotel for one thousand dollars each, one of which, however, expired by its terms before the fire. Thereafter defendant sold his interest in the hotel and saloon business to one Rossi who alone seems to have thereafter conducted it until a few days before the fire when he abandoned the business, closed the hotel and left that part of the country. A few days afterward and while the hotel premises were vacant they were destroyed by fire. The defendant for several months before the fire had been living in San Francisco but, a few days *369 before it occurred, had been seen in the vicinity of the Summit House, once in company with Lepori of the firm heretofore mentioned—lessees of the hotel; another time with one Manzo, a resident of San Francisco; and some eleven months prior to the fire defendant had endeavored, but unsuccessfully, to prevail on one James Bryant to burn the hotel, offering him two hundred dollars to do so.

There was considerable other evidence in the case—conduct on the part of the defendant and circumstantial evidence—■ relied on by the people to establish the guilt of the defendant, but no positive evidence except his alleged confession directly connecting him with the commission of the crime. We make no further reference to the evidence because our purpose has been to only state such of it as will make intelligible the matters to which the confession of defendant is claimed to have been addressed, and the condition and circumstances under which it was made.

It was not claimed by the people that the defendant himself actually set the hotel on fire. The theory was that the defendant, at the instigation of Lepori, engaged a man named Manzo. to go from San Francisco to burn it and that he actually did so, the motive prompting Lepori being that by the destruction of the property the firm of which he was a member would be relieved from further payments on their lease, which still had three years to run and was an unprofitable investment, and the motive of defendant was to secure the insurance money on his personal property situated in the hotel.

Now as to the conditions and circumstances under which the confession of defendant was made.

On February 8, 1908, three days after the hotel was burned down, the defendant,-who had left San Francisco for Jackson, Amador County, was arrested by the sheriff of that county at Martell, a railroad station a short distance from Jackson, and taken to the county jail. The next evening, Sunday, February 9th—he was brought from the county jail to the office of the district attorney of the county, where were present the district attorney, the sheriff of the county, a deputy sheriff, the official stenographer of the superior court, and a constable of Amador county, the latter being present at the request of the district attorney, to act as interpreter, the defendant being an Italian, *370 who, though able to speak the English language, did so brokenly. This interview in the district attorney’s office lasted at least two hours and a half, although some of the parties present testified that it lasted nearly five hours. It resulted, after defendant had been interrogated by both the district attorney and the sheriff, in what purported to be a confession of the defendant. The statement made by him was dictated to the stenographic reporter, who transcribed it at once. It was this statement which was admitted in evidence as the confession of defendant and in which he admitted having taken part in the burning of the building, having at the instigation and request of Lepori employed a man whose name is not disclosed in the written confession who agreed to and did burn it.

On the preliminary showing the sheriff, district attorney, and the deputy sheriff testified generally that no promises were held out to defendant or any threats or intimidation or other improper means used to procure him to make the confession. As to what took place at the interview the district attorney testified: “I was in that meeting or investigation for a period of about two hours. Both Mr. Gregory and .myself asked defendant Borello some questions. Of course he willingly made the statement, the whole statement himself, and then we asked him as to little points and one thing and another that we wanted to find out and that took up about two hours. . . .” Mr. Willis, the stenographer who was present during all the interview which culminated in the making of the alleged confession, was not called by the prosecution at the preliminary showing and his presence as a witness had not been required by it.

On the part of defendant he himself testified, among other things, that both the sheriff and district attorney told him that it would be better for him if he would tell the truth about the burning of the hotel; also that if he would do so both he and his brother Marco (who was then under arrest also accused of burning the hotel) would be allowed to “go free;” that the district attorney told him that he did not want to keep him in jail, but that he wanted to get Lepori. He stated further that the sheriff had told him that his brother Marco had made a full statement of the cause and origin of the fire, and that the sheriff stated other facts tending to convey the impression *371 that in this statement so claimed to have been made, his brother had implicated defendant in the crime and fhat if defendant would not tell the truth and sign a statement, his brother Marco could get fourteen years. Other matters were testified to by defendant and other witnesses on the preliminary showing' tending' to support the claim of defendant that his confession had not been procured from him freely and voluntarily.

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Bluebook (online)
119 P. 500, 161 Cal. 367, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-borello-cal-1911.