People v. Bundte

197 P.2d 823, 87 Cal. App. 2d 735, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1386
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 1948
DocketCrim. 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 197 P.2d 823 (People v. Bundte) 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. Bundte, 197 P.2d 823, 87 Cal. App. 2d 735, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1386 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The defendants were jointly indicted in three counts under section 404 of the Penal Code for participating in riots, and in nine counts under section 245 of that code for assaults committed upon different named persons by means likely to produce great bodily injuries, to wit, by the hurling of rocks. They were tried by jury and convicted of all counts, except that William Phillips was acquitted' of the assault charged in the fourth count. The riots charged in the first two counts occurred on January 30, 1947, and the riot charged in count three, together with the assaults charged in the nine remaining counts occurred February 4, 1947. All offenses grew out of a labor dispute. The defendants, together with 30 or more union labor men, were engaged in picketing two adjacent lumber mills near Willits in Mendocino County. The assaults were made on nonunion employees of the mills and upon one driver of a truck who was hauling lumber from another mill to Oakland. The assaults were made by the defendants and their associate pickets, acting together, upon the *738 nonunion workmen, by hurling roeks at them. Several of the workmen were seriously injured.

A demurrer to the indictment was overruled. Motions for a directed verdict and for a new trial were denied. The trial commenced on April 14, 1947. Separate verdicts were returned against each defendant. Judgment was rendered accordingly. The defendants were sentenced upon each conviction of riot to the county jail for the term of 180 days, such sentences to run concurrently. They were also sentenced upon each assault of which they were convicted to state prison for the term prescribed by law, said sentences to begin at the expiration of the county jail sentences, and to also run concurrently. From said judgment the defendants have appealed.

The appellants contend that the counts for riots under section 404 of the Penal Code, which are misdemeanors (Pen. Code, § 405), were improperly joined in the indictment with the remaining counts of assaults to commit bodily injuries under section 245 of that code, which are felonies. They therefore assert that the court erred in overruling their demurrer, and their motions for a directed verdict and for new trial, on that ground, and because of a lack of evidence showing that the defendants acted together in committing the riots to disturb the public peace by means of force or violence; that the evidence fails to show that the defendants personally threw the rocks that injured some of the workmen or damaged their automobiles; that the evidence fails to show they cooperated with the other strikers in commission of the offenses ; that they should not have been found guilty of certain assaults in which they were not identified as personally hurling rocks, on the mere theory that they aided and abetted their associate strikers in committing the offenses; that section 31 of the Penal Code has no application to the circumstances of this case; that the court erred in instructing the jury in that regard, and that the court erred in admitting in evidence photographs of the rocks thrown and the automobiles damaged in said assaults.

The transcript contains 1,000 pages of evidence. There is much conflict of testimony on the essential issues. The strike of union labor employees commenced about a month prior to the commission of the offenses in question, at two adjacent lumber mills near Willits in Mendocino County. It continued to the time of the commission of the offenses. The riots charged *739 in counts one and two occurred January 30, 1947, at the Hollow Tree Lumber Company mill located 9 miles east of Rockport on the highway from Willits to Fort Bragg. The riot charged in count three and the assaults charged in the remaining counts occurred February 4, 1947, at Richardson Lumber Company mill situated on said highway two miles west of Willits. At the time of the affrays both mills were being operated by nonunion workmen. Both mills were then picketed by a small number of men estimated at not more than 10 men. At the time of the disturbances in question the number of pickets had been increased to 30 or 35 men. Most of the same pickets were engaged in all the affrays. The defendants were among those assailing pickets, and active in all offenses charged at both mills. When the foreman and nonunion employees left the Hollow Tree Lumber Company mill at noon to go to lunch at the cook-house, some distance down the roadway, they were compelled to pass through the picket line, consisting of 30 to 35 men who had congregated at the entrance to the mill. The defendants were then among those pickets. An open lane was forced by a deputy sheriff through the crowd of pickets, along which the nonunion workmen passed. The defendant Bundte held in his hand a switch which he was flipping back and forth to intimidate the passing workmen. The officer warned him not to strike anyone with it. No one was struck. The attitude of the pickets was clearly antagonistic. But the workmen passed the picket line without an assault. When they reached a point about 100 yards down the roadway, George Sherrard, one of the strikers who had evidently been hiding there, suddenly stepped from behind a clump of bushes and hastened toward them. He was muttering and using “some pretty bad language.” He bumped against Mr. Smith, who was in the lead, and deliberately “reached out and struck” in the face, or slapped Charles Scaife, the mill foreman. Sherrard and Scaife then clinched and a scuffle ensued. They fell to the ground. Scaife’s brother James tried to separate them. Sherrard “jumped on top of Scaife.” Observing the affray, a large group of the strikers ran down there. ‘ ‘ Some of them had rocks and things in their hands.” The defendants, Bundte and Phillips, were among them. The deputy sheriff also ran to the scene of the affray. “They all more or less arrived at the same time.” “There were several remarks passed by them [the strikers] about getting the S.O.B. and words to that effect.” William *740 Smith testified, “The pickets came charging down the road, and there were sticks and stones in some of their hands. And they said ‘Let’s take the bastards’ or words to that effect. . •. . Mr. Bartolomei and John Bnndte were one of the first there.” The deputy sheriff testified that he heard the defendant Phillips say “I hope George [Sherrard] gets the bastard,” and that Bundte said to Sherrard “Poke the--, George.” He said he saw Sherrard when “Scaife had [received] this more or less of a haymaker”; that “Bundte reached down awful low . . . and he says . . . ‘Reno, you seen who started this,’ ” to which the officer replied “Yes, I seen who started this.” The sheriff stopped the fight and told Bundte “You tell your men that there will be no more of this,” to which Bundte responded by saying, “Men, there will be no more of this—¡just as much.” The inference is that Bundte thereby purposely encouraged “his men,” the strikers, to continue the use of force and violence “just as much” as they desired. The strikers then returned to the mill, while the nonunion workmen proceeded to the cook-house.

About 2 o ’clock on the afternoon of January 30th, Ed Sands, who had been driving a truck for an Oakland firm for about eight years, reached the Hollow Tree Lumber Company mill with a heavy load of lumber chained to his truck and trailer, which he was hauling from Rockport to Oakland.

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Bluebook (online)
197 P.2d 823, 87 Cal. App. 2d 735, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bundte-calctapp-1948.