People v. Burcham

217 P. 558, 62 Cal. App. 649, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 402
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 25, 1923
DocketCrim. No. 674.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 217 P. 558 (People v. Burcham) 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. Burcham, 217 P. 558, 62 Cal. App. 649, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 402 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant was charged by an indictment found and returned by the grand jury of Humboldt County with the crime of perjury and was subsequently tried on said indictment in the superior court of said county. The indictment was in three counts and the jury found him guilty on each count.

He appeals from the judgment and the order denying him a new trial.

*650 The indictment charges that the alleged perjury was committed by the defendant as a witness in a criminal action tried in the superior court of Humboldt County and in which one Lawrence Mahach and Marion Rube were charged with the crime of robbery committed in said county on the third day of May, 1922.

It appears that in the forenoon of Wednesday, the third day of May, 1922, and during business hours, the Bank of Fortuna, situated in the town of Fortuna, in Humboldt County, was entered by a bandit and in the presence of Fred P. Newell, an officer of said bank, said bandit forcibly took from said bank the sum of $18,000. About the time that the robbery was being perpetrated a young man, a student of the high school of Fortuna, was approaching the bank, having been sent there to procure some change for the principal of the school. He saw an Oldsmobile car standing in front of the bank. As he neared the car a man emerged from the bank carrying with both hands a large sack which appeared to be filled with some article that was heavy and cumbersome. This man stepped to the front of the car and threw the sack in the front part thereof or in front of the seat next to which the driver sits when operating an automobile. This young man stated that, although the curtains of the car were drawn, he was able to observe at least one and he thought two men sitting in the back of the car. Immediately upon throwing the sack into the car, the party jumped in and started the machine at a rapid rate around the corner of the street and the ear disappeared from sight. Within a short time thereafter several of the employees of the bank rushed out to the sidewalk and exclaimed that the bank had been robbed. At the trial of Mahach and Rube the young man testified to these circumstances and also stated that, although the face of the man who carried the sack from the bank to the automobile was thickly covered with what seemed to him to be white powder and rouge, he was, nevertheless, able to and did positively identify Rube as that party. Subsequently to the commission of the robbery, said Lawrence Mahach and Marion Rube were arrested and charged with the commission of said robbery.

On the twenty-ninth day of April, 1922, one O. J. Pidgeon, the owner of a garage in the city of Eureka, -Hum *651 boldt County, just before the hour of 8 o’clock P. M., parked his Oldsmobile ear in front of the Elks Building in said city and thereupon went to the Elks Hall to attend a meeting of the lodge and a banquet to be later given that evening under the auspices of said organization. When he returned from the Elks Hall to the sidewalk where he had parked his machine he found that it was missing. On the 30th of April, in the forenoon, a machine, which bore the description of Pidgeon’s Oldsmobile, was seen traveling at a rapid rate of speed over a road leading from the town of Pepperwood, which is about thirty miles from the city of Eureka, and going in the direction of the town of Scotia, in Humboldt County. Later in the day an Oldsmobile of the same description was seen parked in the woods near Pepperwood about one hundred yards from the highway. No one was seen about the car at the time and the engine was “dead.” Parties going through the woods and who had seen the car earlier on the 30th of April again passed the same spot later in the day and observed that the machine had been taken away.

On Thursday following the day of the robbery Pidgeon recovered his ear, it having been left in the town of Fortuna, where the robbery occurred. The car had been roughly used. It was covered with dust and dirt and the insulation had burned out and the machine could not be operated without the repair of the insulation and other parts of the machinery thereof.

The description of the Oldsmobile seen in the woods near Pepperwood and the car seen by the young man near the Fortuna Bank at the time of the robbery and into which Eube threw the sack tallied with that of the Oldsmobile stolen from Pidgeon.

The theory of the prosecution was, and the people directed their proof to the support of that theory in said case of People v. Mahach, and Rube, 60 Cal. App. 635 [213 Pac. 539], that the said parties stole the machine of Pidgeon and that they used the car for the purpose of carrying out the scheme which evidently they had conceived to rob the Bank of Fortuna. The evidence presented by the people disclosed circumstances from which the jury could well have concluded that said theory was well founded.

*652 The defendant in this case testified as a witness for the defendant Rube. He stated that he met Rube in Eureka near 7 o’clock in the evening of Saturday, April 29, 1922, Rube having a short time before arrived in Eureka on the stage from Crescent City, Del Norte County; that in a conversation with Rube the latter said to him that he had been working “up north” and that he was anxious to return to his home; that the defendant asked where his home was and Rube stated it was at Pepperwood. a distance of about twenty-five or thirty miles from Eureka; that Rube stated to him that he was short of money and that he did not like to be required to hire a ear to take him home; that thereupon the witness said: “Well, I have a friend here, if I can see him, I oftentimes use his car. I will take you home, because I had never been down that way, I had only been over here a short time. Anyway I told him if he would pay the oil and gas and that sort of thing, and in case we had any tire trouble, I would take • him home where he wanted to go.” The defendant stated that he immediately started out to borrow the car from the friend to whom he had referred in his conversation with Rube and promised to meet him (Rube) within an hour in case he succeeded in securing the loan of the car; that he did secure the ear and near the hour of 8 o’clock P. M., met Rube and drove him to his home at Pepperwood. Before leaving for Pepper-wood, however, Rube stated to Burcham, so the latter testified, that he (Rube) desired to purchase some sugar and cornmeal to take home with him; that thereupon he (Burcham) drove the machine to the store of Hindi, Salmon & Walsh in Eureka; that Rube gave him $20 and asked him to go into the store and purchase three sacks of brown sugar and some cornmeal; that he (Burcham) entered the store and purchased the articles named, returned to the car and then proceeded on his way to Pepperwood; that, arriving at Pepperwood, Rube went to his home and he (Burcham) returned to Eureka.

In reply to questions by the district attorney on cross-examination, the defendant stated that the name of the man from whom he borrowed the ear was E. L. Hartwell; that it was a Dodge automobile; that he and said Hartwell served together as soldiers in the war with Germany and were in Europe together during said war. He was asked *653

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Related

People v. Di Giacomo
193 Cal. App. 2d 688 (California Court of Appeal, 1961)
People v. Tolmachoff
138 P.2d 61 (California Court of Appeal, 1943)
People v. Layman
4 P.2d 244 (California Court of Appeal, 1931)
People v. Burcham
232 P. 149 (California Court of Appeal, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
217 P. 558, 62 Cal. App. 649, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-burcham-calctapp-1923.