People v. Burcham

232 P. 149, 69 Cal. App. 614, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 260
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 812.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 232 P. 149 (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, 232 P. 149, 69 Cal. App. 614, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 260 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

FINCH, P. J.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of perjury and prosecutes this appeal from the judgment of conviction and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The alleged perjury is charged to have been committed during the trial of People v. Mahach and Rube, 60 Cal. App. 635 [213 Pac. 539]. The defendant was convicted of perjury in giving some of the testimony herein alleged to be false, prior to the commencement of this action. The judgment in that case was reversed. (People v. Burcham, 62 Cal. App. 649 [217 Pac. 558].) The opinion therein contains a comprehensive statement of the facts which show the materiality of the alleged false testimony charged in that action and in this, and no general restatement of such facts is necessary here. After the remittitur was filed in the trial court the action was dismissed on motion of the defendant. Thereafter this action was commenced. The defendant pleaded that he was “once in jeopardy,” basing the plea upon his trial and conviction in the case which was reversed and thereafter dismissed. There is no merit in the plea. (People v. Schmidt, 64 Cal. 260 [30 Pac. 814]; People v. Mooney, 132 Cal. 13 [63 Pac. 1070]; People v. Disperati, 11 Cal. App. 469 [105 Pac. 617].)

The information herein charges, among other things, that in the trial of the case of People v. Mahach it “became and was material to know . . . whether or not a person known as Elmer L. Hartwell was in the city of Eureka ... on April 29th, 1922, and on that day was the owner of and had possession of a certain Dodge automobile and on said day . . . loaned said Dodge automobile to said *616 Kenneth Bur chara, which said automobile was on said 29th day of April, 1922, used and employed by said Kenneth Burcham to convey and. transport one Marion Rube from Eureka ... to a point on the state highway about five miles beyond Scotia in said county and state.” It is then alleged, in appropriate language, that the defendant gave certain testimony, which is set out by question and answer and which covers six pages of the transcript, and that all such testimony was “false and untrue, and was known by said defendant to be false and untrue at the time the same was so given.” The information contains a second count which in all respects is the same as the first, except as to the materiality of the testimony given and, in that respect, it is alleged that it “became and was material to know . . . whether or not a person known by the name of Elmer L. Hartwell was alive and in the city of Eureka ... on the 29th day of April, 1922, and talked to and conversed with said Kenneth Burcham about the loan of a certain Dodge automobile, then owned by and in the possession of said Elmer L. Hartwell.”

The testimony set out in the information and alleged to be false is too long to quote, font in substance it is averred that at about 8 o’clock in the evening, on the 29th of April, 1922, the defendant borrowed a Dodge touring car, 1921 model, from one Elmer L. Hartwell and in it took Rube from Eureka to a point about thirty miles south thereof and about five miles south of Scotia; that he then returned alone and placed the automobile in a garage at Third and D Streets, where Hartwell had told him to leave it; that he had theretofore seen the- license on the car and that it was registered in Hartwell’s name (but it is not alleged that defendant testified in what state the automobile was registered) ; that he did not know any of Hartwell’s relatives or where he lived; that he did not know, but thought that Hartwell was staying at the Metropole (a hotel, or lodging-house, in Eureka) at the time the automobile was borrowed; that Hartwell remained in Eureka “as much as a month” thereafter and that the defendant last saw him “near the ith of July.”

The defendant’s testimony given at the trial of Mahach and Rube was properly admitted in evidence. It showed that, *617 in addition to the testimony set ont in the information, the defendant there testified that he and Hartwell “soldiered together in Europe for twelve or fourteen months, and I met him at different times here—about five years altogether”; that Plartwell was about thirty years of age and unmarried; that defendant did not know where Hartwell came from to Humboldt County and never knew where his parents reside; that he “said he was working upon the highway some place, I do not know where”; that the defendant’s mother had a ranch near Red Bluff and that he had resided at or near that city from May 11, 1919, to about the first of the year 1922, when he went to Redding, where he stayed for two days and then went to Eureka; that there was a California license on the automobile; that he did not read the license number plates but “supposed” they were of the year 1922, that they were white but he did not know the| color of the letters or figures thereon. I

The evidence shows that there is no record in the motor vehicle department of the state of California showing the registration of a Dodge automobile in the name of Elmer L. or E. L. Hartwell in either 1921 or 1922. It must be kept in mind, however, that the defendant is not charged with swearing that the license on the Hartwell automobile was a California license. It is apparent also, from the testimony charged to be false, that the defendant was testifying merely, to what appeared upon the face of the license attached to the automobile and not that a license had in fact been issued J The proprietors of a number of hotels and lodging-houses,j including the Metropole, testified that no one was registered-at their respective places under the name of Elmer D. or! E. L. Hartwell during the month of April, 1922, and that they did not know of such a person. Peace officers and other persons who had resided in Eureka for many years and had wide circles of acquaintances therein testified that they did not know of such a person in Eureka during April, 1922. This evidence, being negative in character, is necessarily weak. Some of these witnesses testified that the population of Eureka was then about fifteen thousand. None of them pretended to know all the residents of the city.

The prosecution produced evidence that a man named Elmer L. Campbell resided during the earlier part of the *618 year 1921 in Bed Bluff and that later in the year his time was divided between Redding and Eureka and that he was killed by an explosion of dynamite near Redding on the 10th of November of that year. It may be inferred that Campbell served in the late war, as one witness testified that he “knew him better since he came back from the war.” There is evidence from which it may be inferred that he and the • defendant were associated together in the illicit manufacture of intoxicating liquor near Red Bluff and probably at Redding and Eureka. They were seen together frequently during the year 1921 at Red Bluff and at Redding and for a time occupied the same room at a Redding hotel. They were seen riding together in a Dodge touring car belonging to Campbell. The defendant knew of Campbell’s death. About the time of leaving Red Bluff, Campbell adopted the name Elmer L, Hartwell and thereafter was known by many persons, including the defendant, as Hartwell, although others knew him only as Campbell.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 P. 149, 69 Cal. App. 614, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-burcham-calctapp-1924.