People v. Cannizzaro

31 P.2d 1066, 138 Cal. App. 28, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 628
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 11, 1934
DocketCrim. No. 2457
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 P.2d 1066 (People v. Cannizzaro) 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. Cannizzaro, 31 P.2d 1066, 138 Cal. App. 28, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 628 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

DESMOND, J., pro tem.

The defendant appeals from judgments of conviction on two counts; the first charging him with violating chapter 339, Statutes of 1923, by possessing on or about April 26, 1933, “an instrument and weapon commonly known as a black-jack and billy”; the second charging a violation of the same law, as amended in 1931, Act 1970, section 2 (Deering’s Gen. Laws), and alleging that,' on or about the date mentioned, defendant was not a citizen of the United States, and that at that time he had “in his possession and custody, and under his control, a certain firearm, to-wit, a revolver, . . . the said firearm having a barrel less than twelve inches in length”. The act defines such a weapon as one “capable of being concealed upon the person” and the information so described it. This appeal is also grounded upon an order of the trial court denying defendant’s motion for a new trial on both counts.

An unmarried woman, who testified that she was engaged to the defendant and that she had assumed the name of Pauline Durant, by which she will be known in this narrative, resided for some months prior to April 26, 1933, in apartment 407 of a certain apartment house in the city of Los Angeles. The defendant was seen passing through the lobby of this building on various occasions by the landlady, to whom Pauline Durant paid rent for apartment 407. On one occasion Mrs. Durant introduced the defendant, as Frank Hugo, to the landlady. About noon of April 26, 1933, three police officers called at apartment 407, defendant coming there about ten minutes later after Mrs. Durant had telephoned him. While awaiting defendant’s arrival, the officers —according to one of them, Walter Schubert—searched the apartment and found there “a sap, a three-cell flashlight with a red lens; some buckshot, some revolver cartridges, some bird shot”. This officer also testified that shortly after entering the apartment, defendant picked up a revolver from under a cushion on an overstuffed set in the living-room, and handed it to him. This weapon Schubert described as a blue steel, Smith & Wesson, hammerless revolver with a barrel about 2y2 or 3 inches long. The “sap” or “billy” referred [31]*31to in this officer’s testimony was then introduced in evidence, also the flashlight. At this point the district attorney undertook to elicit from the police officer a conversation which he claimed to have had with defendant in apartment 407 at the time the articles above named were found by the officers or produced by defendant. Counsel fof defendant interposed an objection on the ground that the corpus delicti had not been proved; that therefore admissions or confessions by the defendant could not legally be introduced to supply the missing essentials of such proof. The trial court ruled that there had been sufficient proof of the corpus delicti to permit the conversation to be related. This ruling is assigned as error. We must therefore analyze the offenses charged. As to the first count, there are two elements of the corpus delicti: First, possession; second, a weapon prohibited by the statute. As to the second count, there are three elements: Possession, a proscribed weapon and alienage of the defendant. In connection with this last element, we know that in addition to the testimony above narrated, the defendant was charged under the name Cannizzaro, and was present before the jury.

People v. Selby, 198 Cal. 426, at page 438 [245 Pac. 426], lays down the rule “that the corpus delicti is not required to be established to a moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt before the extrajudicial statements, admissions, or confessions of a defendant maj^ be received in evidence— prima facie proof of the corpus delicti being sufficient for that purpose”. Gauged by this standard, which has been approved repeatedly, and considering especially the testimony which was before the jury that defendant produced the revolver from its place of concealment, we feel no error was committed by the trial court in admitting testimony of the conversations. This brings us to appellant’s contention that the evidence produced was insufficient to support the verdict on either of said counts. -Having read the transcript, we find that in this case, as in many others, the jury had before it, when the evidence was all in, two contrary theories: one developed and disclosed by the People and its witnesses; the other by defendant’s witnesses. This conflict of evidence was resolved against the defendant by the jury, and we cannot say, after a review of all the testimony produced by the People and apparently accepted as true by the jurors, that [32]*32there was anything so inherently improbable in it as to call for a reversal of either judgment.

Other assignments of error which are before us relate to misconduct charged to the prosecuting attorney by appellant, as follows: asking Mrs. Durant if it were not a fact that the officers when they took the defendant from the apartment house “told Frank Hugo they wanted him in connection with a murder”; alluding to defendant in argument to the jury as “Frank Hugo or Frank Cannizzaro or Paul Durant, or whatever his name may be”; referring to the apartment as a convenient place for bootleggers to take orders; describing the flashlight with a red lens as “an article used by ‘thugs’ and ‘gangsters’ and ‘hoodlums’ ... a light conveniently used by high j ackers and hoodlums for the purpose of simulating police officers”; various other similar remarks, expressing the belief that the possession of such tools by the defendant (who, according to the police officer, stated that he lived in apartment 407 and owned them all), stamped him in his trade and profession “as truly as anything that could be placed in this court, and having thus stamped him as they do, you can go into your jury room, if you want to, and turn loose upon Los Angeles one of the greatest racketeers, hoodlums and gangsters, we have ever had in our midst”.

As to the first item above; an objection to the question as to whether the officers told Frank Hugo they wanted him in connection with a murder charge was sustained, although defendant’s counsel had opened up this avenue of inquiry on direct examination by asking Mrs. Durant these questions: “Q. Was the conversation that took place between the officers and the defendant in your presence after he arrived? A. Yes. Q. State what that was?” Upon the court’s sustaining the objection no answer was made to the inquiry. “Assuming it to have been an improper question a mere mistake by the prosecuting officer relative to a rule of evidence cannot be regarded as misconduct.” (People v. De Vries, 69 Cal. App. 201, 206 [230 Pac. 982].) It may be noted also that no request was made by defendant’s counsel to instruct the jury to disregard this conduct deemed objectionable on the part of the prosecutor as required under the rule of People v. Carson, 49 Cal. App. 12, 17 [192 Pac. 318], As to the other items of claimed misconduct [33]*33occurring in the prosecuting attorney’s argument to the jury certain comments by the court in People v. Sieber, 201 Cal. 341, 355 [257 Pac. 64, 70], are apropos. “Appellant complains of what he terms the ‘shocking conduct and shameful tactics’ of the deputy district attorney who conducted the case for the People in the trial court. The prosecuting officer may have been overzealous at times, but we are not persuaded that he was so unmindful of the duty he owed both to the state and to the defendant as to use his office ‘as an engine of persecution’, as charged by the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
31 P.2d 1066, 138 Cal. App. 28, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cannizzaro-calctapp-1934.