People v. Castello

229 P. 855, 194 Cal. 595, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 257
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 2072.
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 229 P. 855 (People v. Castello) 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. Castello, 229 P. 855, 194 Cal. 595, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 257 (Cal. 1924).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

The defendants, Alberto Gastello and Joe Albo, both natives of the republic of Mexico and aged, respectively, twenty-one and twenty-two years, were convicted in the superior court of the county of Los Angeles *597 of the crime of grand larceny, committed on the thirtieth day of March, 1923. Before taking up their residences in Los Angeles they had resided at El Paso and had been acquaintances for several years. Gastello had a wife and two young children. Both of said defendants speak and read the English language. On said thirtieth day of March, 1923, Mrs. K. Omura, a Japanese woman, had employed an expressman to convey her household effects and the family wearing apparel of herself, husband and children to a steamer on which she was soon to take passage for Japan. Said household effects and wearing apparel were packed in trunks, boxes, baskets, suitcases, and cloth containers. A Singer ' sewing-machine had been crated. All of said household effects, including said sewing-machine and wearing apparel, were placed by said expressman upon his autotruck. En route to the steamer landing he entered his place of business for a few minutes and upon returning fqund that the truck and its contents had been removed. A few days thereafter the truck was found abandoned with only a few minor articles upon it.

Gastello’s wife and children had left Los Angeles for El Paso ten days before the crime was committed. Gastello and Albo left the state together for El Paso a short time after the commission of said crime and the disposal by them, and probably with the assistance of one Juarez, of most of the salable articles stolen. Said defendants remained at El Paso for something over two months and returned to Los Angeles singly. On the afternoon of July 30, 1923— the day on which Albo arrived in Los Angeles—he and Gastello, for whom a search had been in progress for some time, were observed together in a street-ear and placed under arrest by Officers S. S. Stone and Le Roy E. Richards. An investigation into the commission of the offense during the absence of said defendants developed facts which indisputably connected them with the commission of the crime. Gastello, Albo, and probably said Juarez—the latter undoubtedly had guilty knowledge of the commission of the offense if he was not indeed an actual participant in its commission—disposed of the sewing-machine and a number of articles contained in the trunk to a countryman and had also concealed other articles which were a part of the stolen property in the home of Juarez and at the former *598 home of Gastello, which were identified by Mrs. Omura as her property. Some of the trunks had been destroyed, but two of them remained intact and were indisputably identified by Mrs. Omura as her property. The contents of one trunk were disposed of for the sum of one hundred dollars and the sewing-machine was sold to another party for the sum of fifteen dollars. That Gastello and Albo positively negotiated said sales, which were made in a manner that should have aroused strong suspicion in the mind of a person of average caution that the property offered for sale had been dishonestly obtained, there can be no reasonable doubt. That the three parties, including Juarez, participated in a division of the fruits of the sales is scarcely open to serious question. The testimony, independent of the confession, is sufficient to warrant such a conclusion. The corpus delicti was fully established.

In the afternoon of the day on which Gastello and Albo were arrested they made oral confessions of guilty participation in said larceny, which confessions were, four days thereafter, repeated and reduced to writing by a phonographic reporter. Each of said defendants after having read his separate confession, which purported to have been freely and voluntarily made and with knowledge that it could be used against either or both of them, signed it as a detailed statement of the commission of the crime and his participation therein. At the trial it was the claim of each that said alleged confessions were not freely or voluntarily made by them, but that they were the result of extortion, punishment, and physical torture and abuse. In fact, they claimed to have been subjected to cruel and unusual treatment by the officers who arrested them and therefore urged in the court below, and urge here, that said confessions were inadmissible against them. To the foregoing objection may be added the additional claim made by them that inducements were held out by said officers to influence them to make confessions of guilt upon a promise that it would be better for them to do so. The main objection to the admission in evidence of said confessions is predicated upon the following admitted statement of Officer Richards: “We told them we had the goods on them and that they had just as well come clean.” ■ Officer Stone further said to the defendants that they could introduce them to persons who saw *599 them steal the property. According to the testimony of said officers the defendants said in this connection that “someone had squealed on them” and that they suspected a partner of theirs that was on North Broadway. A fourth party, referred to as Perez, was brought into the case by defendants as the person who procured the defendants to haul the stolen property to the persons who bought it and who, it is claimed, gave Gastello a number of the stolen articles found in his possession. Gastello claimed that this was the first time he had met Perez. The latter was given two or three aliases by the defendants and at times was placed by them at the home of Juarez. The personality of one shades into the personality of the other. It would seem that Perez was a fictitious person injected into the transaction to fill the part actually taken by Juarez whom the defendants for some reason seemed disposed to protect. Joe Perez and Joe Juarez were, without much doubt, interchangeable names representing but one person.

It is the claim of defendants, but denied by the officers present at the time, that what Officer Stone actually said to the defendants was “that we better come clear with the truth because he got the goods on us and we better come through if we want him to help us out.” There can be no doubt but that the words “we better come through if you want him to help us out” would, under ordinary circumstances, if credited by • the court, render the confessions inadmissible. (People v. Barrie, 49 Cal. 342; People v. Gonzales, 136 Cal. 666 [69 Pac. 487].) Defendant Gastello, however, in another part of his testimony, departed from the statement above quoted and testified that the officer said that they had “everything on them” and that they might as well “come through with the truth and say everything.” It is a further ground of complaint that the statement made by the officer that they could introduce them to the persons who saw them steal said property was a deception employed by said officers and was calculated to and did have the effect of procuring the confession.

The rule is well settled that whether or not a confession is free and voluntary is a preliminary question addressed to the trial court. (People v. Loper, 159 Cal. 6 [Ann. Cas. 1912B, 1933, 112 Pac. 720]; People v. Siemsen, 153 Cal. 387 [95 Pac. 863]; People v. Grafft,

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Bluebook (online)
229 P. 855, 194 Cal. 595, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-castello-cal-1924.