People v. Chenault

169 P.2d 29, 74 Cal. App. 2d 487, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1000
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 1946
DocketCrim. 573
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 169 P.2d 29 (People v. Chenault) 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. Chenault, 169 P.2d 29, 74 Cal. App. 2d 487, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1000 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

*489 GRIFFIN, J.

Defendant Samuel Chenault, Jr. (colored, aged 26) was charged with and convicted by a jury of entering the Singer Grocery Store in Fresno with intent to commit theft therein. A motion for new trial was denied. At the trial it was stipulated and established that the grocery store in question was burglarized sometime between 7 p. m. of November 21, and 10 a. m. of November 22, 1945, by a breaking of the rear door and that rolls of pennies, nickels and dimes, together with certain groceries, cigarettes, a radio, and ladies’ wearing apparel were taken. The store proprietor identified articles of groceries received in evidence by the retail prices which he had written thereon.

Defendant came to Fresno from Los Angeles on Sunday evening, November 18, and claims that he was en route to San Francisco to see a sick cousin or uncle, but stopped over to see two lady friends. Sunday evening he saw a “Room for Rent” sign in a window, rented the room, and paid $7.50 for the first week.

According to the testimony of the proprietor (a Mr. Phillips, also colored and about 64 years of age) defendant brought with him a woman who was supposed to be his wife, and a man whom defendant said was his brother. He testified that the claimed wife stayed there with him Sunday and Monday nights and the brother stayed with him on Tuesday night; that on Wednesday night, November 21, the day before Thanksgiving, at about 11 o’clock, defendant and the brother came to the house together and made two or three trips into the kitchen with packages and bundles under their arms; that the brother left and defendant retired; that defendant occupied a rear bedroom and had kitchen privileges; that in order to get to the kitchen defendant had to go through the proprietor’s room where he slept; that after defendant went to bed he, the proprietor, got up and went to the kitchen and saw a lot of groceries in a big box; that the next morning defendant took the groceries out of the box and stacked them on three separate shelves in the kitchen; that the ice box was also filled with food; that on Thursday morning, Thanksgiving day, while Phillips was preparing for church, defendant attempted to hook up a black radio to Mr. Phillips aerial; that he told defendant there was no need of two radios; that defendant said he would sell his radio then; that on that same morning defendant told Phillips “that he was a good *490 man,” and that he would pay him some more money on his room rent; that defendant then gave him $7.50 for another week’s rent; that the money consisted of a roll of 50 dimes. and some 50 cent pieces; that he became suspicious of defendant because he had missed a vibrator out of the top drawer of his dresser; that he called the police department at about 6 p. m. on Thanksgiving day; that an officer arrived and that he told him about missing the vibrator and showed him the groceries and $5.00 in dimes; that the officer got defendant out of bed and sent him to headquarters.

The officer testified that he questioned the defendant about the burglary of the Singer store and that at first defendant denied ever seeing the groceries but immediately thereafter stated that he had bought them from a man in Chinatown two or three days previously. Later, another officer interviewed defendant and defendant told him that when he was about 35 miles from Fresno, a white man, whom he did not know, sold him the groceries for $5.00 and took him and the groceries to the Phillips home. Defendant denied any knowledge of the burglary, about the radio, the ladies’ clothing or the fresh meat found in the ice box. A search of defendant’s room revealed a radio hidden under the bed, which radio was taken from the Singer store, and a box of ladies’ clothing which was also taken from the same store. Finger prints found on a partly empty beer bottle in the same store were examined but there were found to be no clear prints, only “smudge spots.”

Defendant took the stand and testified that when he arrived in Fresno on the morning of November 18, he went to the house of “Iola” and “Jennie”; that he did not know their last names; that he wanted to get a room; that he was going to San Francisco to see a sick cousin; that he would be back in about a week or ten days; that that afternoon he went to San Francisco in a car driven by a colored boy named “George”; that he did not know his last name; that when he arrived in San Francisco his cousin was dead; that he attended the funeral on Tuesday, November 20, but did not lrnow just exactly where it was held; that he stayed one night in a hotel in San Francisco but did not remember the name of it; that he then went to Oakland and left for Fresno on Thanksgiving day, November 22d, about 1:30 or 2 o’clock in the morning with “George”; that he arrived in Fresno about 10 a. m., saw Iola and Jennie on the street and then *491 went to his room and saw Phillips and other people there having a “jamboree”; that Phillips made improper advances to him and threatened to get even with him; that about 30 minutes later the police came and accused him of burglary which he denied; that he had never seen the groceries until he arrived home and that the radio was being played by guests in the house; that he never talked to the police officers although they tried to get him to talk and admit the burglary; that he never slept in the room except the hour or two just before he was arrested on November 22d. Defendant first denied that he had ever been convicted of a felony but later, after considerable cross-examination, admitted a prior conviction of robbery in the second degree and that he was granted five years probation. In rebuttal, the police officer testified that defendant never told him anything about being in San Francisco at the time of the alleged robbery. Mr. Phillips denied that any party was going on at his home on Thanksgiving day and said that defendant’s story was “the biggest story ever told”; that when Officer Baker came to the home defendant was in bed with one Mary Allen and that when the officer questioned the defendant about the vibrator defendant said “he did not give a---if they put him in the penitentiary.”

It is first claimed that prejudicial error was committed in the cross-examination of the defendant in respect to the prior conviction of a felony. A portion of the cross-examination on this subject is as follows:

“Q. (By Mr. Wash): By the way, have you ever been convicted of a felony? A. No. Q. Isn’t it a fact, Mr. Ohenault, that on May 28, 1942, you were found guilty of second degree robbery in the Superior Court of the County of Los Angeles ? A. Beg pardon? Mr. Said: Just one moment, please. We object to that question, Your Honor, as already been asked and answered. The only question that he can ask this witness is whether or not he has been convicted of a felony and the answer has already been given. Counsel knows he cannot go any farther than that. He wishes to leave an impression with this jury that this man has been convicted of something that he was not convicted of, and I assign that as prejudicial misconduct.” The objection was overruled. “. . . A. Well, I have never been convicted nowhere of a felony. Mr. Wash : Q. Isn’t it a fact that on May 28, 1942, you were found guilty *492 of robbery in the second degree? A. No. . . . Mb. Wash: Q. Isn’t it a fact that you were granted probation for five years in that case? A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 P.2d 29, 74 Cal. App. 2d 487, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-chenault-calctapp-1946.