People v. Ciulla

187 P. 46, 44 Cal. App. 719, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 559
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1919
DocketCrim. No. 866.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 187 P. 46 (People v. Ciulla) 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. Ciulla, 187 P. 46, 44 Cal. App. 719, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 559 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

WASTE, P. J.

The appellant was convicted of rape, alleged to have been forcibly committed by him upon the person of Mary Schiro, a young Italian woman, twenty-two years of age. From the judgment of his conviction, and from the order denying his motion for a new trial, defendant appeals.

His first contention is that the verdict is not supported by the evidence. There is absolutely no merit in the eon *721 tention. On the trial, appellant admitted the act of sexual intercourse, hut denied that it was had or accomplished by him with force or violence, but contended that the prosecutrix consented thereto. This was denied by the girl, and the jury believed her story. The record on appeal presents a case against the defendant and his several confederates of such nature as to merit the characterization of the attorney-general as being “conduct toward this young woman of the most brutal sort, not to say astonishing, in a civilized age and a civilized community. It would put even a ‘caveman’ to blush.” Early in the morning of April 7th of this year, as the prosecutrix was leaving her home in San Jose to go to work at a near-by place of employment, she was roughly seized by the defendant, who, with the help of two others, Sam Corcufa and Sam Mazzurco, overpowered her and threw her into a waiting automobile. She struggled and fought to the utmost of her strength with the assailants, and screamed loudly for help. The abduction was witnessed by two neighbors, Simon Bojorques and Grace Durso, who were witnesses at the trial. The prosecuting witness was taken against her will and over her protest to Mazzurco’s house, in the town of Campbell, a number of miles away. Her outcries were stilled and she was forcibly taken into the house and locked in the bedroom with the defendant. Later the other men returned with the wife of Mazzurco, who assisted in partially disrobing the girl, after which all retired from the room except the defendant, who accomplished the act of sexual intercourse. The prosecutrix testified that she fought her assailant as long as she had strength, that she was scared, and finally had to give up. The defendant was arrested upon two charges. For the forcible seizure and taking the prosecuting witness to the home of Mazzurco he was charged with kidnaping. He was likewise charged with the crime of rape, resulting in the conviction upon which this appeal is based.

[1] The prosecuting witness testified fully to the occurrence of the abduction, no objection .being made by the defendant to this testimony. When, however, the prosecution called witnesses Bojorques and Margaret Durso to corroborate her story in that particular, defendant objected upon the ground that the testimony tended to prove a distinct and separate offense, for which the defendant was *722 not then on trial. The court correctly overruled the objection and admitted the testimony. [2] “If several crimes are intermixed, or blended with one another, or connected so that they form an indivisible criminal transaction, and full proof by testimony, whether direct or circumstantial, of any one of them cannot be given without showing the others, evidence of any or all of them is admissible against a defendant on trial for any offense which is itself a detail of the whole criminal scheme.” (Underhill on Criminal Evidence, 2d ed., sec. 88, p. 157; State v. Taylor, 117 Mo. 181, [22 S. W. 1103], 118 Mo. 153, [24 S. W. 449]; Oakley v. State, 135 Ala. 29, [33 South. 23].) We are also satisfied that the testimony of the kidnaping was admissible upon another theory. [3] “It is held by all the authorities that, whenever there is a clear connection between two offenses, from which it may be logically inferred that, if guilty of one, the defendant is also guilty of the other, evidence of such other offense is admissible.” (People v. Burke, 18 Cal. App. 72, 98, [122 Pac. 435, 447], and numerous authorities therein cited.) Rarely will a case be presented, the facts of which fall more clearly within the rule of evidence noted than do those of the case at bar.

[4] Another point urged by the appellant for reversal, without the citation of authority or any argument beyond the bare statement of the contention, is that “the court erred in the exclusion of testimony offered in support of the theory of the defense that the prosecutrix was not forced against her consent to the relationship had with defendant.” While we are not called upon to make an independent examination and inquiry as to the correctness of the ruling, in order to determine whether or not there is any merit in appellant’s contention (People v. Castro, 42 Cal. App. 453, [183 Pac. 828]; People v. Ruiz, 39 Cal. App. 593, [179 Pac. 691]), we have done so. The testimony sought to be elicited was irrelevant and immaterial, and the lower court was correct in excluding it.

Another objection, similarly stated, is that “the court erred in excluding the testimony of Grace Durso embraced in the questions on pages 320-322 of reporter’s transcript.” Here, again, the appellant has not performed his duty “to point out clearly and concisely the rulings complained of as erroneous, and the reasons why they are so, with reference *723 to authorities, if any. In case counsel will not take the trouble to do so we shall deem the matter as of not sufficient importance to merit notice in an opinion.” (People v. McLean, 135 Cal. 306, 309, [67 Pac. 771].) The record plainly shows, however, that the defense was attempting to get before the jury other irrelevant matter having to do with the alleged actions of the parents of the complaining witness and in no way connected with, or bearing on, the crime with which defendant was charged.

Another contention of the appellant is that “the court erred in refusing defendant’s instructions, and the whole thereof.” An examination of the charge given by the trial court shows the jury to have been fairly and thoroughly instructed in all matters necessarily involved in the offense for which the defendant was then on trial.

[5] As to the contention that the court should have instructed the jury as to the purposes for which the evidence of the kidnaping was admissible in the trial for rape, the record discloses that no such instruction was requested by the defendant. The failure of the trial court to instruct the jury upon any proposition deemed essential by the defendant is not to be regarded as error, unless he made a request for such instruction. (People v. Fice, 97 Cal. 459, 460, [32 Pac. 531] ; People v. Martin, ante, p. 45, [185 Pac. 1003].) [6] Defendant’s proposed instruction No. 12, bearing on the subject, was correctly refused by the court, because it erroneously advised the jury that they were not to consider evidence of other acts at all.

Appellant asks consideration by this court of certain assignments of alleged misconduct on the part of the district attorney. It has required a search of the transcript, and the assistance of the attorney-general, in order to locate that portion of the record wherein these assignments occur.

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Bluebook (online)
187 P. 46, 44 Cal. App. 719, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ciulla-calctapp-1919.