People v. Curry

218 P.2d 153, 97 Cal. App. 2d 537, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1570
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 16, 1950
DocketCrim. 2636
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 218 P.2d 153 (People v. Curry) 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. Curry, 218 P.2d 153, 97 Cal. App. 2d 537, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1570 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

BRAT, J.

On charges of (1) assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder and (2) robbery, the jury convicted both defendants of assault by means of force likely to produce great bodily injury, and of robbery in the first degree. Both defendants appealed from the judgments entered on the jury verdicts and from the order denying their motion for a new trial.

Questions Pbesented

1. Alleged error in refusal to permit a voir dire examination of prosecuting witness to determine his competency. 2. Alleged error in admitting surgeon’s testimony as to an operation. 3. Alleged error in excluding evidence of claimed beating of defendants. 4. Alleged error in admitting testimony of a probation officer as to statements made to him by defendant Jones. 5. Alleged misconduct of the district attorney in allegedly injecting the race issue.

Evidence

Shortly after 10:15 on the evening of March 11, 1949, three men entered a liquor store at 1346 Pacific Avenue, San Francisco, accosted the proprietor, Victor Sambado, asking first for a wine which he did not have, and then saying: “It’s a holdup.” The men were standing as follows: the first leaning on the counter directly across from Sambado as he stood beside the cash register, the second to the side near two refrigerators, and the third man was at the door. Sambado testified that he had previously seen these men in the store. Sambado raised his hands and told the men to take it easy, take everything he had; he noticed that the second man, later identified as defendant Curry, was turning his gun around, holding it by the barrel; then he looked at the first man, Jones, in order to remember his appearance for identification, and was struck on the head. Sambado’s cousin, Mrs. Pirpo, heard a noise and came in to see what had happened, observed a man at the cash register; one of the men pointed a gun at her and said, ‘ ‘ I will kill you, ’ ’ and then the three ran out. Mrs. Pirpo could not identify the men.

While the robbery was in progress, Mr. Chilton and Mr. Gerber parked their car near the store and Mr. Chilton went in. Both Chilton and Gerber noticed a late model light colored Mercury ear parked near the store facing west. Chilton *540 entered the store and then observed the robbery in progress, Sambado on the floor behind the counter. The men ran out past him, and he called Gerber, who phoned for the police. Chilton noticed that one of the men was wearing a round flat hat.

About this time Special Officer la Grande had been nearly run down at Pacific and Polk Streets by a light colored Mercury car containing three men. He reported the incident to a police patrol car from which a broadcast was put in for a “cream colored Mercury sedan.” Later another description of the ear was given to the officers in the patrol car and relayed for broadcasting, and about the same time Officer Tucker who had gone to Sambado’s store in response to the call from Mr. Gerber also had a broadcast made describing the holdup men and the car as a grey Mercury sedan.

The broadcasts were received by Officers Litt and Strange who were then on duty in their patrol car. After the first broadcast they followed and parked behind a grey Mercury car containing three young men, and had some discussion as to whether the occupants were the suspects after the men got out of the ear and walked away. The officers drove away and returned when they received the second broadcast describing the suspected car as grey. They searched the car and waited for the absent occupants to return. The search disclosed a .38 calibre revolver without handles under the front seat, the matching handles in the glove compartment, and a tin cash tray on the rear floor. The tray was later identified by Sambado as one he had made himself and had used up to the time of the robbery.

After the search was completed Curry and Jones, two of the three prior occupants of the ear, returned. Both officers had noticed Curry’s “pork-pie” hat. The officers took the defendants across the street into a doorway, after accosting them with drawn guns, and questioned them. Both defendants denied knowledge of the ear, although when confronted with various documents found in the car they admitted it was owned by Jones’ father. It actually was owned by defendant. Jones and his father. The defendants were then searched; about $93 including fifteen to twenty one dollar bills and some coins were found on Jones, most of the money in a roll in his pocket, and $15 in his wallet; about $75 including fifteen to twenty one dollar bills and some coins were found on Curry. Also found in Jones’ jacket pocket were five .38 calibre short bullets fitting into the gun without grips. Jones denied that *541 any bullets were taken from his person. The key to the car was found on the sidewalk in the vicinity of the right rear wheel where Jones had been standing.

The defendants were taken to the police station and then to the emergency hospital where Sambado identified them as two of the men involved, and later again identified them at the Franklin Hospital. At the trial Chilton testified that he thought defendant Curry was the man he saw in the doorway at the time of the holdup, but he was not positive. Jones admitted that the witness Gerber identified the defendants on the night in question. Gerber did not identify them at the trial. Sambado testified that at the time of the holdup he had noticed that Curry had an odd looking gun, which at the trial he identified as similar to the gun without grips.

1. Refusal to Permit Examination as to Sambado’s Competency.

The blow which Sambado received on the night of the holdup caused a depressed fracture of the skull over the motor cortex. Defendants contend that as a result of the blow there was a gap in Sambado’s memory and that they should have been permitted to examine him before he testified on direct examination to show that this gap was sufficient to cause him to be incompetent as a witness. In their opening brief they say: “Mr. Sambado was undoubtedly sane, able to understand the nature of an oath and to testify clearly all during the course of the trial. But his testimony discloses that there was a hiatus in his recollection of the events of the robbery and assault ...” They base their claims of this gap on several facts: 1. that Sambado testified that subsequent to the accident his right leg became partially paralyzed, whereas Dr. Webb, a neurological surgeon who examined him the morning after the robbery, stated that the injury sustained would only involve the left leg. (This does not take in account the fact that another doctor who saw him about the same time testified that he had a clonus, an involuntary muscular action in both legs.) 2. Sambado exhibited a defect in speech—an aphasia—which could have resulted from a retrograde or an hysterical amnesia. This condition Sambado ascribed to an illness. 3. Sambado testified he was struck by a gun butt, but a policeman testified that Chilton (although at the trial he stated that when he first saw Sambado he was lying on the floor) had stated to him the night of the robbery that Sambado was struck by a bottle, and there were broken bottles on the floor. 4. Sambado *542

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 P.2d 153, 97 Cal. App. 2d 537, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-curry-calctapp-1950.