People v. Dean.

226 P. 943, 66 Cal. App. 602, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 489
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 18, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 1148.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 226 P. 943 (People v. Dean.) 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. Dean., 226 P. 943, 66 Cal. App. 602, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 489 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

This is an appeal by the defendant Robert G. Dean, from a judgment entered upon a verdict of a jury finding him guilty of robbery.

Briefly, the facts are as follows: Robert G. Dean and Joseph A. Neff were living together in Oakland prior to February 5, 1923, the date of the crime for which defendant was convicted. During the early part of January, 1923, Dean spoke to Neff about the commission of some crime, without discussing any details. The substance of this conversation, as testified to by Neff, was as follows: “He said that he had met a friend of his that knew of a job, as he called it, to he pulled, but that they would not be able to do it because they had to have another party and wanted to know if I would consider taking part in it and I admitted I did and it was dropped then for the period -of *604 about another week, when it was brought up in about the same way.” About a week later Dean again asked Neff if he was willing to go in on the “job:” Neff signified his willingness and Dean said the other man wanted to meet Neff. Later Dean introduced Neff to this other man whose name was given as James Carroll. At a subsequent meeting of these three Carroll discussed in detail the plans for robbing the State Theater in Oakland. It was proposed that they rob the theater early the next morning. Dean and Neff, according to arrangement, went up¡ to Carroll’s room at about 6:15 the next morning and from Carroll’s room they walked up Broadway and passed the State Theater. They saw the janitor cleaning out the entrance and waited nearby until he had finished and gone inside. Dean and Neff then entered the theater. They found Albert Lohman, who acted as janitor and watchman, operating a vacuum cleaner back of the last row of seats. Dean pointed a revolver at Lohman and ordered him to throw up his hands. Dean and Neff had covered their faces with handkerchiefs upon entering the theater and they afterwards removed these coverings and placed them over the faces of the janitors whom they had bound to chairs. Dean and Neff took Lohman up to the mezzanine floor of the theater, where they blindfolded him and tied his hands behind his back with wire. About the time they reached the mezzanine floor, Louis Mieotti, the day janitor and watchman, came down from the balcony where he had been working, and was ordered to throw up his hands. His hands were tied with wire and the keys to the office were taken from him. Lohman and Mieotti were then taken into the ladies’ dressing-room, where they were seated in chairs and bound to the chairs with wire. Neff went down to the first floor to represent himself as the janitor to any person who might come to the theater, and Dean and Carroll went into the office of the theater, which was located on the mezzanine floor about twenty-five feet away from the ladies’ dressing-room where the two watchmen were confined. Later Neff was called to the office and saw that the lock on the door of the large outer safe had been pried open and the strong-box was in sight. At the request of Carroll, Neff pulled the strongbox out of the safe and laid it on the floor. Neff then went downstairs and while there heard an explosion. Later he *605 went back to the office and saw that the door of the strongbox had been blown loose, but was not completely off. They tried to pry it off with a bar and failing to do so Carroll said he would give it another “shot” of nitroglycerine. Neff then went downstairs and while he was there B. H. Fitzgerald, a plumber, came,to do some work at the theater. Neff told him to go upstairs and when he got to the head of the stairs Dean met him with a revolver and ordered him to throw up his hands. At the trial Fitzgerald positively identified Dean. Fitzgerald’s hands were tied behind him and he was left sitting on the floor of the ladies’ dressing-room with Lohman and Micotti. After this Neff again went downstairs and while there heard a second explosion. Later he returned to the office- and found the door of the box completely blown off. There were still several rolls of silver in the safe and on the desk was a leather handbag packed with money. Neff carried the bag to -San Francisco, where he and Dean went to a hotel and registered and divided the money. Carroll’s share was wrapped up and left for him and Neff took his share and went to another hotel, where he was arrested later.

Appellant’s first attack is upon the information, which read, in part, as follows: “The said Joseph A. Neff and Robert G. Dean, hereinafter called the defendants, 'prior to the time of filing this information, and on or about the 5th day of February, 1923-, in the said county of Alameda, State of California, did, unlawfully, wilfully, feloniously and by means of force and fear and against the will of Albert Lohman and Louis Micotti, take, steal and carry away from the personal and immediate presence of said Albert Lohman and Louis Micotti, the following described personal property, to-wit, Two Thousand Forty-two Dollars and twenty-five cents ($2,042.25) in lawful money of the United States and two keys, which said personal property was then and there in the possession of said Albert Lohman and Louis Micotti, and the personal property of the Oakland-San Francisco Theatre Company, a corporation, organized and existing under and by virtue of the. laws of the State of California, and which said personal property was then and there of the value of $2042.25 in gold coin of the United -States of America.”

*606 It is contended that the information is defective in not alleging that Lohman and Micotti, alleged to have had the possession of the personal property, were the agents of the Oakland-San Francisco Theater Company, alleged to have been the owner of the same. We see no merit in the objection, and, .-furthermore, no demurrer was interposed to the information or other objection made to the same in the trial court, and this objection is not such an one as is available upon appeal for the first time. (People v. Matuszewski, 138 Cal. 533 [71 Pac. 701]; People v. Bryon, 103 Cal. 675 [37 Pac. 754]; People v. Pauli, 58 Cal. App. 594 [209 Pac. 88].)

It is contended that the court should have instructed the jury that if it was not satisfied that the crime of robbery had been committed, but was satisfied that grand larceny had been committed, it was their duty to find the defendant guilty of the latter offense. This contention is based upon the appellant’s position that the evidence showed the offense to have been grand larceny rather than robbery, because of an alleged absence of proof that Lohman and Micotti were in possession of the money taken by defendant and his confederates. But the record contains testimony that Lohman and Micotti were janitors and watchmen; that, in addition to their duties as janitors, they were charged with the custody, protection and safeguarding of the State Theater, which was conducted by the Oakland-San Francisco Theater Company, and of everything contained in and about the premises of said theater. Lohman testified that he was “night janitor and watchman’’; that he had access to all the rooms of the theater and had keys to all of them, including the office from which the money was taken. He also testified that he was instructed by the manager, Mr. Holtz, to watch the building and to let nobody in after the show was over, and that at the time he was engaged to work at the theater, his employer, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
226 P. 943, 66 Cal. App. 602, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-dean-calctapp-1924.