People v. Egan

23 P.2d 1042, 133 Cal. App. 152, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 539
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 3, 1933
DocketDocket No. 2342.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 23 P.2d 1042 (People v. Egan) 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. Egan, 23 P.2d 1042, 133 Cal. App. 152, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 539 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

ARCHBALD, J., pro tem.

Defendants were tried before a jury on a joint information charging one Dallas Egan and themselves with the crime of murder. Egan was also *154 charged with four prior convictions and Turcott with one. During the course of the trial Egan changed his plea to “guilty” and the trial proceeded against his co-defendants. The jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree as to defendant Rogers, fixing the punishment at life imprisonment with recommendation of leniency. As to Turcott, the jury returned a similar verdict without recommendation of leniency. From the judgments of conviction entered upon said verdicts and from orders denying their respective motions for a new trial each defendant has appealed.

On July 23, 1932, three men entered the Broder jewelry store in Los Angeles and rohbed the establishment. During the robbery William J. Kirkpatrick, an elderly man, was shot and killed. The three robbers then left the store and escaped in an automobile with two confederates, one of whom had acted as lookout man, while the other stayed at the wheel of the car while the crime was being perpetrated. Three of the men involved were white, one a negro and the other a Mexican.

Appellant Rogers contends that the court erred (1) in permitting the introduction of evidence of other crimes in which it is urged he did not participate and which it is contended are not connected with or pertinent to the one involved here, (2) in admitting statements of defendant Turcott as to such other crimes, and accusatory statements of one Lamey and defendant Egan in the presence of Rogers, and (3) in denying his motion for a separate trial, and (4) that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict.

Appellant Turcott urges (a) that the admission of statements made by him to W. C. Burris was erroneous in that at the time such statements were made this appellant was unable to comprehend them, (b) that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict in that excluding “the so-called confession” there is no evidence connecting him with the crime, and that the court erred (c) in admitting such confessions because they were not shown to have been free and voluntary but were obtained by a promise and for a consideration and (d) in admitting testimony as to other crimes without proof of the existence of a conspiracy.

*155 (1), (2) and (4). One witness testified that she was trying to park her car in the vicinity of the jewelry store at the time of the robbery and noticed a “brown car” witli “a kind of a rumble seat in the back” parked in front of a radio store near the jewelry store; that it was “moving back and forth”, one man at the wheel and another on the sidewalk by the front wheel; that she heard a shot and that three men ran out of the jewelry store and jumped into the brown car; that the man standing on the sidewalk also jumped into the car. Mr. McCormick, proprietor of the radio store, testified that he saw an Oakland cabriolet, “tan color”, in front of his store at the time of the robbery, “rocking to and fro from the curb at an angle”, with someone in the driver’s seat, and that defendant “Bogers was standing there, one hand on the door”; that he heard two shots, rushed out on the sidewalk and saw two men with guns rúnning toward him and the cabriolet; that one of them said “move”, whereupon the witness ran into his store; that he saw Bogers jump in the car, following the shooting. In addition to the foregoing there was evidence showing that E'gan, who, it will be remembered, was jointly charged with appellants, followed by two men, one white and one colored, entered the jewelry store at the time in question, and with guns compelled the proprietor and his clerk to hold up their hands, “took pillow cases out of their pockets and started to empty jewelry” into them from the showcases; that Kirkpatrick entered and was shot in the head, dying from the effect thereof. At the time of Bogers’ arrest a car was found, which he said his father owned but that he, Bogers, “had used it most of the time”, and which answered the description of the ear used in the robbery. Photographs of this machine were identified by witnesses as a fair representation of the automobile used at that time. There would seem to be sufficient evidence to support the verdict and judgment as to appellant Bogers.

After properly instructing the jury that it was only to be taken as against the defendant Bogers, the court admitted evidence of a statement made by defendant Egan, in Bogers’ presence, which was to the effect that Bogers was with them in the jewelry store robbery at which Kirkpatrick was killed, that Bogers’ car was used, and that Bogers stayed outside *156 with the car and was given his share of the proceeds of the robbery, to which statement Rogers said nothing. Against both appellants, a statement made to the police officers by Turcott, in the presence of Rogers, was read in evidence, to the effect that Rogers was not only with them in the robbery of the jewelry store but that he went with them to San Bernardino on a trip when they planned to hold up a bank but did not execute the plan, and in which his car was used as well as a stolen La Salle; that about a week before the jewelry store robbery they held up an office of the Bureau of Water and Power in Los Angeles, using the ever-present Oakland car belonging to Rogers; that Rogers was with them at the time and sat behind the wheel of the car waiting while the holdup was being perpetrated, afterwards taking his “split” of the money, the others present being Egan and Alvarado, the Mexican of the jewelry store robbery. During the making of such charges Rogers “stood mute”. Although Turcott confessed to his part in the robbery of the jewelry store which resulted in the killing of Kirkpatrick, he was not identified by any prosecution witness.

A statement made by one Lamey in the presence of Rogers and some officers was also introduced in evidence, in which Lamey said that he met the parties in San Bernardino at the time mentioned in Turcott’s statement, having gone there from Los Angeles for that purpose; that he rode in the “Oakland car” in' San Bernardino while Rogers was driving it, and that Rogers told him that he, Rogers, drove the car on the jewelry robbery job and that a man was killed. After the statement was made an officer asked Rogers if his name “was Homer Rogers and he said yes”. Asked if he wanted to make any statement then, Rogers'said he “didn’t have any statement to make”.

Following the introduction of such statements in evidence, testimony of the robbery of the office of the Los Angeles Gas & Electric Company was admitted, showing that an Oakland car resembling that driven by Rogers was used, one man remaining outside with the automobile during the commission of the crime. Other witnesses identified Egan as one of the robbers. The same is true as to a robbery of the Lakeview Creamery, participated in by four men who drove up in an Oakland car resembling that used by Rogers, three *157 of them, two identified as Egan and Turcott and the third a Mexican or negro, entering the place and perpetrating the crime while the fourth remained at the wheel of the machine.

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Bluebook (online)
23 P.2d 1042, 133 Cal. App. 152, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-egan-calctapp-1933.