People v. Fitzgerald

58 P.2d 718, 14 Cal. App. 2d 180, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 843
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 1936
DocketCrim. 1463
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 58 P.2d 718 (People v. Fitzgerald) 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. Fitzgerald, 58 P.2d 718, 14 Cal. App. 2d 180, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 843 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

TUTTLE, J., pro tem.

Appellants were found guilty by a jury of malicious and reckless possession of dynamite as that crime is defined in section 6, Act 2433, General Laws of California. They now appeal from the judgment, order denying motion for new trial, and order denying motion in arrest of judgment.

No appeal lies from an order denying a motion in arrest of judgment, and such appeal will therefore be dismissed. (People v. Bundy, 168 Cal. 777 [145 Pac. 537].)

The facts, as disclosed by the evidence produced by the prosecution, and also certain undisputed facts, are stated in the following paragraphs:

During the months of March and April, 1935, there existed on the Pacific Coast a strike which involved various oil companies operating oil tankers and their maritime employees, members of certain maritime unions. This strike was commonly referred to as “The Tankers Strike”. The various maritime unions, consisting of The Sailors’ Union of the Pacific, The Pacific Coast Marine Firemen, Oilers, Wipers & *186 Water-Tenders, The Marine Cooks and Stewards Association, The Marine Engineers Benevolent Association, and The Pacific Coast District Masters, Mates and Pilots, formed what was known as “The Joint Tankers Strike Committee and Negotiations Committee”. These various unions appointed members of the joint tankers strike committee and of a negotiations committee, the purpose of which latter committee was to meet with the mediation board appointed by the President of the United States for the purpose of adjusting the differences between the employers and the employees.

While the strike was in progress, and as early as about the 1st of April, 1935, the Standard Oil Company was recruiting and concentrating strike-breakers to be used on its oil tankers at Patterson and at the town of Westley, both in the county •of Stanislaus, state of California. Said strike breakers were housed in the town of Patterson in a hotel known as the Del Puerta Hotel.

During this period, although other oil companies were involved in the strike, the Standard Oil Company was the company most particularly affected in this, that the unions had declared a boycott on all Standard Oil products.

On April 3, 1935, Donald W. Cobble, a member of the Marine Engineers Benevolent Association, one of the unions on strike, received a letter from his wife, who was a waitress in the Del Puerta Hotel at Patterson, California, stating that strike breakers were housed in the said hotel. This letter Cobble took to union headquarters and delivered to a Mr. Merriweather, an officer of the union. On the night of April 10, 1935, two of the defendants, Buyle and Rodger, met one George Brazelton, and his wife, Helen Brazelton, at the Mohawk restaurant, situate at No. 40 Commercial Street, in the city of San Francisco. They arranged to take Helen Brazelton with them on a trip to Marin County. On this trip they went to the Daniels quarry, a few miles from San Rafael, and there they entered a powder magazine and a locked box and stole a quantity of dynamite, fuses and caps, and two cans of black powder. They returned to San Francisco and to the apartment of George and Helen Brazelton, and asked George Brazelton if they could store the “soup” there. During all of the times mentioned, Cobble and defendants Rodger and Buyle were members of unions conducting the strike mentioned.

*187 James Scrudder, at the time employed as a longshoreman, and also previously employed as a special police officer by the San Francisco police department, met the defendant Buyle on the street on the morning of April 11th, and was told by Buyle that he and Rodger had gotten sufficient “stuff” the night before to blow up the town. On the 11th day of April, Scrudder communicated with the crime prevention bureau of the San Francisco police department, commanded by Captain George Healy, and was instructed to look out for the dynamite. Between the 10th and 20th of April, Scrudder contacted all of the appellants in this case at various times, with the exception of the appellants Silva, Burrows and Sousa. He told the appellant Rodger that he had a car which could be used if it became necessary at any time.

On the 20th of April, 1935, in the morning, Scrudder met Stanfield and Ciambrelli, two of the appellants herein, who were looking for Rodger and Buyle, stating that they had a party on for that night and that the party involved a letter which had been written by some engineer’s wife, relative to the place in the country where they were housing nonunion sailors, and that they were going “to dump the finks”. Later, at the Mohawk Restaurant, Scrudder was present when Stanfield, Ciambrelli, Rodger and Buyle discussed the party that was to take place that night. On this same day defendant Stanfield called at the union headquarters and secured from Merriweather, a union official, funds to defray the expenses of the trip to Patterson.

Some time before 7 o’clock that evening the defendant Rodger called Scrudder on the phone and asked him if his car was all right, so that it would not stall on the highway, and directed him to be at the Mohawk Restaurant not later than 7 o ’clock. When Scrudder got to the Mohawk Restaurant on the night of April 20th, all of the appellants, together with Hal Marchant, were there waiting for Rodger. When Scrudder asked where Rodger was, he was told that Rodger had gone to get the “groceries”, the “soup”, the dynamite. Shortly afterwards Rodger returned to the Mohawk and had with him a package of twelve sticks of dynamite, some fuses and fulminate caps, which he proposed to put in Scrudder’s car. Scrudder declined to take the package in his car, and insisted that it be divided, and the dynamite was divided on the running board of the Chrysler car in the presence of all *188 of the appellants herein, and Marchant and Scrudder, and six sticks were put in the Chrysler car belonging to Rodger, and six were taken into the Nash car by the appellant Fitzgerald, he sitting in the rear seat of that car. The party then started for Patterson, traveling south to San Mateo and over the San Mateo bridge, stopping for gas, and arriving at Tracy, where the cars became separated.

Before leaving San Francisco Scrudder reached a telephone and telephoned to Officer Harry Majors, of the San Francisco police department, crime prevention bureau. Meanwhile, at the Del Puerta Hotel at Patterson, John M. Sayers, a special agent of the Standard Oil Company, in charge of the guards, had received a telephone call giving an automobile license number which was that of Scrudder’s car. He communicated with the sheriff of Stanislaus County, who, with the undersheriff, proceeded to Patterson. There he remained until the episode of the arrests as hereinafter related.

The appellant Rodger, driving his Chrysler car, in which were also riding the appellants Silva and Ciambrelli, in the front seat, and Stanfield and Johnson in the rumble seat, drove into Patterson, passed around the circle in front of the Del Puerta Hotel, and identified it, passed through other streets of the town of Patterson, and back out on the highway toward the north, where they stopped at a point near K Street, on the side of the highway.

Alfred B. Hughel and Sidney E.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P.2d 718, 14 Cal. App. 2d 180, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fitzgerald-calctapp-1936.