People v. Fleming

136 P.2d 88, 58 Cal. App. 2d 37, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 8
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1943
DocketCrim. 3664
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 136 P.2d 88 (People v. Fleming) 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. Fleming, 136 P.2d 88, 58 Cal. App. 2d 37, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 8 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

In an information filed by the District Attorney of Los Angeles County defendant was accused in three counts of the crime of forcible rape while two counts charged him with kidnapping. A prior conviction of rape and robbery, for which the defendant served a term of imprisonment in the state prison, was also charged and admitted. Following not guilty pleas on all counts, trial was had before a jury resulting in the conviction of defendant upon each count of the information. From the judgments of conviction, the order denying his motion for a new trial and from the verdicts of the jury defendant prosecutes this appeal.

With reference to counts one and five wherein the defendant is charged with rape and kidnapping of the complaining witness, we find in the record evidence that between nine and ten o ’clock on the night of June 28, 1942, the prosecutrix, re *39 turning home alone, was just stepping upon the porch of her residence when the defendant threw his hand around her neck and placed one hand or fist against her right side and admonished her to keep walking. Turning around and looking at the defendant, the complainant asked him what was wrong to which he replied “Don’t say anything, but just keep walking.” In obedience to defendant’s command, the prosecutrix turned and went south on Wadsworth Street while the defendant had his one hand around her neck and the other against her side. She did not see anything in his hand but felt him punching her continuously in her side. They walked to an old shack or garage about three houses from the complainant’s residence where defendant opened the door and forced the complaining witness in. When they were inside defendant told her to get on a table. At that time she looked at him and inquired what was wrong with him and whether he was crazy. At about that time defendant removed his hat and threw it over her face at which time she removed it therefrom and shoved it back. Prosecutrix then observed that defendant had a knife and that he was moving it back and forth about her neck, saying to her “Just be quiet and do as I tell you.” Defendant then removed a portion of her clothing and accomplished an act of sexual intercourse upon her. Following the consummation of this act, defendant related to the prosecutrix that on the night before he “Was out to Gene Searles and had taken some woman home with him and that she kept his wallet.” The importance of this statement will be apparent later when we discuss the question of corroboration. About ten minutes later defendant again pushed the complainant on the table and forcibly accomplished a second act of intercourse. He then asked the complainant what she was going to do about it and when she replied to the effect that she was not going to do anything he opened the door and told her to walk out in front of him. After emerging from the shack, he instructed her to keep walking ahead of him, which she did to a point at the next street intersection where they both stood under the street light while he again interrogated her as to what she was going to do and as to whether she was going to call the. police. During this interval, the prosecutrix testified, “Then I got a good look at him.” After assuring the defendant that she was not going to take any action about what had occurred, he told her to walk ahead toward her house during *40 which course he followed her for a short space and then disappeared. She made complaint to a neighbor of what had occurred and the following afternoon reported it personally to the police department. This neighbor testified that at the time the prosecutrix came to her house, the latter seemed to be very much frightened.

On July 19, 1942, about three weeks after the alleged assault, Officer Broady, of the Los Angeles Police Department who was acquainted with the appellant, was driving west on Jefferson Boulevard when he asked the defendant if he wanted a ride, which invitation was accepted. During the course of this ride the officer inquired of defendant as to how he had been getting along and as to whether he was working, to which defendant replied that he had a job in Beverly Hills, and he then related the story to the officer of an occasion when defendant had been down to a place called Gene Searles and that while he was there he “made up” with a woman who, while he was asleep, took his wallet. This should be noted as identical with the story related by the prosecutrix as having been told to her by the defendant. Also during the ride the officer noticed that defendant had a cut about an inch and one-half or two inches long on his left hand which at that time was not bandaged with any adhesive tape.

In count two appellant was charged with forcible rape on or about July 16, 1942, and in connection therewith the prosecutrix testified that she had spent the preceding night at the home of her mother, leaving there shortly before four o’clock on the morning of the assault. As she was walking along the sidewalk and had passed a parked truck, defendant stepped out and struck her a very heavy and painful blow on the side of her head. At the time she was struck, the complainant cried out for help and the defendant uttered a vile epithet to her while he shoved her back of a truck on an adjoining parking lot and placed a handkerchief in her mouth. After pushing her approximately twenty or twenty-five feet back from the sidewalk he knocked her down and as the handkerchief came out of her mouth she “started to holler,” whereupon he struck her a vicious blow and accomplished an act of sexual intercourse with her. Feigning, unconsciousness, the prosecutrix lay, very still after consummation of the act and defendant walked away saying “I don’t know why I did this. I am sorry.” After determining that the defendant was out of sight, the complainant ran to a stranger’s house near *41 by where she was admitted and told the occupants what had occurred. They took her to the Georgia Receiving Hospital where some eight or ten stitches were required in the wound on the right side of her head. From the Receiving Hospital she was transferred to the General Hospital where she stayed from the 16th to the 29th of July by reason of the injuries received in her altercation with the defendant. The occupants of the house at which complainant sought refuge testified that at the time she awakened them she was bleeding from the head and told them she had been attacked by a man. The prosecutrix positively identified the defendant and described the color of the clothes he was wearing. She further testified that she was able to identify the defendant by reason of lights in the buildings across the street from the place of the attack.

The victim named in counts three and four, charging forcible rape and kidnapping, testified that just before midnight on July 20, 1942, she drove home in her automobile, parking it on the street near the front door. She then went to the back yard of her residence and was proceeding toward the back door at which time she heard footsteps in back of her and turning around observed a man. She positively identified defendant as this man. He addressed her saying “Pardon me, lady, this is a stick-up.” He then began hitting her on the head and admonished her not to cry out, but nevertheless she did. He struck her with the butt end of a pocket-knife and also choked her with his right hand thereby causing her to stop screaming.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 P.2d 88, 58 Cal. App. 2d 37, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fleming-calctapp-1943.