People v. Flores

145 P.2d 318, 62 Cal. App. 2d 700, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 868
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 1, 1944
DocketCrim. 481
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 145 P.2d 318 (People v. Flores) 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. Flores, 145 P.2d 318, 62 Cal. App. 2d 700, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 868 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

The defendants were jointly charged in the first count of an information with the crime of kidnaping, and in four other counts each defendant was separately and respectively charged with the crime of rape. A jury found each defendant guilty on both charges and judgments were entered sentencing each defendant to the penitentiary, the terms on the two charges to run consecutively. Each defendant appealed from the judgment as to him and from an order denying his motion for a new trial. Thereafter, at the request of the defendant Hanks, his appeal was dismissed.

The general facts involved are as follows: The complaining witness was 19 years old and, apparently, had separated from her husband who was in the Army. About midnight on December 26, 1942, she came out of a café on Fourth Street in downtown San Diego. As she emerged from the café she was accidentally struck on the forehead by a bottle in the hands of one of several women engaged in a fight in front of the café. She was dazed and bleeding from the wound and a passing sailor led her across the street to an automobile occupied by the four defendants. The sailor suggested that she be taken to a doctor and someone of the appellants replied that they would do so. She was taken into the automobile and it was driven away, the appellant Rico doing the driving. They proceeded out Market Street and instead of taking her to a doctor they went out several miles and then left the highway and traveled some distance over a dirt road, eventually stopping at an isolated spot, where each of the appellants had sexual intercourse with her. Some time later, the appellants returned to town and let the complaining witness out *702 of the car in front of or near her home. She hailed a passing car and, at her request, was taken directly to the police station, where she told what had occurred. We are unable to find in the record the exact time when she arrived at the police station, but the police surgeon testified that he examined her there at 3:30 a. m. on December 27th.

Bach of the appellants first contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain his conviction on the charge of kidnaping. It is argued that the complaining witness voluntarily entered the automobile and that the only evidence of force in connection with the automobile trip is certain evidence that she attempted to jump out of the car at 16th and Market Streets while it was traveling 35 or 40 miles an hour, and that she was restrained and pulled back into the car by one of the appellants in order to save her life. While there is such evidence, there is other evidence that she opened the door of the car and tried to jump out while it was stopped at a stop-sign at 16th and Market, which was less than a block from her home, and that she was forcibly restrained by two of the appellants.

There is ample evidence that the complaining witness was taken out to this lonely spot against her will. She was taken into the car on the representation that she would be taken to a doctor. As they proceeded out Market Street she realized that they were not taking her to a doctor and she repeatedly asked them to take her home or to a doctor. The appellants only laughed and told her she was not hurt, although she was bleeding profusely at the time. According to some of the evidence, which the jury was entitled to accept, she opened the door and tried to jump out when the car stopped at 16th and Market, near her home, and two of the appellants forcibly held her in the car. Although she frequently asked them to take her home the appellants continued on to the lonely spot in question and when they arrived there she was forcibly taken from the car and pushed to the ground. On two occasions she ran away but both times she was caught and brought back. If her testimony, and a part of the testimony of the appellants, is to be believed no reasonable person could doubt that she was taken to this spot against her will and without her consent. She entered the car as the result of a misrepresentation and the appellants actually used some force and repeatedly refused to discontinue the trip or to allow her to leave the car after she dis *703 covered she was not being taken to a doctor. There is sufficient evidence of a forceful taking and carrying away of the complaining witness, within the meaning of section 207 of the Penal Code. (People v. Rosa, 10 Cal.App.2d 668 [52 P.2d 542]; People v. Ogden, 41 Cal.App.2d 447 [107 P.2d 50].)

It is next urged by all of the appellants that the evidence is insufficient to sustain their convictions on the charges of rape accomplished by threats of bodily harm. These counts of the information were based upon subd. 4 of Penal Code, sec. 261, which applies where the female is prevented from resisting “by threats of great and immediate bodily harm, accompanied by apparent power of execution.” It is argued that since the complaining witness testified that she made no physical resistance at the times in question because she was afraid of the appellants, and because she further testified that no spoken threats were made as to what they would do to her if their demands were refused, it follows that there were no threats of great and immediate bodily harm within the meaning of the statute and that they could not be convicted under this subdivision of section 261.

We are unable to agree with the view that there can be no threat within the meaning of this statute unless it is expressed in words or through the exhibition of a gun, knife or other deadly weapon. A threat may be'expressed by acts and conduct as well as by words. If one were met in a lonely place by four big men and told to hold up his hands or to do anything else, he would be doing the reasonable thing if he obeyed, even if they did not say what they would do to him if he refused. Their actions and manner might well indicate their purpose and intention and it would be a mere play on words to say that these actions and circumstances did not constitute and were not the expression of a threat. In fact, it would be a very compelling one. We think similar considerations are applicable here.

There is plenty of evidence not only that the complaining witness was forcibly taken to this secluded spot but that force was there used. Two police officers testified that they talked with three of the defendants two days after the incident occurred. That Flores told them that he and the other defendants were together in Rico’s car and picked up the complaining witness, who was bleeding at her forehead; that she asked them to take her to a doctor; that while they *704 were en route she opened the door and attempted to jump out; that he grabbed her and yanked her back into the car, because he feared she would get hurt; that all four had sexual intercourse with her; and that she tried to run away and one of them ran after her and brought her back. That Hanks told them that she tried to jump out of the car and Plores and Holman pulled her back.

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Bluebook (online)
145 P.2d 318, 62 Cal. App. 2d 700, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-flores-calctapp-1944.