People v. Fluery

327 P.2d 47, 161 Cal. App. 2d 630, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1784
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 25, 1958
DocketCrim. 5983
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 327 P.2d 47 (People v. Fluery) 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. Fluery, 327 P.2d 47, 161 Cal. App. 2d 630, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1784 (Cal. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

LILLIE, J.

Appellant was charged by information with a violation of section 459 of the Penal Code and convicted by a jury of second degree burglary. His motion for new trial was denied and he was sentenced to the state prison. On this appeal from the judgment of conviction and order denying motion for a new trial, appellant submits that the trial court *632 erred in considering certain impeaching evidence on the motion and in giving at the trial two abstract jury instructions dealing with admissions and confessions.

The record discloses that on October 26, 1956, at about 8:30 p. m., appellant entered the Murphy Camera Shop in Whittier where he talked to Mr. Murphy about cameras for approximately óne-half hour. When he left he entered a Ford car, bearing license BHV 052, parked in front near the shop and in which a woman was seated. They drank from a bottle, after which appellant got out of the automobile and for three or four minutes stood behind it facing the front window of the camera shop. He returned to the ear, drove it forward 15 to 20 feet and stopped. Appellant’s ear was in this location at approximately 9 p. m. Mr. Murphy secured the shop and left shortly after 9 p. m. The next morning, police found the shop had been entered and money, equipment and cameras were missing. One of the fingerprints found in the shop matched appellant’s right ring finger.

On October 29th, appellant’s wife, under the name of “Ann Zunt,” giving a fictitious address, sold several of Murphy’s cameras to various loan companies in San Diego. In attempting to sell one to the Boston Jewelry and Loan Company she was arrested. Police waited at a nearby parked car, bearing license BHV 052, and within a few minutes appellant appeared producing an identification card bearing the name “Warren Washington Elwood.” He told police he lived in Cypress and that the husband of the woman who sold the cameras had left her and she was selling them for rent money. The officer arrested appellant and searching the car found five cameras and equipment belonging to Murphy.

On November 2, 1956, Officer Basband had a conversation with appellant at the Whittier police station wherein he stated substantially as follows: On October 26,1956, at about 6 :30 p. m., he took his wife to a Whittier doctor, remaining in the car about one and one-half hours drinking. When she returned to the automobile, he drove seven or eight blocks and parked at the curb. His wife walked around to the driver’s seat and drove home. He was not drunk, just “tight,” but he did not recall getting out of the car and entering the store. At home he had dinner, watched television and went to bed and did not leave the house until 2 p. m. the following day, October 27th. That afternoon he went to Lloyd’s Bar in Whittier where he met Charley Manners and another man, whose name he did not know, who sold him the cameras for *633 $170 in cash, part of which he removed from a glass jar he had buried in the floor of his garage. Manners told him the cameras were not stolen, although later he suspected that they had been. Around noon on October 29th, appellant and his wife drove to San Diego. He told her to sell the cameras and use the name of “Ann Zunt” and a fictitious address.

Officer Rasband thereafter searched defendant’s garage and found no indication of any holes or other excavations in the floor.

Appellant did not testify at the trial. Defense witnesses included his wife and George Mason. Appellant’s wife testified that on October 26th appellant drove her to the doctor’s office and waited for her in the car, to which she returned around 6:15 p. m. They drove two miles and parked at which time he went into the Murphy Camera Shop, remaining for 15 or 20 minutes. She thereafter accounted for appellant’s whereabouts until 5 :30 the next morning. On October 29th they drove to San Diego where she sold several cameras under the name of “Ann Zunt.” George Mason testified that at 7:30 p. m. on October 27th, appellant met him and Charles Manning (Manners) at a bar in Whittier called Lloyd’s, from whom appellant bought the cameras for $170.

In rebuttal Officer Merritt testified that George Mason had previously told him he had not been in Whittier until the latter part of December, 1956.

Appellant urges that the trial court erred in considering impeaching evidence, for which no proper foundation was laid, at the hearing on his motion for a new trial. Appellant’s motion was made on the ground of newly discovered evidence in support of which appellant produced two affidavits, one executed by George Mason who stated that he alone had committed the burglary, and the other by his counsel alleging due diligence. In addition, appellant testified that at the time of the trial he was unaware of the fact that Mason had committed the crime. George Mason was not present at the hearing and did not testify.

In opposition to the motion for new trial, the prosecution called several witnesses, among whom was Thomas Lawlor, a United States postal inspector, and Arthur Johnson, a district attorney’s investigator. Lawlor testified that after the burglary he took a sworn statement from Mason, which was received as People’s exhibit Number 2, wherein Mason in effect denied committing the crime. Johnson testified that after Mason executed the affidavit offered by the defendant on *634 the motion, he talked to Mason about the burglary and, upon being questioned, Mason made certain statements concerning the commission of the crime and the appearance of the premises which were inconsistent and incompatible with known facts. Appellant objected to the testimony of Lawlor and Johnson and the admission of People’s exhibit Number 2, on grounds of hearsay and that no proper foundation for impeachment had been laid.

Section 1181 of the Penal Code provides that the court may, upon defendant’s application, grant a new trial when new evidence is discovered material to the defendant and which he could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and produced at the trial. In determining such a motion, an enlarged discretionary power is committed to the trial court (People v. Coronado, 57 Cal.App.2d 805 [135 P.2d 647] ; People v. Greenwood, 47 Cal.2d 819 [306 P.2d 427]; People v. Beard, 46 Cal.2d 278 [294 P.2d 29]) and a reviewing court will not disturb its ruling unless a clear and unmistakable abuse of discretion is shown. (People v. Coronado, supra; People v. Greenwood, supra; People v. McGarry, 42 Cal.2d 429 [267 P.2d 254]; People v. Gompertz, 103 Cal.App.2d 153 [229 P.2d 105].) In determining what constitutes an abuse of discretion, it should be borne in mind that the claim of newly discovered evidence warranting a new trial is looked upon by the courts with distrust and disfavor. (People v.

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Bluebook (online)
327 P.2d 47, 161 Cal. App. 2d 630, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fluery-calctapp-1958.