People v. Ford

200 Cal. App. 2d 905, 19 Cal. Rptr. 758, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 2793
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1962
DocketCrim. 4041
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 200 Cal. App. 2d 905 (People v. Ford) 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. Ford, 200 Cal. App. 2d 905, 19 Cal. Rptr. 758, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 2793 (Cal. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

Defendants Clarence James Ford and Ralph Harold Manchester were convicted by a jury upon two counts of petty theft with prior felony convictions. (Pen. Code, § 667.) They appeal from the judgment and from the order denying their motion for a new trial.

The case before us involves separate thefts of two bicycles at Dixon and Vacaville on the night of January 13, 1961.

A red bicycle belonging to one Carpenter was stolen from the front of his house in Dixon, California. Carpenter last saw it there at about 7 or 8 p. m. He then left for a nearby café. While he was sitting in the café from which place he could see his house, Carpenter noticed a car stop for a minute or two in front of the house. When he returned home at about 11 p. m., the bicycle was gone.

On the same evening, a green bicycle belonging to one Cooprider was stolen from the latter’s home in Vacaville, California. Cooprider last saw his bicycle in his - driveway *909 about 11 p. m. when he left his house. When he returned about 12 it was gone.

Later the same evening, at about 11 -.30 p. m., Chief of Police Fellers and Officer DeGareia of the Vacaville police department, in their patrol car, came upon both defendants and one Jack Leighton in and near a parked car on East Main Street in Vacaville, about a block from Cooprider’s house. Manchester was sitting behind the steering-wheel, Leighton was in the right front seat bending over into the back, and Ford was outside the vehicle on the right side looking down at the rear tire. The police made a U-turn, came up behind the defendants’ vehicle, and stopped. As they did so, Manchester and Leighton got out of their car, went to the rear and opened up the trunk. Ford went to the rear with them.

DeGareia asked them what they were doing. One of the men, whom DeGareia later identified as Manchester, said they were having trouble with the right rear wheel of their ear. While this was going on Chief Fellers noticed two bicycles in the back seat, a red one with a blanket over it, and a green one on the floor but protruding through the right rear door which was open. Observing that the green bicycle had a Vacaville license plate Fellers returned to the patrol car, contacted the police station and was advised that the bicycle belonged to a resident of Vacaville. The police then took all three men and the two bicycles to the police station in a patrol ear.

Just before this occurred, DeGareia asked where the men had obtained the bicycles and was told by Manchester that two boys had come over and asked them to carry the bicycles downtown for them. Manchester then said “He ran there . . . those ears over there . . . you see them?’’ But DeGareia saw no one.

DeGareia testified that when they arrived at the police station he put Ford and Manchester in separate rooms and talked to Ford first. Ford told him that he worked for Manchester, cleaning furnaces, and that they were on their way from Reno to San Francisco. DeGareia further testified that Ford told him that he knew the bicycles were stolen; that he would rather not say who put the bicycles in the ear; and that the others would more than likely say that he, Ford, put them in because of past experiences. Ford also stated that the three men had stopped on the above street in Vacaville because they had trouble closing the door on the bicycle and *910 that he, Ford, had been outside the ear trying to close the door. According to DeGareia, Ford said that there was no one else there but the three of them. Later that evening, after he had interrogated Manchester, DeGareia returned to the room where Ford was. Ford told him, DeGareia testified, that the three men were low on gasoline and were going to sell the bicycles for expense money.

DeGareia also testified as to his separate interrogation of Manchester on the same night. Apparently DeGareia to some extent went back and forth between the two men in order to cheek their stories. According to DeGareia, Manchester’s conversation with him was as follows: Manchester started out by asking DeGareia if he had found the boy who had run off. DeGareia said he had not. Manchester expressed concern for Leighton because the latter was a young boy and this was his first offense. He stated that Leighton had not been out of the ear at any time; had been asleep in the back seat when the others put the bicycles in; and had to be awakened and put in front. DeGareia then took Manchester to see Leighton who was also in custody. Manchester thereupon told Leighton to give the police what they wanted but DeGareia noticed that Manchester was winking at Leighton. DeGareia returned Manchester to the latter’s room. Later, when DeGareia asked him who put the bicycles in the car, Manchester replied that he didn’t want to put the blame on anybody but he figured it was one of the others. According to DeGareia, neither Manchester nor Ford said that they took the bicycles. DeGareia had no other conversations with either defendant.

DeGareia’s testimony pertaining to the statements made by both men, was admitted in evidence under careful instructions by the court to the jury that the statements of each defendant, having been made out of the presence of the other, could be considered as evidence only against the defendant making the statement.

The above evidence was introduced during the case in chief for the prosecution, which consisted of the testimony of the two owners of the bicycles and the two police officers. Thereupon the defendants moved for a dismissal upon the ground that no theft had been established against the defendants. The motion was denied.

Both defendants testified on their own behalf. Manchester testified that they were coming from Reno and had left Sacramento at about 11 or 11:15 p. m. Half way between Dixon *911 and Vacaville he stopped and picked up a rider. He had not stopped at, or even gone through Dixon. The hitchhiker said that his brother and sister had been riding their bicycles and had left them in Vacaville; he offered Manchester five dollars to return the bikes to their home. Manchester accepted the offer, drove to Vacaville, and at the direction of the stranger made a turn in a blind alley, while the hitchhiker got one bicycle and put it in the car. The hitchhiker then directed Manchester to Main Street and had Manchester pull over so that he could get the second bicycle. According to Manchester, the stranger was actually riding the bicycle back to the car, when the police first drove by. After the police stopped, Manchester and Leighton got out of their ear, but the stranger disappeared.

Ford told substantially the same story. He did not recall making any of the statements to DeGarcia, as the latter had testified, except that “the only statement I recall making was that evidently the bicycles were stolen or the guy wouldn’t have ran ... I stated that—that I would probably get the blame for it, because I had a prison record.” On cross-examination, Ford admitted that Manchester, when first stopped by the police, had told them that the three men were taking the bicycles downtown for a couple of boys. Ford also admitted that there were no boys around at all.

In rebuttal, the prosecution introduced testimony of both police officers to the effect that they saw no man riding a bicycle as claimed by the defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 Cal. App. 2d 905, 19 Cal. Rptr. 758, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 2793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ford-calctapp-1962.