People v. Fox

153 P.2d 729, 25 Cal. 2d 330, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 322
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1944
DocketCrim. 4561
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 153 P.2d 729 (People v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Fox, 153 P.2d 729, 25 Cal. 2d 330, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 322 (Cal. 1944).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

In a trial upon an indictment charging the two offenses, Abe Pox was convicted of grand theft and acquitted of receiving stolen property. He now challenges the judgment upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, and that the trial court erred in receiving certain testimony relating to asserted confessions made by him. He also complains of the court’s refusal to give several instructions which he proposed.

The prosecution of Pox is based upon the theft of a large quantity of cigars and cigarettes. The undisputed evidence shows that on January 11th, a short time after a truck was left near the dock of the System Freight Service, it was stolen by an unidentified person. When it was found, the cigarettes and other merchandise were missing.

At that time Pox owned a drugstore and was a customer of Alex Gorberg, who sold restaurant and soda fountain supplies. Police officers investigating the theft placed Gorberg under arrest and charged him with receiving stolen property. *332 When. Pox, accompanied by an attorney, went to the police station for the purpose of securing Gorberg’s release from jail, Pox was arrested and for about forty-eight hours was held in custody without a warrant of arrest. Later, Pox and Gorberg were separately indicted, the charge against Gorberg being that he received, as stolen property, the cigarettes which had been taken from the freight truck.

The evidence relied upon by the district attorney to support the judgment of conviction consists entirely of the testimony of Gorberg, who declared that he disposed of a large quantity of cigarettes for Pox, and of police officers who related asserted conversations which they had with Pox during the time he was under arrest. In those conversations, the officers stated, Pox made certain confessions concerning the theft of the merchandise from the truck and the means which he took to store and later to sell it.

When called as a witness for the People, Gorberg stated that his testimony was given under a promise of immunity made by the district attorney, as he was then under indictment. He told the jury that on a day in January, the date of which he could not recall, Pox told him he had a quantity of cigarettes for sale. This conversation occurred at Pox’s place of business. After several days, when he was again at the Pox store on a routine call, Pox informed him that he had ninety-six cases of cigarettes which he would sell at $50 a case. Pox also spoke of certain cigars he had for sale but said he had not then ascertained their value.

Two days later, the witness declared, he was at the drugstore on a business errand and Pox offered him the entire lot of cigarettes for $46 a case. On a Friday near the end of January, Gorberg again went to the Pox store. Gorberg then told Pox that he had arranged to sell the ninety-six cases of cigarettes to the Bower Tobacco Company at $50 a case, delivery to be made the next day and Pox agreed to give him $4.00 per case profit for his part in the transaction.

Prom the garage at the rear of the Pox store, Gorberg continued, he and Pox loaded ninety-six cases of cigarettes into a truck, and he delivered them to the tobacco company. Two trips were required. Upon the return of Gorberg, Pox asked when payment would be made and Gorberg replied he would get it as soon as one Newman, through whom the sale had been made, received the money from the tobacco company. *333 That evening about 5 p. m., said the witness, he delivered $3,360 to Fox in a paper bag. The money was in five, ten and twenty dollar bills. The following Tuesday afternoon, Gorberg testified, he gave Fox $1,150, the balance of the money due. All of the money which he gave Fox came from Newman. Concluding the account of his dealings with the appellant, Gorberg stated that a few days later he received a case of cigars from Pox at a warehouse garage on Bast First Street, to which Pox had a key. The cigars were taken from a pile of merchandise covered with a tarpaulin, and Pox told him that he had brought them from the garage at the rear of his store.

All of the other testimony tending to prove participation by Pox in the theft of the cigarettes was given by Captain G. A. Chilson, Officer Fred H. Doane, and Officer B. B. Varela of the Los Angeles Police Department, who related conversations assertedly had with the appellant during the time he was in custody. The policemen said that Officers Hanson and Hollery were present from time to time and also participated in the questioning of Pox. As the foundation for the presentation of Pox’s statements to Captain Chilson and Officer Doane, each of them asserted during his examination by the district attorney that the declarations were made freely and voluntarily; also, that Fox did not speak under the compulsion of any force or threat or undue influence nor was any promise of immunity or reward made to him. Over the objection of Pox that his statements had not been made freely and voluntarily, the testimony of the officers was received in evidence.

According to their accounts of these conversations, when Pox appared at the Newton Street police station to secure the release of Gorberg, Varela took him into custody for investigation. At the first conversation, Fox was questioned principally by Hanson and Doane. Asked whether he knew anything about cigarettes stolen from a System truck, Pox denied having any knowledge concerning them. The officers then told Fox that, according to information given them by Gorberg, the cigars and cigarettes had been stored for a time in a garage behind Pox’s store and were later removed to a warehouse on Bast First Street. Pox still insisted that he knew nothing about the stolen goods or any place on First Street where they had been stored. He denied having a key to any *334 such building and upon search of his person no key was found.

Chilson and Hanson then left the room and according to Doane, who was alone with the prisoner, he told Fox that the police would find his fingerprints on the merchandise. Fox then stated that he had merely permitted Gorberg to store the goods in the garage behind his place of business and, later, helped Gorberg move the goods to the First Street garage. Doane told Fox the police knew more about the case than he thought and demanded the key to the warehouse. Fox said he did not have it, and as he had also told the officers that his wife was expecting a baby and was in a delicate condition, Doane said that they would get a police matron and search the house “because we know that key is there.” Fox then admitted having the key at home and agreed to produce it.

This was about nine o’clock on Saturday night and the officers, with Fox, left the detective room for the Fox home. On the way out of the building, Fox said that he had changed his mind; he did not know anything. Nevertheless, the party got into two automobiles, Chilson, Doane, Varela and Fox in one of them. Again being told by Chilson that Gorberg had given them complete information concerning the theft, and by Doane that they would have a police matron search his home, Fox then said that, under the circumstances, he would produce the key.

When driven to his home, Fox obtained the key and the party then proceeded to a warehouse on Bast First Street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 P.2d 729, 25 Cal. 2d 330, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fox-cal-1944.