People v. Fratianno

282 P.2d 1002, 132 Cal. App. 2d 610, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 2235
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1955
DocketCrim. 5254
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 282 P.2d 1002 (People v. Fratianno) 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. Fratianno, 282 P.2d 1002, 132 Cal. App. 2d 610, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 2235 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

From a judgment convicting him of conspiracy in violation of section 182 of the Penal Code and of attempting extortion in violation of section 524 of the same code, appellant now demands a reversal on the grounds of the insufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment, errors in rulings, errors in giving and refusing instructions, errors in the admission and exclusion of evidence.

The Evidence Sufficient

Prior to the events about to he recited, one George Terry had incorporated the Terry Drilling Company and was *616 its president and principal stockholder. The corporation owned 35 per cent interest in 800 acres of Tapo Canyon in Ventura County and was one of the general partners in the copartnership of “Terry and Jansen” which held a lease from the Tapo Oil Company, a California corporation. The partnership acquired the lease from the last named corporation December 4, 1952, and soon thereafter began to drill. Oil was discovered February 16, 1953. The success of the undertaking was acclaimed in the press.

The witness B-iddell was a friend of Terry and a stockholder in the drilling company. The defendant Easpona had been an acquaintance of Terry about four years. He operated a liquor store in Burbank. Terry visited the store and at one time in 1950 leased a drilling rig to Easpona, but had no other transactions with him. About February 20, 1953, pursuant to the merchant’s request, Terry paid a visit to the liquor store when Easpona inquired of Terry whether the latter knew of any royalty for sale in the discovery well. Terry knew of a Mr. Lopspeich who had a 2 per cent overriding royalty that he might be interested in selling “and I told him I would see him and let him know. ’ ’ Easpona said he had some people with $5,000 who wanted to buy some royalty in a well.

After talking with Mr. Lopspeich, Terry discussed the matter with Easpona near his liquor store and told him that “this royalty deal had already been sold and that there was nothing available up there.” Easpona repeated that some “mighty fine people were interested with him.”

About July 9, 1953, Easpona and a party called “Eay” stopped near Terry’s office and Eay said, “I want to talk to you, personally.” He said nothing more, but Easpona asked Terry to “come to my place tomorrow.” Prior to such meeting Terry had not seen or conversed with Easpona since their conversation about February 20. Although, prior to the trial, Terry had heard the name Fratianno, he had met neither Fratianno or Módica.

The royalty sought by Easpona and his eodefendants was a “two per cent overriding royalty” in this Tapo 435 acres under lease to the partnership, worth $25,000. *

*617 Appellant appeared greatly concerned about acquiring the royalty. After the foregoing events, he telephoned Terry that he was “Jimmy Fratianno” and wanted to see him. They did not meet.

Besides his friendship for Terry and his holdings in the Terry Drilling Company, Carl Riddell was an independent driller and knew Raspona and Módica. About April 27, 1953, Riddell, at their request, met Raspona and Módica at the latter’s store. Raspona told Riddell he had a deal with Terry and that $5,000 had been put up by appellant’s friends; that appellant had represented the people who had put up the money and Raspona stated that he felt appellant might think he (Raspona) had taken the money, and would not deliver any percentage or any deal he might have with Terry because it had suddenly become good. Raspona asked Riddell to tell appellant and Módica that he was not the kind of character that would take their money and not deliver. Five thousand dollars was mentioned. Appellant stated that he was known as “the Weasel” and asked Riddell (1) for assurances as to Raspona and (2) to arrange a meeting with Terry.

In further numerous conversations with Raspona and appellant, the former insisted that Riddell had promised to arrange a meeting for him and Terry; that Terry had been evasive about meeting him and appellant and that he was worried for fear that “these people” meant business and might take Terry out and “shake him out of it.” Raspona told Riddell that “These people would blow Terry’s and my head off if I did not make contact with Terry and straighten the thing out; that they had a ‘net work’ all over the country and could fix things if anybody got into trouble and he said it would be lots of trouble if this contract wasn’t made and this so-called deal completed.” He told Riddell that he “had better arrange the meeting or they would blow his head off and, that if he resorted to the law, he would be killed.”

Riddell had another conversation with Raspona about August 6, 1953. Riddell had received a call from appellant. He informed Raspona of the call from appellant who told Riddell he allowed no one to talk about him. Riddell drove down to the liquor store and told Raspona of his telephonic call from appellant and that he wished to come down and straighten the thing out. He met Raspona in the liquor store and they sat in “the car” while they visited. Riddell told Raspona that appellant had called him and said that he was *618 going to blow Riddell’s brains out; that he did not allow people to talk about him; that he had come to get Raspona to straighten appellant out.

When Riddell complained to Raspona of appellant’s threats and appealed to Raspona to get him out of the situation, Raspona stated to Riddell that appellant was determined to go through with this deal; that no one could stop him and that “these people” had a network and even the police were fixed, and that “the best thing to do would be to get Terry to go through with the deal.”

On August 7, 1953, appellant with profane and obscene language threatened to Riddell to “blow Riddell’s head off.”

On August 8, 1953, the police installed sound recording equipment onto Riddell’s telephone. Commencing on the evening of August 9, the several tape recordings of the conversations of defendants were made. The substance of such conversations is convincing proof that defendants had a common understanding and were attempting in unison to terrorize Mr. Riddell and his family into action and to force him to induce Terry to assign to them an overriding royalty on the Tapo lease.

The following is taken from such conversations:

Raspona: “I’m just going to have to straighten this thing out, Carl. I don’t want nothing happening. Your wife called yesterday, worried sick. I don’t know why. I know they’re not going to touch kids, for Christ’s sake ...”
Riddell : “Why talk about kids . . . what am I supposed to do. This guy called me up. He’s splitting my head open. He’s going to crucify me ... I either have to have him arrested or go kill him ... I know, but when they start threatening my family Don, what am I going to do? . . .” “here is this Fratianno. What does he want from me? What’s his deal?”
Raspona: “When we had that talk out there in that God damned liquor store . . . you said: ‘I’ll make a date. I’ll get hold of him and we’ll set down and talk like people.’ Remember—your exact words, Carl? . . .

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Bluebook (online)
282 P.2d 1002, 132 Cal. App. 2d 610, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 2235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fratianno-calctapp-1955.