People v. Gerbel

162 P.2d 946, 71 Cal. App. 2d 325, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 893
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 26, 1945
DocketCrim. 3893, 3894
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 162 P.2d 946 (People v. Gerbel) 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. Gerbel, 162 P.2d 946, 71 Cal. App. 2d 325, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 893 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

In the cause presented by appeal numbered 3894, the trial court sitting without a jury found defendant guilty of the crime of grand theft and denied his motion for a new trial, as well as his application for probation. Appeal numbered 3893 arises out of a prior conviction of the crime of burglary, wherein proceedings were suspended and defendant was placed on probation for a period of fifteen years from and after July 2, 1938. By reason of defendant’s conviction of the crime of grand theft (Appeal 3894), the court found he had violated the terms of his probation, and revoked the same and entered judgment for burglary (Appeal 3893), the sentences imposed in the two causes to run concurrently.

Defendant here appeals from the judgment of conviction of grand theft in the principal cause and from the order denying his motion for a new trial therein. He also appeals from the order revoking probation in the prior case and from the judgment of conviction of burglary of which h.e was found guilty in 1938. The appeals in both causes have been consolidated by stipulation of counsel and are presented to this court upon one set of briefs.

It is here contended by appellant that excluding the “involuntary verbal confession” which was forcefully and unlawfully extracted from him, there is no competent legal evidence to sustain his conviction of the crime of grand theft; that errors committed at the trial based upon the alleged inadmissibility of the said confession were prejudicial to his cause, and the conviction based upon the alleged confession is violative of the 14th amendment to the federal Constitution.

An examination of the reporter’s transcript of the evidence reveals that on the night of April 7, 1944, a Buick automobile bearing license No. 1F7924 was taken from the *327 used ear lot of the Taylor Automobile Company at 911 West Pico Street, Los Angeles, without the consent of the owner.

Radio Officer Jos. F. Meade, who identified the appellant as the person whom he arrested at about 1 a. m. of April 8th, testified that his attention was. first attracted to appellant by the erratic manner in which the Buick car, bearing the license above referred to, was being driven and in which appellant was then seated. The witness stated that he first saw this car going north on Main Street; that it “went right through” the stop signal and turned east on 9th Street, whereupon said witness and his brother officer operating a radio car pursued the Buick which “turned north on Los Angeles Street to 7th; then east on 7th to Alameda”; ran through the stop signs at 7th and San Pedro and at 7th and Central, turned south on Alameda, traveling at a speed of 80 or 85 miles per hour; that the Buick continued south on Alameda picking up speed and “ran through two boulevard stops.” That the officers in the radio car turned their spotlight on the Buick and two motorcycles which took up the chase “had their red lights and sirens on directly behind us.” The witness further testified that he shot at the Buick five times but it did not stop; that “at 25th and Alameda there is a Pacific Electric right of way crossing there, and the arm for the safety stop on the right of way came down, and their ear ran through that arm, that barrier, and knocked the barrier out of the way, and then went onto the railroad tracks where Alameda divided at 25th, and they ran straight out on the railroad tracks, and then they looped to the right out of the railroad tracks into the regular automobile right of way, and at that time we came alongside of them and they hit us and knocked us into the right of way . . . struck our car on the right-hand side and knocked us from the regular automobile right of way into the railroad right of way, ’ ’ putting the radio car out of commission. Thereafter, “the car we were pursuing struck another car, sideswiped another car that was parked on Alameda, and then . . . they came to a skidding stop down about 27th and Alameda, and just before they came to a stop one fellow jumped out of the left-hand side of the car and ran east across the tracks and the other fellow jumped out of the right-hand side of the car and ran into a vacant lot south of the Pacific Freight Lines yard. That was the defendant. We later captured him. . . . The two cars were almost a block apart at the time they stopped, and he, the *328 defendant, got out into the bnshes and humps and valleys where some trash had been dumped, and he fell down in the bushes. He was ducking when he ran, and we had flashlights, and he fell down, and my partner overtook him and shot at him twice, and the second time he shot at him he fell down. ’ ’ That they then overtook appellant who “was lying perfectly still, then I made a start to look for the other fellow, and in the meantime this fellow jumped up and made an attempt to escape and my partner took him back to the car; . . . and on the way back over to the road the defendant turned and struck my partner on the side of his face with his fist,” whereupon the witness’ partner, Officer Lober, “immediately hit him and knocked him down”; that they then handcuffed him and took him to Central Police Station. Officer Meade then testified regarding a conversation he had with appellant around 1:45 or 2:00 that morning at the station, Officers Simkins, Lober and Ricketts being present; that no force or violence was used on appellant and no promises of immunity or hope of reward were extended to him; that the statements then made by appellant were free and voluntary. The conversation as related by Officer Meade follows: “We asked the defendant where he had gotten the car, and he stated that they had got the car on Figueroa Street. We asked whose ear it was, and he said at first that it was the other fellow’s car, a friend of his, but he couldn’t tell ¡who the friend was, didn’t know who he was. Then later he changed the story and said they got it on Pico Street; that they had stolen it off a lot on Pico Street; that they first had tried to steal a Ford off another lot and couldn’t get it started, then they went to this lot and got the Buiek started and were headed toward home at East Los Angeles somewhere at the time we saw them.” Upon cross-examination, said officer testified that the only time he saw appellant struck was when Officer Lober struck him at the time of the arrest; that appellant’s face at that time was dirty or dusty but it was not bruised; that appellant had been drinking but that he was then sober.

The above testimony constituted the so-called confession which appellant claims was erroneously admitted because it was induced by force and fear.

Appellant took the stand in his own defense and testified that he left home to buy his wife an Easter present; that he started drinking at various “taverns” in downtown Los Angeles finally reaching 5th and Hill Streets where he *329 remained until around midnight drinking beer and finishing a bottle of whiskey which he bought early in the evening; that he felt “pretty wobbly” and tried to find transportation to his home but failing in this he hailed a passing automobile, got in the car and “must have went to sleep.

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Bluebook (online)
162 P.2d 946, 71 Cal. App. 2d 325, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gerbel-calctapp-1945.