People v. Guasti

243 P.2d 59, 110 Cal. App. 2d 456, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1555
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 1952
DocketCrim. 4736
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 243 P.2d 59 (People v. Guasti) 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. Guasti, 243 P.2d 59, 110 Cal. App. 2d 456, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1555 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

McCOMB, J.

From a judgment of guilty of perjury after trial before a jury, defendant appeals. There is also an appeal from the order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial and a purported appeal from the order denying his motion in arrest of judgment.

Facts: During the year 1946, Joseph F. Reed was assistant chief of police in the Los Angeles Police Department. The administrative vice squad of the police department was in his command and Lieutenant Rudolph Wellpott was in charge of the squad. James Fisk was on the administrative vice squad, on the team apprehending bookmakers. Undersheriff Arthur Jewell held a position in the sheriff’s office of Los Angeles County comparable to that of Assistant Chief Reed in the police department and the two dealt together in matters of jurisdiction of the sheriff and the police department.

Defendant was a captain in the sheriff’s office assigned to the anti-subversive detail.

On August 30, 1946, Police Officer James Fisk went into county territory outside of the city of Los Angeles and there made a bookmaking arrest at 1709 East Florence Avenue.

A few days after August 30, 1946, Lieutenant Wellpott and Assistant Chief Reed were in the latter’s office. Defendant walked into the office carrying a letter which he threw on the assistant chief’s desk. This letter the assistant chief opened and read, then nodded his head at the defendant who turned and walked out. Chief Reed handed the letter to Lieutenant Wellpott and asked him to read it which he did. Lieutenant Wellpott was then told to take the letter to his office. There he gave it to Officer Fisk who read it, took it home, showed *460 it to Ms wife and put it in a file with other papers belonging to him.

About a year after he received the letter Mrs. Fisk urged him to get rid of some of the papers which he had accumulated but he decided to retain this letter which he did until about a year later when he gave it to his wife to dispose of. This she did by burning it.

On or about December 12, 1950, the Grand Jury of Los Angeles County was regularly impanelled and undertook a general investigation of vice conditions and protection payoffs in Los Angeles County. The secretary of the grand jury read to it a statement of the purposes of its investigation as follows: “The investigation before the Grand Jury was an investigation of County officers, particularly with respect to the pattern of vice protection in Los Angeles County, with particular inquiry into the giving and taking of bribes for the protection of vice in this County.”

In addition, defendant in his activities and his relationship with a Mr. Contratto was also the subject .of investigation by the grand jury. Defendant appeared before the grand jury as a witness and after being sworn was asked the following question:

“Getting back to Joe Reed, the Chief of Police under Chief Horrall—I believe he is entitled to that name—he has informed me, sir, as well as Mr. Wellpott, whom you do not know, that he personally received a letter written by you, signed by you, on the Sheriff’s stationery, advising—and I quote only in substance—the Los Angeles Police Department to stay out of the territory of the County, the incident growing out of a visit by Lieutenant Fisk down in the Florence Avenue area. Did you write such a letter?” Defendant replied, “No, sir.”

The following questions and answers then ensued:

“Q. I gave you that background because I have interrogated Joe Reed, obviously, and he distinctly remembers not only the letter but the manner of delivery. A. Yes.
“Q. It is your testimony under oath that you never wrote such a letter ? A. I don’t recall writing such a letter; no, sir. ’ ’

Various witnesses gave testimony showing the lack of authority of defendant to write such a letter and with reference to the operation of bookmaking establishments in the Bast Florence Avenue area of Los Angeles County. At the time of the trial witnesses testified that shortly after August 30, 1946, defendant had given Assistant Chief Reed a letter typewritten on the stationery of the sheriff’s office of Los Angeles *461 County which was addressed to Assistant Chief Joseph Reed, and which stated that administrative vice squad officers had gone into the county some distance beyond Los Angeles jurisdictional lines; that Sergeant Fisk had made a statement that it was not the last time he would go into the county, and that the sheriff’s office was able to deal with such problems; that such a thing should not happen again. The Los Angeles police were to stay out of the county. At the bottom of the letter the name “ Al Guasti” was handwritten.

Questions: First: Was defendant’s denial of writing the letter material to any issue before the grand jury?

Yes. The law is settled that the matters falsely sworn to need not be directly and immediately material. It is sufficient if it- be so connected with the facts directly in issue as to have a tendency to prove or disprove such fact by giving weight or probability to the testimony of a witness testifying thereto. (People v. Barry, 63 Cal. 62, 64; People v. Phillips, 56 Cal.App. 291, 293 [2] [205 P. 40]; People v. Dunstan, 59 Cal.App. 574, 582 [211 P. 813].)

Applying this rule to the present ease it is apparent that the grand jury had before it an investigation of county officers respecting the pattern of vice protection in the county and the giving and taking of bribes for such protection. The inquiry concerned activities of the sheriff’s staff and specifically .those of defendant. Testimony was presented to the grand jury with respect to the bookmaking establishments in Los Angeles County and inquiry was being made as to why those conditions existed.

Testimony concerning the letter which defendant denied writing showed that it stated in substance that Sergeant Fisk, a city police officer, had gone into county territory and there made a vice arrest; that the officer had stated that it would not he the last time he would do so; that the letter stated such a thing should not happen again; that he must stay out of the county.

From this evidence the grand jury may have inferred that defendant did not want persons suspected of illegal activities in the county molested by law enforcement agencies, and such letter tended to show that the writer thereof was protecting persons in the county in their illicit activities. This is especially true in view of other evidence that defendant at the time the letter was written was in charge of the anti-subversive squad of the sheriff’s office and was not concerned with jurisdictional matters concerning the anti-vice detail. *462 The fact that he had come to protest anti-vice activities of the Los Angeles Police Department indicated he had some special interest in seeing that vice laws were not enforced.

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Bluebook (online)
243 P.2d 59, 110 Cal. App. 2d 456, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-guasti-calctapp-1952.