People v. Hailey

149 Cal. App. 2d 453
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 26, 1957
DocketCrim. No. 5734
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 149 Cal. App. 2d 453 (People v. Hailey) 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. Hailey, 149 Cal. App. 2d 453 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

WOOD (Parker), J.

Defendant Belme, one Hailey, one McCarty and one Gildersleeve were charged by information with robbery. Trial by jury was waived. Hailey pleaded guilty. The case was dismissed as to Gildersleeve. McCarty and Belme were adjudged guilty. Belme appeals from the judgment and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

Appellant contends that the evidence was insufficient to support the judgment.

The robbery occurred on December 21, 1955, about 3:10 p. m. Mr. Wilmot, a cashier at the Western Union Telegraph Company, 734 South Flower Street, Los Angeles, was returning to his office after having been to a bank where he obtained $7,500 in currency for use in paying the employees. He was carrying the money in a bag. He entered an elevator in the Western Union building, and as he turned to face the elevator door defendant Hailey “dashed around the corner,” grabbed the bag and tried to take it away from him. Defendant McCarty stood in the doorway of the elevator with a revolver in his hand. In the struggle for possession of the bag, Hailey pulled Mr. Wilmot out of the elevator and struck him on the hand with a revolver. As the revolver “came down” it was discharged and the bullet went through Mr. Wilmot’s trouser leg. Hailey jerked the bag from Mr. Wilmot’s hand. Then Hailey and McCarty ran down the hallway (a distance of approximately 150 feet) and out the front door. Mr. Wilmot identified Hailey as one of the robbers. The elevator operator identified Hailey and McCarty as the robbers who were in the building.

Miss Schneider testified that on said December 21, about 3:15 p. m., while she was at the front door of said building she heard a gunshot; then she saw two men run out of the building and one of them had a satchel in his hand and was putting a gun in his belt; the man with the satchel and [455]*455gun was defendant Hailey; she saw the two men run out the front door, get into a 1947 or 1948 light blue automobile and take off; after they were in the automobile it stayed there just long enough for someone to start it; she did not notice whether someone else was in the automobile.

Mr. Novoa testified that at said time he was in a parked automobile in front of the Western Union office; about 30 feet in front of his automobile, and in front of the entrance of the building, there was a “parked” dark blue automobile that “was in motion back and forth” about 10 minutes; he saw one person in that automobile—the driver, a white person whose hair style was on the “bushy side”; the automobile “took off”; about 5 or 10 minutes after he saw the automobile he heard that there had been a robbery.

Mr. Williams, a taxicab driver, testified that on said December 21, about 5 p. m., two men entered his cab as passengers at Pico Boulevard and Vermont Avenue, and he took them to Grand Avenue and Pico Boulevard; at that place one of the men got out of the cab and went to the rear of the cab, and the other man stayed in the cab; the man who had gone to the rear returned to the cab; then the cab went to 97th and Prairie Streets in Inglewood, and when the cab stopped there a blue Dodge automobile pulled up behind the cab; another man was in that automobile; the two men who were in the cab paid the cab fare and got into the other automobile. Photographs of Hailey and McCarty were shown to the witness, Mr. Williams. He testified further that, to the best of his judgment, those photographs were photographs of the two men who were in the cab.

Officer Rafferty testified that he had a conversation with defendant Belme (appellant) on January 3, 1956, wherein Belme said that on the morning of December 21 Hailey came to Belme’s house and asked if he could borrow Belme’s car; Belme replied that he could borrow it; Hailey took the ear, which was a 1942 blue Dodge sedan; he returned the car to Belme that afternoon about 4 or 5 o’clock at the Swing Time Bar in Inglewood; he (Hailey) came into the bar with another fellow and gave the car keys and $200 to Belme, and told him the car was parked in the back. The officer testified further that he asked Belme what the $200 was for, and he replied that it was for the use of the car; the officer asked him if he knew, before the car was taken, what Hailey was going to use it for; Belme replied that he knew it was going to be for something illegal but he did not know exactly [456]*456what it was; the officer asked if he had any conversation with Hailey when the car was returned; Belme replied that Hailey mentioned the name “Western Union,” and said everything went all right, that Belme did not have to worry, that Hailey had a scuffle with the guy in an elevator, and a shot was fired but no one was hurt.

Officer Rafferty testified further that he had another conversation with Belme on the day before the preliminary examination, in the hallway of the Hall of Justice, and in the presence of Belme’s attorney, Mr. Donahue; at that conversation the officer said: “Louis [referring to Belme], you lied to us .... We know that you not only received a thousand dollars, we know that you received an additional $500.00. We know that you drove the car. That they got out, that they took a taxicab and met you at Frank Wiggins Trade School [Pico and Grand] and you later followed the cab out to Inglewood.” The officer testified that Belme “looked at me and said nothing.”

Belme testified that he did not participate in a robbery at the Western Union; on the morning of December 21, 1955, about 10 a. m., Hailey came to Belme’s house and asked if he could use Belme’s car; Belme said “Yes”; then Hailey, accompanied by Belme, drove the ear to the Swing Time Café and left Belme there; Belme stayed there about 15 minutes and then went home; then he went to James Pollack’s house in Torrance where Belme was going to build a chimney (Pollack was manager of the Swing Time Café); Belme stayed there about an hour fixing the foundation for the chimney; then he and Pollack went to a place on Hobart Street (distance about 12 miles) where Mr. Greminger was working and obtained some cement; they stayed there a few minutes, and Mr. Greminger went with them to Pollack’s place, arriving there about 2:30 p. m.; the three of them worked on the chimney until approximately 4 p. m. when Pollack took Belme home; Belme went to the Swing Time Café where he waited for the return of his ear; Hailey returned there with the car about 5 p. m. and gave Belme $200 and said that it was for the use of the car; Belme asked Hailey what they had done, and he replied that “they pulled a job down in L. A.,” and he had “to take off some place” and would see Belme later; then Hailey left; Belme did not know that there was to be a robbery; the first knowledge he had that something was wrong was when Hailey told him at the café that they did something wrong; he did not tell [457]*457Officer Rafferty that he knew “they” were going to use the car for an illegal purpose; Officer Rafferty did not say to him: “You shouldn’t lie Louis. You know you received $500 more at or about the Frank Wiggins School”; the officer did not say anything like that to him.

James Pollack testified that on December 21, 1955, he first saw Belme about 11 a. m. at Pollack’s house; he and Belme went to a place on Hobart Street where Mr. Greminger was working, obtained some cement, returned home, and mixed and poured the cement; Mr. Greminger did the cement finishing ; Belme stayed there until approximately 4:15 p. m., when Pollack took Belme home, arriving there about 4:40 p. m.

Mr. Greminger testified that on said December 21, about 1:30 p.

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Related

People v. Crary
265 Cal. App. 2d 534 (California Court of Appeal, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
149 Cal. App. 2d 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hailey-calctapp-1957.