People v. Hammond

332 P.2d 769, 166 Cal. App. 2d 255, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1395
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1958
DocketCrim. No. 6341
StatusPublished

This text of 332 P.2d 769 (People v. Hammond) 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. Hammond, 332 P.2d 769, 166 Cal. App. 2d 255, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1395 (Cal. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

FOURT, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction of the crime of burglary. An information was filed in Los Angeles County on January 18, 1958, charging the defendant with entering the store of Kunin Furniture Company on December 29, 1957, with intent to commit theft therein. The defendant also was charged with four prior felony convictions : the first was for grand theft in December, 1943; the second was for escape from a police officer in August, 1946; the third was for burglary in August, 1946, and the fourth was for burglary in April, 1955. The defendant pleaded not guilty and denied the truth of the allegation of the priors. By stipulation, the cause was submitted on the transcript of the preliminary hearing, each side reserving the right to present further evidence. The matter was heard on April 24, 1958 and May 19, 1958, after two continuances.

The defendant was found guilty as charged, the court fixed the crime as burglary in the second degree and found the prior convictions to be true.

A résumé of the facts is as follows: The Kunin Furniture Company store, located at 4611 South Central Avenue in Los Angeles, was locked up at about 6 to 6:30 o’clock p.m. on Saturday, December 28, 1957. At that time there was on display in the window of said store an R.C.A. portable television set, serial number B 7688876. When the owner of the store arrived the next morning, Sunday, December 29, 1957, at about 6:30 o’clock, a window glass was broken, a rock was on a table near or in front of the window and the portable television set and another television set were missing. No permission had been given to anyone to enter or to take the sets.

About a week later, on January 5, 1958, at about 4:30 [257]*257o’clock a.m., two policemen were driving south on Vermont Avenue near 54th Street in Los Angeles, when they observed a person looking into the window of a store where some television sets were on display. They saw this person turn toward them, and as they approached, saw him turn on to 54th Street. They also saw another person standing in the doorway at 936 West 54th Street. As the officers glanced around they saw these two persons enter a car which was parked at the curb. The officers found a rock which was moist on top in the doorway of 936 West 54th Street, about three feet from where they had observed the second person standing. They then found the defendant, together with the other two persons, sitting in the automobile. Each of the three persons told a different story as to why they were there, and as to what they were doing. The defendant stated that he was driving Mr. Blunt, the first person observed, home to East 46th Street, and that Mr. Jefferson, person number two observed by the officers, had felt sick and defendant had stopped the car to the end that Mr. Jefferson could get out and relieve himself.

According to the testimony of an automobile salesman, the automobile was purchased by the defendant on December 21, 1957.

In the trunk compartment of the car the officers found a spare tire, a jack, some plaster, some rocks, and a paper tag about 1% inch by % inch in size, bearing the number B 7688876. All three men were placed under arrest and taken to the University Police Station. At the police station an officer showed the paper or tag bearing the figures to the defendant, and asked the defendant if he had ever seen it before. The defendant stated at that time that he did not know anything about it. The officer told the defendant that he had found the tag in the trunk compartment of his car, and the defendant said that he had never seen it before and did not know how it had gotten there.

On January 8, 1958, three days after the arrest, an officer talked with the defendant and defendant stated that he had driven Blunt and Jefferson to 54th and Vermont, that he had learned that Blunt planned to buy some narcotics, and that thereupon he and Blunt got into an argument and he told Blunt that he would not haul him back in his car. The defendant then said that he had purchased the automobile some two weeks or more before that occasion and that he had been in [258]*258the sole possession of the automobile and had hauled no furniture, appliances or television sets.

The tag or paper, which was said to have been found in the trunk compartment of the defendant’s ear, was shown to the owner of the store which had been burglarized. The owner testified that the number on the tag was the same number given to the television set missing from the window of the store. He further stated that when a television set comes from the factory, a tag bearing the serial number is fastened to the outside of the carton in which the television set is packed. He also testified that another tag is affixed to the bottom of the television set itself, which carries the same serial number, and which remains on the set itself until it is sold, and that the set which was in the window of his store and was stolen had such a tag affixed to it. He said further that the tag affixed to the carton and the tag affixed to the set itself are similar and are of the same type. The owner of the store was shown the tag which the officer said had come from the trunk compartment of the defendant’s car and was asked, “Then, you would have no way of knowing whether this was the tag from the carton or the tag from the set?”, and he answered, “Not positively, no.”

In further referring to the tag in question, the following questions were put and answers given by the owner of the store:

“Q. Is there a serial number stapled on them outside of the carton in which this is boxed ? A. Yes.
“Q. Is it the same type as this? A. I would say so.
“Q. And it’s a—the box, the object the TY set comes boxed in, the carton ? A. Yes.
“Q. And on the outside, is it glued or stapled? A. Glued.
‘‘Q. They are similar to this ? A. Similar to—it seems to me it was a larger tag, but I would have to look at others.
“Q. You don’t know? A. No.
' ‘ Q. But it is similar in style ? A. Similar in style, yes.
“Q. And it would carry the same number on the other tag? A. Yes.
‘'Q. This tag, you do not place on the television set ? A. No, that’s glued to the bottom of the TY.
“Q. This tag that is on the box, on the carton, does that come in two sections with a perforated portion ? A. In some eases, it does; and in other cases, sometimes there is only one, just the half.
[259]*259“Q. We are speaking of this particular product and this particular tag. Does it come with a perforated tag? A. I can’t answer that question honestly, because I didn’t open up this particular box, but I have seen boxes that came in to us where in some cases, there is a perforated tag, in two pieces. In other eases, RCA has already torn off that.
“Q. Isn’t the purpose of that perforated section to take it for your use in your inventory ? A. No. I have used that one.
‘ ‘ Q. But it is the custom in the trade to use that tag-
“Me. Aisenson: I object, your Honor.
“The Coubt: Sustained. The witness has stated he doesn’t use them.”

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Bluebook (online)
332 P.2d 769, 166 Cal. App. 2d 255, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hammond-calctapp-1958.