People v. Hartley

197 Cal. App. 2d 111, 17 Cal. Rptr. 286, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1321
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 1961
DocketCrim. 3842
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 197 Cal. App. 2d 111 (People v. Hartley) 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. Hartley, 197 Cal. App. 2d 111, 17 Cal. Rptr. 286, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1321 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

SHOEMAKER, J.

Defendants Hartley, Willis and Smith, convicted of robbery in the first degree and rape in four counts, appeal from the judgment.

Defendant Smith, convicted of violating section 288a of the Penal Code, also appeals from that judgment.

The record shows that on October 26,1959, at approximately 4:45 a. m., Daniel Roosendahl and Carmen Simpson drove to Coit Tower on Roosendahl's motor scooter. After they had been there about 15 minutes, another car drove up, and four Negro men got out. One of these men asked Mrs. Simpson for money. When she told him that she had no money, he said, “Let me see,” and proceeded to unbutton her coat and put his hands on her stomach. Mrs. Simpson then found a dollar in her pocket and gave it to him. While one of the men held an iron bar raised at about shoulder level, another of the men took Mr. Roosendahl’s wallet and removed the money. The loose change was also removed from Mr. Roosendahl’s pocket. One of the four men then proceeded to order Mrs. Simpson inside the automobile where each of the four men then had an act of sexual intercourse with her. In addition, one of the men forced Mrs. Simpson to engage in an act of oral copulation with him. The four men then released Mrs. Simpson, got into the car, and drove away.

At the commencement of the trial, defendants stipulated that the crimes of robbery, rape, and oral copulation had been committed. The only question to be determined by the jury was thus one of identification. All three defendants were sailors stationed at Treasure Island. On the evening of October 29, 1959, three days after the crimes had been committed, Hartley, Willis, Smith, and a fourth Negro sailor, *113 Gilbert, had come into San Francisco to spend the evening when they were picked up by the police, apparently for the reason that they matched the descriptions given the police by Mrs. Simpson and Mr. Roosendahl. The defendants were taken to the police station and put in a lineup, where they were identified by Mr. Roosendahl and subsequently by Mrs. Simpson.

All defendants based their defense on the claim that they had not been in the vicinity of Coit Tower at the time the crimes were committed, but had been at Treasure Island. Their respective alibis were not established to the satisfaction of the jury, and the record in this case warrants the jury’s adverse finding. However, since defendant Willis bases his claim of reversible error in part on his showing with respect to his alibi and the district attorney’s remarks with respect thereto, in which he is joined by his codefendants, we set forth the pertinent facts.

Defendant Willis contended that his morning duties involved picking up and distributing pastries from the main galley between 5 and 5 :20 a. m., and that although no one had seen him performing his duties on the morning in question, there were no complaints as to the delivery thereof, hence he must have performed his duties on the morning of the crime in the usual manner.

It appears that during the argument of Willis’ counsel to the jury and while he was arguing that if the pastries were not delivered on time there would have been a complaint, the following exchange occurred: “Mr. Andersen: [counsel for appellant Willis] . . . Well, Willis was a fine man, never been in any trouble, no criticism, no nothing, was working during that morning, was working during each morning the job was done. Were there any complaints? No. Mr. Deriman: [district attorney] Wait a minute. Now yesterday we, in chambers, your Honor, there was a conference concerning a certain witness and I was assured there would be no discussion about the witness, if I didn’t call the witness. I didn’t call the witness. In fact, I wanted to call the witness, and he argued—you remember the discussion. The Court : Yes. Mr. Andersen : I am going to demand a mistrial now. Counsel is making an absolute, deliberate, misstatement, an absolute and deliberate misstatement. Mr. Deriman : He wants to mention the name-Mr. Andersen : I am going to mention the name now. This man he wanted to call was Bleth. He said he was going to call Bleth. He did not call Bleth. Mr. Deriman : You *114 said you wouldn’t comment. Mr. Andersen : I said I wouldn’t comment on Bleth, no, by calling him-Mr. Deriman : That is correct. Mr. Andersen: That’s all I said. I said, ‘Call the witness if you want to.’ ” This flareup between counsel is referred to by the district attorney in his closing argument to the jury in the following manner: “You’re led to believe, and you’re asked to accept at this point of time that on that particular morning there was no complaint about those deliveries being made on that basis. That’s what you’re led to believe. Now I can’t go outside the record. All I can testify ■—all T can do here is argue what’s in that record in the way of evidence. I’m bound by that. I wish I knew what to say here. Apparently there’s some misunderstanding between myself and other counsel and the Court. I can’t tell you what any other witnesses testified to, all I can tell you is that a man named Bleth, I thought his testimony ought to be in the record. It wasn’t. Apparently I misunderstood to what extent comment would be made upon it. But we’ll leave it right there. I won’t go any further on that subject, but I ask you ladies and gentlemen of the jury to examine this carefully before you conclude that there was no complaint against Willis’ being late that particular morning, October 26th, with the delivery of the pastries.”

Based upon the foregoing remarks of the district attorney, the appellant argues that his reference to a man named Bleth was designed to create an inference in the jurors’ minds that there had in fact been a complaint as to the pastry deliveries on the morning of October 26, and that Bleth could have testified as to this complaint but was prevented from doing so by the actions of defense counsel; hence, that the district attorney commented on evidence which was not within the record and, in addition, raised the inference that defendant Willis and his counsel concealed or withheld evidence regarding Bleth.

As for the district attorney’s remarks, it may be noted that the jurors were never told what Bleth would have testified had he been called as a witness. The district attorney stated only that he thought Bleth’s testimony “ought to be in the record,” but that he would go no further on that subject. He then requested the jurors to consider carefully the evidence which had been presented as to the absence of complaints. It seems highly unlikely that these comments alone could have led the jurors to suspect that Bleth’s testimony related to delivery complaints p,nd had been wrongfully withheld by *115 defense counsel. Appellants appear to have arrived at their interpretation of the district attorney’s comments only after an extremely painstaking analysis of comments which the district attorney delivered extemporaneously to the jurors. It is difficult to believe that the jury would have attached any great significance to these remarks, particularly since they were made at the conclusion of a lengthy trial during which the district attorney and counsel for appellant Willis repeatedly took part in heated exchanges.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 Cal. App. 2d 111, 17 Cal. Rptr. 286, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hartley-calctapp-1961.