People v. Hidalgo

179 P.2d 102, 78 Cal. App. 2d 926, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1552
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1947
DocketCrim. No. 2438
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 179 P.2d 102 (People v. Hidalgo) 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. Hidalgo, 179 P.2d 102, 78 Cal. App. 2d 926, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1552 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

Appeal from .judgment of conviction for violation of section 261 of the Penal Code and section 702 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, and from the order denying the motion for new trial.

Appellant does not question the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict of the jury, but bases his appeal on two grounds: (1) Alleged error by the court in omitting two of defendant’s proposed instructions; and (2) alleged misconduct of the prosecuting attorney.

The information charged defendant with violating section 261 of the Penal Code by an act of sexual intercourse with Johanna Nellen, a girl of the age of fourteen years, not his wife, on April 3, 1946 (a date changed by amendment of the information from April 9), and with violating section 702 of the Welfare and Institutions Code on the same day by taking Johanna Nellen to a room in a San Francisco hotel, thereby causing her to become and remain “A person under twenty-one years of age who is leading or from any cause is in danger of leading, an idle, dissolute, lewd, or immoral life. . . .” Appellant pleaded “not guilty’’ to both counts.

The defendant is a Filipino; the complaining witness a white girl. The latter lives with her father on Orienta Street in Bayshore City, San Mateo County. Next door, defendant lives with his white wife Evelyn, whom he married shortly after his arrest, and two children—his child by a former marriage, and her child by a former marriage to another Filipino.

The prosecutrix testified as to her age and that she was not married to defendant, and as follows: She had met defendant the preceding November. On the day in question, when she came home at noon recess from the Bayshore Elementary School, defendant phoned her, stating that he wanted her to help him look for his wife, Evelyn, and that he would pick her up at 2 o’clock at the “P. G. & E.” (the power plant about a block from Johanna’s school). She returned to school and remained until 2 o’clock. When she came out defendant [929]*929was waiting for her at the designated spot. She got into his car with him and he drove her to the Broadmoor Hotel in San Francisco. They entered the back entrance of that hotel. Pictures of the hotel and this back entrance were identified by prosecutrix. Defendant took her in the elevator from the basement to the fourth floor bathroom, pictures of which she identified. Defendant asked her if he could have sexual intercourse with her, and she consented. The act was consummated and defendant gave her a dollar and told her to go home. She left the hotel by the back entrance, taking a streetcar and bus to her home, arriving there at 5:30. The first person she told about the affair was the principal of her school, Miss Fitzgerald, whom she told the next day. Previously she had told the principal of her sex relations with other men. On the 13th of April, prosecutrix went to Placerville for her Easter vacation, and while there told her aunt about what had happened. Before she went to Placerville defendant phoned to her again and wanted her to come down again with him. She said that she would, but she did not go. He again phoned her asking her to see him before she left for Placerville, and then asked her to take off the first day of her return to school and go with him to the Broadmoor Hotel. He told her that “if I told anybody, even told Evelyn or anybody, he would cut my neck.”

On the first day of her return from her vacation, about noon, she went to the vicinity of the P. G. & E., where the defendant was supposed “to pick me up.” She was accompanied by two police inspectors. Shortly thereafter defendant drove by the place in his automobile and on into the driveway of his home, where the inspectors arrested him.

On cross-examination, in an endeavor to show motive, defendant brought out the fact that prosecutrix had several times been scolded by defendant’s wife for sitting in cars in front of defendant’s home with Filipino boys. She had also been told by other women in the neighborhood not to sit in cars with Filipinos. Prosecutrix had on many occasions eaten dinner with the defendant and his wife, and on about five occasions her father had also eaten dinner with her there. Then because she was spending so much time at Hidalgo’s house her father complained that he did not like to eat alone. In March, defendant’s wife stopped inviting prosecutrix to dinner. Prosecutrix denied that she became angry over this, [930]*930but her feelings were hurt and she resented it. She admitted that she had told the authorities that Mrs. Hidalgo -had set traps for her in her house, so that Filipino boys would be there when prosecutrix went in, and these boys would have relations with her. She knew that there was no one home at the Hidalgo house during the day, as Hidalgo worked at the Broadmoor Hotel, Mrs. Hidalgo worked at Christine’s Restaurant, and the two Hidalgo children were at school. Defendant’s wife had asked her to empty the ice box. To get in for that purpose, as well as to meet the Filipino boys, prosecutrix would put her arm around through the window and unlatch the door. Defendant and his wife introduced prosecutrix to Filipino boys who gave her presents.

The two police inspectors testified to being parked in a car with Johanna on April 22d, on Orienta Street, not at the point of the rendezvous testified to by Johanna, although they could see the P. G. & E. from where they were parked; that defendant drove by, was pointed out by Johanna, and the arrest was made as soon as defendant drove into his driveway. One inspector stated that the reason defendant gave for coming home at noon was that his car needed fixing.

Miss Dorothy Fitzgerald, principal of the Bayshore School, a witness for the People, testified that Johanna left school without permission on April 3d, between 2 and 2:20 and did not come back. Her teacher reported that fact to witness, who thereupon wrote a note to Johanna’s father telling him about it. The next day Johanna brought this note back with an excuse on the bottom. Apparently not believing the excuse, the witness said to Johanna, “Now tell me the truth.” After fifteen or twenty minutes of conversation Johanna apparently told witness what had happened the preceding day. On April 12th, the day before Easter vacation, witness saw defendant driving his car very slowly, circling the school grounds, continuing to do so until 25 minutes after 1. It doés not appear in her testimony what time he first came out or how long he was there. Witness made a note of his car license number. • On cross-examination witness testified that Johanna had been truant from school four or five times and that her father did not seem to think her conduct was his responsibility.

Mrs. Evelyn Hidalgo, the defendant’s wife, called as a witness for defendant, testified that she married defendant after his arrest. She worked at Christine’s Coffee Shop on Franklin [931]*931Street in San Francisco, about two blocks from the Broad-moor Hotel, where her husband worked as a room boy. Defendant had a half hour from his work, and daily came to Christine’s for lunch at 12 noon. She always had his place set up at the end of the counter, and had a meal ticket there for him. He would remain there after he finished eating, helping with the dishes and other things. Defendant came to Christine’s for lunch on April 3d. In October, witness had taken Johanna with her and three of the latter’s relatives to the Broadmoor Hotel to get the ear keys from defendant. They, including Johanna, went in the back way to the hotel, as Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
179 P.2d 102, 78 Cal. App. 2d 926, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hidalgo-calctapp-1947.