People v. Hill

173 P.2d 26, 76 Cal. App. 2d 330, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 717
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 3, 1946
DocketCrim. 4015
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 173 P.2d 26 (People v. Hill) 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. Hill, 173 P.2d 26, 76 Cal. App. 2d 330, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 717 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

The district attorney filed an information in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County wherein the defendant was charged with the commission of five (5) felonies as follows:

Count 1: Kidnapping;
Counts 2 and 5: Rape;
Counts 3 and 4: Violation of section 288a of the Penal Code.

Trial before a jury resulted in the conviction of defendant on all five counts. A motion for a new trial was denied and defendant was sentenced to state prison for the terms prescribed by law on all counts, the sentences to run concurrently.

From the judgment of conviction and the order denying motion for a new trial, defendant prosecutes this appeal.

Because the sole ground of appeal is that the court erred in refusing certain instructions offered by the defendant, we do not deem it necessary to here recite in detail the sordid circumstances which gave rise to this prosecution. The evidence pertinent to a consideration of this appeal may be thus epitomized :

*333 Between 9 and 10 o’clock on the evening of September 20, 1945, the prosecutrix, a woman divorced from her husband and the mother of two children aged 8 and 6 years, was sitting with a male companion in the latter’s parked automobile on a public scenic drive in the Palos Verdes Hills in Los Angeles County. Defendant approached the automobile on the side where the man was sitting behind the steering wheel, opened the door and shoved an object into the man’s side, whereupon the latter told the prosecutrix seated beside him to run away. She ran about half way down the hill on the asphalt road, turned up a bank to a bush behind which she secreted herself. She heard the defendant following her, and when he too turned running off the road she ran to the other side of the bush, down the bank, and across the road. The defendant continued to pursue her, calling out, “You stop or I’ll kill you.”

When the defendant was within 8 or 1,0 feet behind her, the prosecutrix stopped. Walking up to him she observed that he had a fiat, gunmetal-colored revolver in his right hand. When the prosecutrix inquired of the defendant what he wanted, he told her to “shut up”; that he was not a “cop” and that “you will find out what I want.” The defendant then turned the prosecutrix around, put the gun “behind my heart, in my back” and asked her to go back to the automobile or “I’ll plug you here.” The prosecutrix testified that she was “desperately afraid” of the defendant’s gun, and that “by the tone of his voice and the way that he was acting” the prosecutrix testified she “didn’t doubt for one instant” that he would shoot her if she failed to obey him.

With, the defendant behind her, holding her left arm, and with the gun pressed against her back, the prosecutrix, in obedience to the defendant’s command, and with him “pushing and shoving” her, proceeded back to her companion’s automobile.

When the defendant and prosecutrix arrived at her companion’s automobile he was not in sight and did not respond to calls for him uttered by the prosecutrix. There is testimony that the defendant was very nervous and highly excited, that he insisted to the prosecutrix that if she did not get her male companion back to the ear he would shoot her then and there. At this time, defendant was still holding his gun to her back. After the prosecutrix, at the defendant’s command, made fur *334 ther outcries for her companion, the latter came from behind the car with his hands up.

Defendant told him that he did not want money but wanted the woman and that he would kill her companion if the latter came any closer. Defendant threatened “very often” to kill the companion of the prosecutrix and finally instructed him to stay at the ear for 50 minutes and to then come to a spot at the end of the road where he would find his automobile keys.

The defendant again emphasized that if the man did not remain at the automobile he, the defendant, would kill the prosecutrix. During all of his talking, the defendant continued to keep his gun pressed to the prosecutrix’s back, and, according to her testimony, she was at all times in fear and apprehension that defendant would shoot her companion if she and the defendant stayed at the automobile. She thereupon said to the defendant, “If it is me you want, let’s go.”

After proceeding some 50 feet, the defendant turned the prosecutrix off the road, took her across a field and up a hill. He inquired of her as to whether she was married to her companion, to which she replied in the negative, and told the defendant her companion was her boss.

At the top of the hill, about a block from the aforesaid automobile, the defendant commanded the prosecutrix to get in the front seat of another automobile and drove off with her, circling around the hills for “a long time.” All of this time, the prosecutrix testified, she was trying to talk to the defendant but that the latter was “very brutal in his voice” telling her that he did not intend to bring her back as she would “squeal” on him and that, therefore, he would kill her where they were. According to the testimony of the prosecutrix, her one thought was to convince the defendant that she would not “tell on him” and she so stated to him. She thereupon suggested that she and the defendant go to a beer parlor or to his apartment, which invitation the defendant refused. She then told the defendant of her children. During all of this time, according to her testimony, the prosecutrix was frightened “practically out of her wits.” While in the automobile the defendant kept his gun in the front of his unbuttoned shirt. He drove around the hills for about 30 minutes, never on the highway, and then drove the car off into and across a large Deealite pit hewn from the side of a hill, and to a lonely spot overgrown with weeds with room for just one automobile going one way. There were no houses or people around nor were any house lights to be seen. At this point the defen *335 dant said, “Here is where I get some of that loving.” At defendant's command, made while he had a gun in his hand, the prosecutrix practically disrobed. She testified she did so because of her fear of the defendant and the thought that he would kill her if she refused. Thereupon, defendant consummated the acts forming the basis of counts 2, 3, 4 and 5. After the consummation of the aforesaid acts, defendant stated to the prosecutrix that she was “pretty nice” and that he wanted her address and telephone number. Fearful of consequences that might ensue if she refused this request, she gave the defendant the requested information as well as the name of the place where her former husband had worked and also the address of her companion. Defendant stated to the prosecutrix that he could probably get her a better job than she had. He then drove her past her house and, at about 11 o 'clock, to within half a block of her sister’s house.

Defendant told the prosecutrix that if she reported him to the police, he would kill her or disfigure her by throwing acid upon her when he got out of prison. He further told her that he would be back in four or five nights and that he intended to keep in touch with her.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P.2d 26, 76 Cal. App. 2d 330, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hill-calctapp-1946.