People v. Houser

193 P.2d 937, 85 Cal. App. 2d 686, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 971
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 26, 1948
DocketCrim. 589
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 193 P.2d 937 (People v. Houser) 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. Houser, 193 P.2d 937, 85 Cal. App. 2d 686, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 971 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

Defendant was charged in an information with three counts of felony, committed on July 4, 1947: Count One, with rape by force; Count Two, statutory rape; and Count Three, with lewd and lascivious conduct upon the body of one Patsy Ann Jeter, 8 years of age. On motion of the People, the first and second counts were dismissed. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict of guilty on the third count. A motion for new trial was denied. The appeal followed.

Patsy Ann was in the third grade at school. She said she knew what it was to tell a lie and that the answers to the questions about to be propounded would be the truth. On the evening of July 4, 1947, she was left in her mother’s parked car with her little sister, aged 3, on a street in front of a bank near the “Lindsay Club.” The mother went into this club to ask her husband, who was playing cards in the back room, to come home with her. During this waiting period she returned several times to see if the children were all right. She last saw Patsy about 10:30 p. m. Around 11 p. m. a man approached the car and asked if Patsy would “like a pound box of candy.” She got out of the car and walked down the street with the man. She said he told her the box of candy was in a near-by orange grove. She went with him. She was barefooted and after they entered the grove for some little *689 distance Patsy’s panties and dress were removed, her body was violated and acts denounced by sections 288a, 261, 287 and 288 of the Penal Code were committed upon her. The man left her in the orchard. She then ran back to the place where the car had been parked. Her parents drove to their home a short distance away, looking for her. On their return they found her near the place where the car had been parked with nothing on except her panties. She immediately told the officers of her experience and described the claimed culprit: “He was bare headed ... his hair was brownish black, his nose was pointed, his shirt was khaki colored—his pants were kinda bluish and he wore a belt. He had his sleeves rolled up. His clothes looked clean and he smelled like whiskey.”

The child was taken immediately to a doctor and examined. According to his report there was substantial evidence of the commission of the acts described.

Defendant makes no contention in this regard, but relies principally on the question of identification and lack of evidence connecting him with the commission of the offense.

Patsy showed the officers where she went with the man into the orchard. Her bare feet tracks were reflected in the dirt as well as the shoe prints of the culprit. A plaster of Paris cast was made of one of the most prominent of the shoe prints.

The next morning the officers took two suspects to Patsy’s home for possible identification and they were rejected by her. Defendant was then picked up and taken to her home and identified by her. As to this identification she testified in the justice’s court, where defendant was having the preliminary hearing without the aid of counsel: “Q. And when you saw this man you think that (he) did it? A. Yes. ... Q. And when you think, are you sure this is the man who did it ? A. Yes. Q. You are really sure, you are not saying because I suggested, I want you to tell the court the truth, was he, he was the man you thought at that time that done it? A. Yes . . . Q. And as you look at this man now, do you think he is the man who did that to you in the grove ? A. Yes. . . . He looks like him. . . . He had a moustache. ’ ’ She later testified at the preliminary hearing in response to a question by the district attorney as to whether “the man who did this, to you was in the court?” She replied: “I don't know.” The defendant was then pointed out to her and she was asked: “Is this the man,” and she said: “I don’t know.” She testified at the trial that she was not sure at the preliminary but she was sure now and she pointed out the defendant from a group of *690 men and described the clothes the defendant was wearing on that night as “kind of brown looking pants with a cream-colored shirt”; that she “did not know if he had a moustache ... It looked dark under his nose”; “he didn’t hardly have a moustache ... he had kind of a few hairs under his nose.” She was then shown a shirt and pair of trousers which defendant claimed and other witnesses testified he was wearing that night. She described the shirt as a “blue-white color to her” and the trousers were “green looking.” She then stated that she smelled whiskey on the man’s breath after she had “walked a ways with him” toward the orchard; that while accomplishing the act the man’s trousers were down and he was kneeling on the ground; that thereafter he took her dress and wiped himself with it. Knee prints were discernible to the officers on July 8th, 1947, and they found her dress buried in the dirt near-by, with evidence of human excreta and blood stains upon it.

The officers asked defendant as to his whereabouts the night of July 4th. He stated that he had been drinking quite heavily that day but was not intoxicated; that that evening he had made the rounds of the local bars; that he was in the Lindsay . Club and saw men playing poker at one of the tables; that a short time before 11 p. m. he left the club by the rear entrance and went home. He specifically described to them, block by block, and street by street, the exact rqute he said he took in going home at that time. The officers then took him to his near-by home where he lived with his invalid father and 8-year-old sister. They asked to see the clothes he wore the night before. He had washed them early that morning and they were hanging on the line with other family clothes that he had also washed. He was asked to see the shoes he had worn and he pointed them out to the officers. These shoes had been cleaned and shined that morning. The shoes, a blue sport shirt and a pair of blue-colored pants were taken and are exhibits in the case. The officers repaired to the spot in the orange grove and measured the footprints for size and observed identifying marks between the shoe and the footprints in the dirt. The plaster of Paris cast, the shoes, several samples of soil in the orchard and Patsy’s dress were forwarded to the State Bureau of Identification for examination, photographing and for a comparison.

Mr. Bradford of that department qualified himself as an expert and testified that it was impossible to get the blood grouping from the dress because it was contaminated with dirt *691 and fecal material; that as to People’s Exhibit 6, the plaster of Paris cast of the shoe print, and as to the shoe, he had made and examined photographs of both of these exhibits (Photo Exhibit 7) and he proceeded to describe the points of similarity between them from the photographs. The first point was the similarity in the wear of the heel; second, a trade-mark which was on the rubber heel of the shoe “| BEGENT |” which also appeared in the cast of the footprint; third, the characteristic thickness of the shoe as to the outside curve of the shoe sole and also the inside curve of the heel; fourth, as to the curvature of the heel and a circle on the heel below the trade-mark about the size of a 25-cent piece, which circle plainly showed in the plaster of Paris cast. Other similarities were the amount of heel wear on that circle, in addition to the brad marks, and the size of the heel, which comparison he said was a perfect fit.

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Bluebook (online)
193 P.2d 937, 85 Cal. App. 2d 686, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-houser-calctapp-1948.