People v. Kane

166 P.2d 285, 27 Cal. 2d 693, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 347
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1946
DocketCrim. 4637
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 166 P.2d 285 (People v. Kane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Kane, 166 P.2d 285, 27 Cal. 2d 693, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 347 (Cal. 1946).

Opinion

SCHAUER, J.

Defendant took from Marie H. Echols approximately $2,700 which belonged to her employer and which she was carrying to the bank. At the time he committed the offense defendant was armed with a .38 caliber revolver. A jury found him guilty of robbery of the first degree. From the judgment of conviction entered upon this verdict and from an order denying his motion for new trial, defendant appeals. According to defendant’s testimony Miss Echols and he agreed to simulate a robbery and each was to receive a share of the proceeds. The trial court refused certain instructions, requested by defendant, as to the specific application of the doctrine of reasonable doubt to the facts as testified to by defendant and corroborated to some extent by prosecution witnesses. In the circumstances shown, hereinafter related in more detail, we cannot say that the failure to instruct the jury as requested did not prejudice defendant.

Miss Echols testified as follows: She was assistant manager of Eaton’s Restaurant. For “quite some time . . . getting into months” before the commission of the offense she saw defendant, who was employed by a linen supply company, nearly every day when he delivered linen to the restaurant. She and defendant chatted when he came in the restaurant. They called each other by their first names; Miss Echols did not know defendant’s last name. About three or four weeks before the commission of the offense the defendant left the employ of the linen supply company and Miss Echols did not see him until October 25, 1943. On that day, at about 1 o’clock p. m., as was her custom, she walked toward the bank, carrying about $2,700 in a money bag. When she was about one and one-half blocks from the restaurant the defendant approached her. Although he wore *695 dark glasses and two strips of adhesive tape across his nose, she recognized him at once. “He reached for the [money] bag and said, ‘I will take this.’ ... I knew him so I just said, ‘Don’t be foolish.’ ... He pulled a gun and said, ‘I am not fooling. This is loaded. ... I will shoot you.’ ... I said, ‘Don’t be foolish. I know you.’ With that he struck me over the head with the gun and knocked me down and took the money and left. ... He got in the car and drove away. . . . The turtleback was up. . . . [T]he head injury was not serious; it was the ligaments in my back; when I was knocked to the sidewalk they were torn.”

Ralph Spellman, a friend of defendant, testified that at about 6 o’clock in the evening of October 25, 1943, defendant gave him a loaded .38 revolver and asked Spellman to “keep the gun for him, he didn’t want to have it in his car.” The gun was identified by Miss Echols and defendant as the one with which defendant struck her.

At about 1:30 o’clock in the afternoon of October 25, 1943, (i. e., one-half hour after the crime was committed) police went to defendant’s apartment. No one was there. In a dressing table they found $2,334 in currency. The police waited for defendant. At about 5:30 p. m. he came to his apartment. Officer Brennan testified that defendant “seemed very much surprised to find someone in his apartment and he says, ‘Well, what is the matter?’ And I answered, ‘Why, you know what is the matter. . . . We are here on that holdup this afternoon that you pulled.’ ” Defendant denied any knowledge of and connection with the crime. He was searched and $450 was found in his pocket. At about 6:30 p. m. defendant’s half brother, who lived with him, arrived. Defendant continued to deny that he had stolen any money until the officers told him that they had found about $2,300 in his apartment. He then admitted that he “pulled the holdup.” Defendant went with the officers to Mr. Spellman’s home and Spellman gave the officers the gun that had been left with him.

Defendant was taken to the police station. There he told the officers, “I needed money bad and I knew that they had quite a lot of money on week-ends from Eaton’s. ... I went down there the day before, or two days before . . . and I watched the girl take the money to the bank and I knew about what time she went by, and I went down there on the 25th, today, . . . and I waited until I saw her come out and start to the bank with the money. ... I walked up to her and I *696 stuck the gun on her and I told her to give me the money. . . . She started to wrestle over the bag of money, so ... I hit her with the gun. . . . The blow knocked her down to the pavement and I jerked the money bag away from her and ran to my car and got in the car and drove away. ... I had the turtleback up on my ear so nobody could read the license. ... I brought the money back to the apartment. ... I took some tens out and put in my pocket and hid the rest of the money in the apartment. ... I imagine it was kind of foolish to do after I see it all now. ... I guess I must have been nuts.” And several times, before and after they went to the police station, defendant asked the officers, “How did you find it out ? ’ ’

Officer Wiseman, who was with Officer Brennan at the time of the arrest, was also a witness. He told the jury that, in reply to his question (in a conversation at the Wilshire Station Detective Bureau) “whether he did not think it was foolish to hold up someone who knew him,” defendant said, “ ‘Well, I didn’t think she would recognize me.’ And I asked him if that was why he had put dark glasses on and the adhesive tape on his nose, and he said ‘Yes.’ ”

Defendant’s half brother, who lived with defendant, testified that when he came home on the evening of the 25th and learned of the crime, he asked defendant, “Why did you do it, George ? If you needed money I had some money and I would have given it to you,” and defendant answered, “Well, I didn’t want to ask you for it.”

Defendant Kane testified that he had known Miss Echols for about two and one-half years while he was a route man for the linen supply company. He talked with her “at least fifteen or twenty minutes every morning” when he delivered linen to the restaurant. He knew that she took money to the bank and three or four months before the crime “the conversation got to that [sic] being some way we could make this easy money.” After the making of “easy money” was first mentioned, “it seems there had not been one single day we did not plan.” Miss Echols “told me the money was insured and if we could get away with it we could split. ’ ’ They talked over the matter in a small office in the restaurant, within fifteen feet of where the cooks and dishwashers were working, but they could not be overheard. Gradually they developed a plan. Defendant left the linen supply company and got a night job. Defendant “would call her on the phone *697 at Eaton’s . . . usually on Monday morning” to ascertain the amount of the week-end receipts.

On the morning of October 25 (Monday) he telephoned. She said, “This is a nice week-end.” He replied, “O. K. I will meet you at Normandie and Wilshire.” They had agreed to “make it look like a real robbery. ... I had that adhesive tape on my eyes, and I had glasses so if anybody did see me they wouldn’t recognize me, and I was willing to take all the blame. ... I knew the exact time she was coming as we arranged; at one o’clock she came walking down the street and I stepped out and said, ‘We will make it look like a real robbery so ...

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Bluebook (online)
166 P.2d 285, 27 Cal. 2d 693, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kane-cal-1946.