People v. King

225 P.2d 950, 101 Cal. App. 2d 500, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1142
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 28, 1950
DocketCrim. 4476
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 225 P.2d 950 (People v. King) 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. King, 225 P.2d 950, 101 Cal. App. 2d 500, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1142 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

WOOD (Parker), J.

Defendants were charged with crimes in six counts as follows: Count 1, the murder of Dorothy Greene; count 2, the murder of Jay Greene; count 3, attempted robbery of Dorothy and Jay Greene; counts 4, 5, and 6, robbery of three other persons. Defendant King pleaded guilty to all said charges and admitted that he was armed with a deadly weapon at the time of the commission of the offenses. Defendant Hamilton waived trial by jury. He was convicted of all said charges, and the murders and robberies were found to be of the first degree. He appeals from the judgment and the sentence. Since there were six judgments, it will .be assumed that he appeals from all of them. He makes no contention on appeal with respect to the judgments as to counts 4, 5, and 6,—the robbery counts. He contends that the evidence was not sufficient to support the judgments as to counts 1, 2, and 3,—the counts charging the murder of Dorothy and Jay Greene and the attempt to rob them.

On July 19, 1949, about 9:45 p. m., defendant King entered the grocery store and vegetable market of Dorothy and Jay Greene at 11119 Burbank Boulevard, North Hollywood. A clerk in that store testified that at said time he heard a person say, “Don’t do it. I will give it to you”; then the clerk turned around and saw defendant King, with an automatic gun in his hand, standing by Mrs. Greene; King reached over the counter toward the cash register; Mrs. Greene bent down, and then he (clerk) heard a shot; King started to run from the store; then Mr. Greene came from the front of the store, and the clerk heard shots and saw Mr. Greene fall; King went “straight out front,”

*502 A customer, who was in the store at that time, testified that he saw Kfng walking back and forth along the counter with a small automatic gun in his hand; Mrs. Greene said, “Don’t do it. I will give it to you”; then she walked toward the cash register and said, “There it is, take it”; King said, “I said give it to me”; Mrs. Greene said, “All right, I will give it to you”; as she reached down under the counter, where she kept cash in a metal box, King shot her, and she never came up; then King shot Mr. Greene who was standing with his hands up; and King then left the store.

Mr. and Mrs. Greene died immediately after they were shot by King.

Mr. Smith testified that in the evening of said July 19th he was standing in front of his home at 11145 Burbank Boulevard waiting for his wife who had gone to a nearby ice cream place; while he was standing there he saw two men approach said market and stand ón the sidewalk in front of the vegetable rack and look toward the inside of the market; there was a slight difference in their height; that one of the men was King; when Mrs. Smith returned, he and she walked up the driveway at their home and as he was entering the back door he heard a series of shots; and he heard the shots about three minutes after he first noticed the two men.

Mrs. Atwood testified that she lived across the street from the market; on said July 19th, about 9:30 p. m., while she was in her house, she heard someone in that vicinity say, “I am going to let you have”; she went upon the front porch and then heard about five shots; after the shots she saw Mr. Greene fall and saw two fellows running toward a car at the side of the grocery store; one of the men was a little taller than the other one; and the defendants are similar in appearance to the two men who ran when Mr. Greene fell.

Mr. Harner testified that on and prior to July 19th King had some things stored in the garage at his (witness’) home'; that on July 20, 1949, about 11 a. m., he saw King and defendant Hamilton at his home and at that time King went into the house and Hamilton was in King’s automobile.

Officer Bouey testified that on July 20,1949, he and another officer were patrolling Griffith Park in a police radio car, and they stopped to investigate a parked automobile; he (witness) looked up on a hill and saw defendants standing in a group of trees; immediately after he saw them they (defendants) ran in different directions; then he and the officer who was with him drove up to the water tank and waited; King came *503 toward them and they asked him where his friend was; King called Hamilton and then Hamilton came np; the defendants were taken to the parked automobile; he (witness) told King that he resembled the radio description of the person who had held up the grocery store in the valley the night before; King said he was not the one; he (witness) asked King if he had a police record, and King replied that he had a record.

Officer Stoner testified that on July 21st he and two other officers and King went to the garage at the home of Mr. Harner; King directed the officers to a canvas sack in which there were a .25 automatic gun, a .38 revolver, a box of .25 shells and some .38 shells; a loaded clip was in the .25 automatic ; on July 22nd, about 10:30 a. m., King and five officers went to Griffith Park, and after searching among the trees they found a bottle of gun oil and a clip for a .25 automatic; about 1 p. m. of said day the officers, King and Hamilton, went to the same location in the park, where the gun oil and clip had been found, and King dug up a gun barrel.

Officer TJhde, a ballistics expert, testified that he fitted the gun barrel, which was found in the park, to the .25 automatic gun, which was found in the garage, and he fired test shots from that barrel; he compared the slugs which were taken from the bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Greene with the slugs used in the test shots and found that the slugs from the bodies were fired from that gun barrel; and he examined some empty shells, which were found at the scene of the murders, and found that this gun was used in firing them.

Officer Stoner testified further that on July 22nd he asked Hamilton, in the presence of other officers, what he had done on July 19th; he replied as follows: That he had been with King during the day and at 6:30 p. m. he had called his wife and made arrangements to meet her at the motorcycle races at Carrell’s speedway; King had dropped him off on Western Avenue; he took the bus on Western Avenue, and walked from Western to the speedway; he was unable to locate his wife during the races; he left during the last race, hitch-hiked home and was in bed when his wife arrived home at 11:30 p. m. He testified further that on July 23rd Hamilton said that, in going to the motorcycle races, he boarded the Western Avenue bus at Wilshire Boulevard; the main entrance to the speedway was on the east side and the pits were off the north end of the track. He testified that he then told Hamilton that the main entrance to the speedway was on the west side, and that the pits were in the center of the track.

*504 The chief supervisor of the Los Angeles Transit Lines testified that in July, 1949, that company operated a bus south on Western Avenue to Imperial Highway (114th Street), but during that month no bus of that company, or of any ■company, ran south of Imperial Highway on Western Avenue.

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Bluebook (online)
225 P.2d 950, 101 Cal. App. 2d 500, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-king-calctapp-1950.