People v. Koenig

173 P.2d 1, 29 Cal. 2d 87, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 279
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1946
DocketCrim. 4714
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 173 P.2d 1 (People v. Koenig) 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. Koenig, 173 P.2d 1, 29 Cal. 2d 87, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 279 (Cal. 1946).

Opinion

TRAYNOR, J.

Defendants William Richter, Donald Koenig and Ralph Hagenios were jointly charged with two counts óf robbery while armed with a revolver. Defendant Hagenios pleaded guilty. Appellant Richter and defendant Koenig were tried by a jury and convicted. They appealed from the judgment and from orders denying their motions for a new trial. Koenig failed to perfect his appeal, and it was dismissed.

, Shortly after midnight of May 21,1944, defendant Hagenios, armed with a .38 caliber reyolver, entered a cafe in West Los Angeles and robbed the proprietor and a customer who was cashing a pay check. According to the testimony of a witness, Hagenios escaped from the scene in a green con *89 vertible car, which was immediately driven away as he stepped into it from the right side. This witness was unable to see the driver of the car. There was no eyewitness testimony at the trial linking appellant Richter with the robbery.

Richter and Hagenios were employed by the Veterans Administration in West Los Angeles, Richter was chief cook, and Hagenios worked under his supervision. The proprietor of the restaurant had been cashing pay checks for 10 years and kept money on hand for this purpose. Two years before the robbery appellant had lived next door to this restaurant for six months.

On May 22, 1944, defendants Richter and Hagenios were arrested in a hotel room in Ocean Park, California, where they were registered under fictitious names after their return from San Francisco together on May 19th. It was not established whether appellant knew that they were so registered. At this time appellant had a home in Los Angeles with his wife, who was out of town at the time of the robbery. At the time of the arrest, the police found in the hotel room, forty-nine .38 caliber cartridges and a cartridge box that had contained fifty cartridges. At the time of the robbery, Hagenios fired one shot that lodged in the wall of the cafe.

The victim of the robbery testified that Hagenios took $1,915, including the amount of the customer’s pay check. When Hagenios and Richter were arrested they had $232 and $278, respectively, on their persons.

Police Officer Subers testified that he was one of the arresting officers and that when the cartridges were found in the hotel room, Hagenios told him that they were his, and that appellant at that time denied any knowledge of the robbery and stated that the $278 in his possession was derived from a sale of his automobile and a loan of $100, both negotiated before his trip to San Francisco, and $90 he won there on the races. Subers also testified that appellant and Hagenios were lodged in the West Los Angeles jail, where on the night of May 23d he had a conversation with the two prisoners and that during this conversation Police Officer Ward was present and that during the last part of the conversation Police Officer King was present.

Subers testified that in the course of this conversation he advised the defendants that he had a good case against them and asked if they would plead guilty. He also requested their *90 cooperation in recovering the rest of the money. At this point, according to the witness, Hagenios denied getting more than $780, which included the money in appellant’s and Hagenios’ possession, $220 that had been given to Koenig, and money that had been spent. Appellant stated that ‘ ‘ That was all they had gotten.” The witness testified that Richter also said that he had given “Koenig $120 as his share of the job” and that “they [Hagenios and Richter] had picked” up the car used in the robbery “at a drive-in place at Wilshire and Santa Monica Boulevard”; that appellant said that he drove the car and abandoned it after the robbery one block east of St. John’s Hospital in Santa Monica.

Police Officer Subers also testified to a later conversation at which Richter, Hagenios, Koenig, Officer King, and he were present. He asked defendant Koenig if he was sure that the $220 received from the other defendants was just a loan and appellant “spoke up and said, ‘I gave you $120.00 and it wasn’t a loan. ’ ”

Police Officer King testified that he did not recall the first conversation to which Subers had testified, but that he was present at the second conversation after Koenig was brought in. He stated that he asked Koenig and Hagenios to “tell us about the robbery and Hagenios spoke up and said that all three were involved in the robbery, and that Richter had driven the car . . that Richter at first denied this “and then Hagenios said, ‘You are into this as well as we are, and we are not going to take the rap for this alone; . . .’ ” At this point, according to the witness, appellant admitted that he drove the car. The rest of Officer King’s testimony so far as it related to Richter, concerned the latter’s description of the car as a green convertible and his admissions that he knowingly participated in the robbery, which the three of them had planned. The admissions as to the acquisition and disposition of the car were substantially the same as those Subers testified were made at the first conversation.

Police Officer Ward was not called to testify. Police Officer Burham testified that he received instructions on the night of May 23d to look for an automobile one block east of St. John’s Hospital, and that he and his partner went to that location and found a 1937 La Salle green convertible that was on their list of stolen cars.

' Appellant testified that the money in his possession at the time of his arrest was what remained after his San Francisco *91 trip of the money received from the sale of his car, a $100 loan, and $70 that he won in San Francisco on the races. He denied admitting guilt or making the statements attributed to him by Officers King and Subers and stated that he heard of the robbery for the first time when he was arrested.

Appellant contends that all the evidence against him was circumstantial and that the trial court failed properly to instruct the jury with regard to circumstantial evidence. Whether all the evidence was circumstantial depends on whether the testimony as to appellant’s admissions was direct or circumstantial evidence. In other jurisdictions evidence of oral confessions is direct and not circumstantial evidence. (See 40 A.L.R 571; note L.R.A. 1917D 595 and 73. U.Pa.L. Rev. 317; Underhill Criminal Evidence (4th ed., 1935) §4.) Research has failed to reveal any case holding otherwise, except Damas v. People, 62 Colo. 418 [163 P. 289, L.R.A. 1917D 591], which was expressly overruled in Mitchell v. People, 76 Colo. 346 [232 P. 685, 40 A.L.R. 566]. Section 1832 of the Code of Civil Procedure, however, defines indirect evidence as “. . . that which tends to establish the fact in dispute by proving another, and which, though true, does not of itself conclusively establish that fact, but which affords an inference or presumption of its existence. For example: a witness proves an admission of the party to the fact in dispute. This proves a fact, from which the fact in dispute is inferred.” A confession is an admission of guilt (People v. Connelly, 195 Cal. 584 [234 P. 374]), a fact in dispute.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P.2d 1, 29 Cal. 2d 87, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-koenig-cal-1946.