People v. La Rocca

68 Cal. App. 2d 652
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1945
DocketCrim. 3849
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 Cal. App. 2d 652 (People v. La Rocca) 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. La Rocca, 68 Cal. App. 2d 652 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

DESMOND, P. J.

The defendant in this case was convicted in a jury-waived trial of grand theft from the person, a felony. He appeals from the judgment and also from the order of the court denying his motion for new trial. He contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the judgment. A survey of the record does not sustain his contention. This record consists of the transcript of testimony taken at the preliminary hearing in this case, which it was stipulated the court might read, and also a transcript of additional testimony taken in the superior court.

One Marksbury testified that on August 28, 1943, at about 6:15 p. m., he boarded a crowded streetcar headed north on Main Street, at the corner of Fifth Street, in the city of Los Angeles; that he had upon his person a wallet or billfold containing a number of bills. Almost immediately after boarding the car he was jostled from behind and he missed his wallet from the left rear pocket of his trousers. Noticing the defendant just stepping off the car, he followed in a hurry, and as he reached the ground called to the defendant, saying he wished to speak to him. The defendant, however, ignored the call and started to run in a southerly direction. Marks-bury pursued him and they ran diagonally across the street to the west sidewalk and south upon the sidewalk and then through a parking lot where the defendant disappeared from view. As they were racing across Main Street, two officers in a police car were traveling south upon that thoroughfare, immediately behind the two men, and when they arrived at the parking lot, parked their ear and began a search for the defendant. He was found in a rest room at the rear of a restaurant at 549 South Main Street, arrested and taken to jail. Upon being searched he was found to have currency in three different pockets of his trousers: in the left hand pocket he had bills totaling the sum of $200; in the watch pocket, bills totaling $37; in the right hand trouser pocket, two crumpled dollar bills.

Marksbury, at the preliminary hearing in this case, testified that his wallet at the time his pocket was picked contained bills aggregating $37. The record reads as follows:

“Q. At the time that you claim you had $39.00 in that bill *654 fold, what were the denominations of the money? ... A. I am not exactly certain. I do know there was $37.00 not $39.00. Q. You told the police officers you had five five’s didn’t you? A. I told the police officers I had some tens and fives. . . . Q. Isn’t it true you told the police officers you had five five dollar bills? A. It is not. Q. How many tens did you tell them you thought you had? A. I told them I thought I had three tens. Q. And one five ? A. And one five. Q. And the rest was in one dollar bills? A. Yes, ma’am.”

Officer Tyndall, who searched the defendant, testified as follows:

“Q. The denomination you found on the defendant as to the $37.00 in one pocket, was a twenty and a ten, wasn’t it, and then the rest were in one dollar bills ? A. It was $37.00 in one pocket and two one dollars separate. Q. But that denomination was a twenty dollar bill and a ten dollar bill and the rest in ones, wasn’t it? A. I wouldn’t swear to it. Q. Well, do you recall what the denomination was ? A. No, I wouldn’t want to say.”

The other officer, Mr. Swan, testifying in the superior court, stated that the money found upon the defendant was held for evidence, one package containing $200 in bills and the other $39, consisting of one $20 bill, a $10 bill and nine $1.00 bills. He testified that Marksbury told him that the $37 in his wallet consisted of three $10 bills, one $5.00 bill and two $1.00 bills. The officer stated: “At the time I talked to Mr. Marksbury I didn’t know the denominations of the money that was booked in the property clerk’s office so then I cheeked on that and found that there was $39.00 over there, consisting of one twenty dollar bill, a ten dollar bill and nine one dollar bills. ... I asked him [Marksbury] again if he was sure what the denominations of the money was that was in the billfold. He said he absolutely knew exactly what the denominations were because he had been to the Thrifty store and made some purchases and when he got his money back he put his money in his billfold and he knew exactly and he was positive that he had three ten dollar bills, a five dollar bill and two one dollar bills.”

At the trial in the superior court, Mr. Marksbury was asked: “What is your recollection as to how it was formed, that is, in what size of bills? A. Well, as near as I can recollect, the currency was the same as Mr. Swan stated it was, three ten dollar bills, a five dollar bill and two one dollar biUs. *655 Now it could have been other money, could have been other denominations.”

In this statement Marksbury was mistaken for, as we have seen, Mr. Swan did not state that the currency was in three $10 bills, a $5.00 bill and two $1.00 bills, he merely quoted Marksbury as having made that statement and testified that upon his own examination of the package containing currency, he found one $20 bill, a $10 bill and nine $1.00 bills.

It is apparent from this review of the testimony concerning the denomination of various bills that the matter was somewhat confusing, but it is to be noted that in his very first answer on this subject at the preliminary hearing Marks-bury stated that “I am not exactly certain” of the denominations, and in the last inquiry, which took place in the superior court, while repeating his original impression as to the denominations, completed his statement by saying, “Now it could have been other money, it could have been other denominations.”

The trial court’s view on this subject appears from his comment, The only thing which is stressed here particularly is the denominations of money, which, so far as I can determine, the victim has never been categorically certain of—he thinks that it was a certain sum, which apparently varies from that that [which ?] was found; he never did vary from the fact that he had $37 and he didn’t have $39.”

The defendant did not testify at the preliminary hearing, but took the stand in the superior court. He stated that on August 28th he had $200 in a secret pocket, $37 in his right hand watch pocket and $2.00 and some change. He denied that he- took Marksbury’s billfold or any money from him. He admitted that he had served time in the state penitentiary for grand theft from the person and also a term for grand larceny. He stated that he was getting on the streetcar at Fifth and Main Streets and being asked, “what was your purpose in getting off the street car immediately this incident happened?” stated that he saw somebody taking Marksbury’s poeketbook and “I figured if the man turned around and accused me I would have a hard time convincing him I didn’t take it.” He admitted that he told Officer Tyndall that the reason he got off the streetcar was because he thought he was being pursued by a “bunch of pachuchos.” He further testified that he told this story to Tyndall because he did not want *656 to expose his record and for the same reason denied that he had suffered a previous arrest. He testified he did not attempt to advise Marksbury that somebody was taking his pocketbook ; “I was scared when I seen what went on there I got off the car . .

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Related

State v. Tritt
463 P.2d 806 (Utah Supreme Court, 1970)
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Bluebook (online)
68 Cal. App. 2d 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-la-rocca-calctapp-1945.