People v. Lee

249 Cal. App. 2d 234, 57 Cal. Rptr. 281, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 2218
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 1967
DocketCrim. 11343
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 249 Cal. App. 2d 234 (People v. Lee) 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. Lee, 249 Cal. App. 2d 234, 57 Cal. Rptr. 281, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 2218 (Cal. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

*237 LILLIE, J.

Defendant was charged in nine counts— armed robbery (count I), kidnaping while armed for the purpose of robbery (counts II, III) ; with Bernard Jackson, Shirley Jackson and Jo Ann McCleary, murder (count IV) and armed robbery (count V) ; with Bernard Jackson, grand theft auto (count VI), armed robbery (count VII), kidnaping for purposes of robbery (count VIII) and assault with a deadly weapon (count IX) ; and with a prior (1962) felony conviction (robbery), which he admitted. The trial proceeded to a jury. After presentation of substantially all of the People’s evidence, defendant withdrew his plea of not guilty to counts I, IV and VII and in its place entered his plea of guilty to Count I (first degree robbery, Stringfield), count IV (murder, Guercio) and count VII (first degree robbery, Docherty). He was sentenced to the state prison for life on count IV and for the term prescribed by law on counts I and VII, the sentences to run concurrently; the remaining counts were dismissed. Defendant appeals from the judgment.

While the conviction rests upon defendant’s pleas of guilty, a brief résumé of the evidence is hereinafter set up to establish the background for the change of plea.

Counts I, II and III (Stringfield and Wilson).

Around 1:25 a.m. on December 14, 1964, Stringfield and Wilson, two clerks, were alone in Webb’s Liquor Store; Stringfield was behind the counter. Defendant, who was in the store, picked up two magazines, a bottle of wine and another item, and placed them on the counter. Stringfield rang up the sale and asked defendant for the money; defendant pulled a gun (resembling Exhibit 1) ordering Wilson from the front door and warning Stringfield not to push any alarm button. Then defendant told Stringfield to empty the cash register drawers in a bag. After Stringfield did so, defendant said, ‘1 want the rest of the money from the back, ’ ’ and forced the two men to walk 10 feet to the rear of the store. He told Stringfield to lie on the floor and Wilson to transfer the money from the unlocked safe to the bag, then ordered the two men into the restroom. After slamming the door, defendant left. Defendant was identified by Wilson and Stringfield as the man who robbed them.

Counts IVand V (Jack Guercio).

Officers Poster, Lewis and Conner in civilian clothes, were driving in an unmarked police ear north bound on Broadway *238 where they came upon Jo Ann McCleary, talking to a man in a vehicle, and Shirley Jackson. Shirley walked over to the officers who said they were looking for some fun; Shirley said, “We can have a party if you will follow me to my place, but it is going to cost you.” They followed the girls, observing defendant and Bernard Jackson standing nearby apparently drunk. Shirley said she had a “trick pad” on the block, but it appeared to be a deserted house and when they entered defendant and Jackson followed. The officers told them it was a private party and asked them to leave but they refused to do so. The girls insisted on knowing how much money the officers had; after telling them that they had between $25 and $30 they identified themselves and arrested the two women. As they were walking out, defendant and Jackson, who no longer appeared to be intoxicated, attempted to interfere and take the girls from the officers; after some scuffling and argument all four were booked.

Jack Guercio, a sailor, was home on leave; he carried in his wallet an Armed Forces identification card, an Armed Forces Geneva Convention identification card and a driver’s license. On January 16, 1965, around 5 :30 p.m., he left his house for a wedding and a reception at Wilshire and 21st Street; he left the wedding shortly before 10 p.m. That evening there was a party at the home of Glen Coon on 16th Street. Shortly after 10 p.m. the guests heard what sounded like a shot; Thomas Revels looked out of the window and saw a body on the lawn next door; it was the body of Jack Guercio. He had been shot in the brain. The wedding invitation was in Guercio’s right hand; the top two buttons from his suit coat were missing—one was on the grass near the body, the other near the body; half of his Armed Forces identification card was in front of 807 5th Avenue; his driver’s license, torn into pieces, was also in the alley, as were his liberty card and pieces of other papers. Bernard Jackson lived at 814 5th Avenue, Shirley Jackson and Jo Ann McCleary lived at 812 5th Avenue. Later Jack Guercio died in the hospital.

After defendant’s arrest and on February 5, he talked with one Galardi, a fellow prisoner and trusty in the county jail. Defendant told him that he killed Guercio but that it had been accidental and unintentional; he asked Gilardi to take a message to his girl friend Frances Lee; he also said that he was not going to “cop out” and that he didn’t think the officers could prove what he had done, and admitted to Galardi that he had held up a liquor store on December 14, taken a thousand *239 dollars and had a nice Christmas. Another inmate, Vargas, was in the same cell block as defendant; the two were discussing the murder (Guereio) which defendant claimed the police were trying “to hang” on him; Vargas asked, “Well, did you do it,” and defendant replied, “Yes, but it was accidental.” Later defendant referred to Jackson as “my crime partner.”

Counts VII, VIII and IX (Auto Theft and Docherty) .

During January 1965, Alfa Auto Rentals owned a Volkswagen, license No. MBS 761; on January 17 it was not rented to defendant, Jackson or anyone else. On January 17 Docherty was a ticket taker at the Studio Drive-In. Around 9 p.m. Jackson and defendant drove up in a green Volkswagen (license No. MES 761); Jackson walked toward the box office displaying a gun, saying to Docherty, “Let’s go, this is a holdup.” Then defendant ordered Docherty, Towers, the assistant manager, and the cashier into the box office. Following them in, Jackson took $81 and warned the three not to move. Meanwhile, defendant made a U-turn in the Volkswagen, pointing it away from the theater; as Jackson started to leave, the police came. Jackson ran, still holding, the revolver, toward the Volkswagen, then threw the money and the gun away. Moments after defendant and Jackson were arrested, the gun was found 10 feet from the Volkswagen. There is a good possibility that the gun could have fired the bullet found in Guereio’s head.

The only issue raised by appellant is that he was denied “effective assistance of counsel” as guaranteed by the federal and state Constitutions. He claims that prior to and during the trial he was not and could not be represented adequately by appointed counsel who from the outset wanted him to plead guilty; that he repeatedly requested that other counsel be appointed; that his appointed counsel finally coerced him into pleading guilty, later admitting that he would not have advised him to do so had he been fully informed; and that in pleading guilty he sacrificed various “appellate issues with reversible potentiality,” i.e., the admissibility of his confession to his two cell mates (counts IV, V), identification (counts I, II, III), and his lack of complicity in the theater robbery (counts VII, VIII, IX)—he was present in the automobile “but that is all.”

On arraignment (March 10, 1965) John Loucks, private counsel, was appointed to represent defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 Cal. App. 2d 234, 57 Cal. Rptr. 281, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 2218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lee-calctapp-1967.