People v. Mahach

224 P. 130, 65 Cal. App. 359, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 606
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 709.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 224 P. 130 (People v. Mahach) 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. Mahach, 224 P. 130, 65 Cal. App. 359, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 606 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendants, who are Indians, and who were, by an information filed in the superior court of Humboldt County, jointly charged with, and, upon their trial, *362 found guilty by a jury of, the crime of robbery, have brought the case to this court by an appeal from the judgment of conviction. The appeal is supported by a transcript of all the proceedings in the case, including the testimony. The defendants made no motion for a new trial. The points upon which reliance is placed for a reversal of the judgment are that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict and judgment and that the court, in rulings involving questions of the admissibility of certain testimony, committed errors, the effect of which was to deny to the accused a fair and impartial trial.

The attorney-general preliminarily urges the proposition that, the defendants having failed to apply for a new trial, and, therefore, there not being here an appeal from an order refusing a new trial, the question whether the evidence supports the verdict cannot be reviewed, since, so it is contended, such question is reviewable only upon an appeal from such order. It has been held that the question whether the evidence is sufficient to support a verdict in a criminal case is reviewable on appeal from the judgment. (People v. Clayton, 33 Cal. App. 357 [165 Pac. 37]; People v. Bailey, 38 Cal. App. 521 [176 Pac. 880].) But granting that the question of the sufficiency of the evidence cannot, in a criminal case, be reviewed on an appeal from the judgment, where no motion for a new trial has been made, and there is, consequently, no appeal from an order denying a new trial, it is still true that, since the adoption into our constitution of section .4% of article VI, it is, nevertheless, essential, where the correctness of rulings upon the evidence and the charge of the court is challenged, that all the evidence shall be brought up for review with the appeal from the judgment in order to enable the reviewing court to determine whether the errors so complained of, if errors they be, would result in a miscarriage of justice in the event the judgment be sustained. (People v. Clayton, supra.) And, in passing upon the points so raised, the appellate court would, in effect, be required to pass upon the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to uphold the verdict.

The record is unusually voluminous. It embraces some twelve hundred pages of evidence, both direct and circumstantial, which, in our investigation of the case, has been carefully read and considered. The defendants testified *363 and each took the witness-stand and positively denied having any connection with the commission of the robbery or having any knowledge as to the identity of the perpetrators of the crime. They also contradicted, or attempted to explain, upon a theory consistent with their innocence, certain circumstances which, considered with other more direct proof of their guilt, were and are of an incriminatory character of more or less potent significance. Yet, with their denials and their explanations, the people presented a very strong case against them. Indeed, accepting, as it must be assumed that the jury did, the testimony of the witnesses introduced by the prosecution as verity, the case made by the people, in support of the charge stated in the information, is well-nigh, if, indeed, not entirely, conclusive of the guilt of the accused. If, therefore, the record here disclosed no errors in the rulings of the trial court admitting incompetent and irrelevant, or excluding competent and relevant testimony, or in the charge to the jury, the judgment of conviction of the accused would stand supported by an impregnable foundation. There were, however, errors made by the court below in the trial of the case, and we are now called upon to examine these assignments by the light of the evidence presented by the people (for it is not the office of this court to determine evidentiary conflicts) and to say whether, after such examination, they involve errors of so egregious a nature from a legal point of view as to compel the conclusion that a miscarriage of justice would attend' and follow an affirmance of the judgment. Much of the evidence is of multifarious eirqumstanees. Hence, a detailed statement thereof cannot be presented herein. It is conceived to be sufficient, therefore, to state the facts in a general way.

The robbery charged in the information occurred in the town of Fortuna, Humboldt County, on Wednesday, the third day of May, 1922, near the hour of 11 o’clock A. M. It appears that, on the day just mentioned, two masked men entered the Bank of Fortuna situated in said town and, holding revolvers in their hands, and after closing the front door of the bank, ordered the parties then in charge of the bank to deliver to them “your money.” The bandits not only had white handkerchiefs over their faces, but also had their foreheads and the back of their necks covered with *364 talcum powder 'and rouge. They also wore gloves. One of the bandits jumped over the counter, through the cashier’s window, and, with a revolver in one hand, proceeded to deposit all the currency in sight and other moneys which were in the vault, which, on his command, was opened by one of the officers of the bank, into a white sack a couple of feet in length. This sack the bandit took from some part of his clothing after he got behind the counter. The coin taken by the robbers was in a Federal Reserve bank sack and this sack with the coin was placed in the larger sack. While he was thus engaged, the other robber held at bay with a revolver two customers or visitors in the bank, commanding them to make no move. After securing all the money in sight or shown to them by the officers of the institution, the robber who operated back of the bank counter backed out of the door into the lobby of the hank, thence, still backing, went out of the building and carried the money in the sack to an Oldsmobile car which was parked in front of and next to the sidewalk of the bank building, and threw the sack into the front part of the car next to the driver’s seat. While this was going on the other robber held his revolver upon the people who were in the bank until the man with the sack had safely deposited it in the car, and he thereupon followed his confederate and jumped into the back part of the car. The car was then started by the man who carried the money away in the sack and proceeded at a rapid rate of speed “around the corner” of the street near which the bank was situated and proceeded in a northerly direction from Fortuna. The sum of approximately nineteen thousand dollars was taken by the robbers. Of this amount, a sum a trifle in excess of three thousand dollars was in gold and silver—the bulk thereof being in gold—and the balance in currency. Immediately' following the departure of the robbers in an automobile from the bank building, the parties in the bank at the time of the commission -of the crime rushed to the street and raised “a hue and cry” and so notified the people then about the streets of the robbery. The fact that the crime had been 'Committed immediately became known to substantially all the people of the town. The sheriff’s office at Eureka, a distance of thirty or thirty-five miles from Fortuna, was at once apprised of the robbery by telephone, *365

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Carson v. Facilities Development Co.
686 P.2d 656 (California Supreme Court, 1984)
People v. Gambos
5 Cal. App. 3d 187 (California Court of Appeal, 1970)
People v. Wong
245 Cal. App. 2d 844 (California Court of Appeal, 1966)
People v. Richards
168 P.2d 435 (California Court of Appeal, 1946)
Espy v. State
92 P.2d 549 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1939)
State v. McDonald
119 S.W.2d 286 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1938)
People v. Murphy
62 P.2d 592 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)
People v. Garcia
256 P. 876 (California Court of Appeal, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 P. 130, 65 Cal. App. 359, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mahach-calctapp-1924.