People v. Malone

4 P.2d 287, 117 Cal. App. 629, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 498
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 22, 1931
DocketDocket No. 107.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 4 P.2d 287 (People v. Malone) 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. Malone, 4 P.2d 287, 117 Cal. App. 629, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 498 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

The defendants were charged with the crime of burglary and tried by a jury. This appeal is from the judgment following a verdict of guilty, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial.

It is admitted that the appellants entered the store of R. J. Wooten in the city of Bakersfield between 11 and 12 o’clock on the night of April 13, 1930, and took therefrom a safe, a number of tires and various other articles of merchandise. The only defense offered at the trial or raised on appeal is that appellants were entrapped into committing the offense by an officer of the law. It appears that for about a month prior to April 13, 1930, one H. 0. Stone had been in the employ of the police department of the city of Bakersfield as a special investigator, and that it was his duty to frequent pool-halls and similar places and pick up information about crimes that were contemplated, or that had been committed. It also appears that Stone had conversations with appellants on the afternoon of April 13th, and that the three went to the rear of the Wooten tire shop and looked at the premises. Stone reported to his superior officer that the Wooten place would probably be entered about 11 o’clock that night. Stone owned a Ford truck and it appears that on April 12'th, the appellants had asked permission to borrow this truck for use during evenings and nights, which permission was given. During the evening of April 13th the appellants came and got the truck. A number of police officers secreted themselves near the rear of the Wooten store and around 11 o’clock that night the appellants came in the Ford truck, and backed the same up to the rear door of the store. They cut the screen from a window, broke the glass, entered through the window, opened the rear door, and removed and loaded on the truck an iron safe, some tires and various other articles. During all this time Brown had with him a *632 44-caliber revolver, which was kept cocked. As the appellants started to drive away, the officers appeared and called to them to stop. Instead of stopping, they drove away as rapidly as possible and the officers opened fire. Both of the appellants were injured and the truck stopped a short distance away, due to a flat tire. Both of the appellants got out and ran and shortly thereafter Brown was arrested on the street and Malone was arrested at the home of Stone, where Stone was engaged in dressing his wounds.

The first point raised is that the evidence clearly establishes that the appellants were entrapped and that the appellants were induced to commit the crime in question by the police employee Stone. This claim is based entirely on the testimony of the two appellants, to the effect that on the afternoon of the 13th, Stone met them on the street and asked them if they wanted a job; that he told them he wanted them to haul a small safe, some tires and some other things from the Wooten store to another place a few blocks away; that he told them he would pay them $20 apiece for the service; and that he took them down and showed them the place and furnished the truck. This was flatly denied by Stone, who testified that he saw the appellants on the afternoon before the robbery and they told him that they had several .places in mind, but that the Wooten place looked easy, and that they took him down and showed him the rear of the premises. He also admitted that when the appellants, on the previous day, asked permission to use his truck evenings, he thought they might use the truck for the purpose of stealing something. John S. Lamberson, a police officer, testified that he had a conversation with Malone at the hospital later on the night of the burglary, and that Malone admitted having robbed the place and said he was going to plead guilty. Nothing was then said about Stone having had anything to do with the burglary. On April 14th, the day after the crime, Malone made a statement which was taken down by a court reporter, in which he stated that no one was with him but Brown and that no one else was mixed up in the crime. He also answered as follows: “Q. When did you first plan it? A. Yesterday. Q. After you got the car? A. No, before we got the car.”

It will be observed that the testimony of the appellants is not the ordinary claim of entrapment, that is, that they were *633 induced to undertake to commit a crime. Their claim is that they thought they were being hired to do some legitimate work, that is, to haul some merchandise. And yet their own story contains some surprising things. They claim they were to receive $20 apiece for this small service. They went to do the work at 11 o ’clock at night, and when they found the door locked, they broke in. They testified that Stone had not told them just what property they were to take, that “he didn’t mention very many things at all. He told us there was material in there, that he could use it all.” So, as they testified, they just “grabbed everything”. They admitted that they knew the goods did not belong to their supposed employer. They took a six-shooter with them, which they kept cocked all the time. While this gun was fired when they were attempting to get away, one of them testified that it went off accidentally as they were closing the truck door. They also testified that they did not hear the policemen call to them to stop, and that they had no chance to surrender.

It cannot be held that the evidence clearly established entrapment. No more appears than a conflict in the evidence and at that, the entire story as related by appellants is of such a nature that it is impossible to see how a jury could have believed them. Aside from their testimony that they were hired by Stone to haul some goods, there is no evidence that Stone planned the burglary or had any part in inducing the appellants to take part in it, except the admitted fact that Stone loaned to the appellants the truck which they used. It may be conceded that when an officer induces a person to commit a crime which he would not have done without such inducement, the law will not punish the person so lured into the crime (People v. Tomasovich, 56 Cal. App. 520 [206 Pac. 119]). But this is true only where the intent originates with the officer and wheré the defendant is induced to commit a crime which was not contemplated by him (People v. Norcross, 71 Cal. App. 2 [234 Pac. 438]). Even the furnishing of money with which to purchase liquor has been held not to constitute entrapment (People v. Rodriguez, 61 Cal. App. 69 [214 Pac. 452]; People v. Caiazza, 61 Cal. App. 505 [215 Pac. 80]). The loaning of this truck to these appellants, even if the officer knew from his conversation with appellants what *634 they intended to do with it, was not such an inducement to commit the crime as will .relieve the appellants from responsibility (People v. Lanzit, 70 Cal. App. 498 [233 Pac. 816]). The question whether the intent to commit this crime originated with the officer or with the appellants was a question of fact for the jury, and their verdict finds ample support in the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
4 P.2d 287, 117 Cal. App. 629, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-malone-calctapp-1931.