People v. Manchetti

175 P.2d 533, 29 Cal. 2d 452, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 312
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1946
DocketCrim. 4741
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 175 P.2d 533 (People v. Manchetti) 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. Manchetti, 175 P.2d 533, 29 Cal. 2d 452, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 312 (Cal. 1946).

Opinions

SCHAUER, J.

A jury found defendant guilty of robbery in the first degree committed while defendant was armed with a pistol. Defendant appeals from the judgment entered pursuant to the jury verdict and from an order denying his motion for a new trial. There is evidence to support the verdict, but the testimony of the prosecuting witness, victim of the asserted robbery, is, to say the least, unusual, and the evidence as to whether the crime was committed and also as to the credibility of the important witnesses is in sharp conflict. The trial was conducted in an atmosphere of bitter animosity among those witnesses who were members of the family of the prosecuting witness. In the circumstances certain errors complained of by defendant may well have influenced the verdict of the jury; certainly we cannot say that they did not have such effect. Therefore, fairness to defendant requires a new trial. (People v. Kane (1946), 27 Cal.2d 693, 702 [166 P.2d 285], and cases there cited.)

Defendant was convicted of robbing Rose Pesce on November 13 and 14, 1940. The testimony of Rose covers various incidents, including many asserted public offenses of defendant against the person and property of Rose, from 1929, [454]*454when, she first met defendant, until May, 1944 (a year prior to the trial of this action), when he “told me ... go up to his attorney’s office and have all this squashed, and I said, ‘No.’ ” Such testimony is as follows: From time to time after Rose met defendant in 1929, they lived together as man and wife. At a time which does not appear, Rose became the operator of a house of prostitution.' In 1939 “I got several beatings, very severe beatings” from defendant and on three occasions he obtained money from Rose by threats. ‘1 He says I was quite successful and I made a good deal of money, and he’d taught me everything I knew, and he was entitled to it because he taught me.”

Rose further testified that on November 13, 1940, at about 11 a. m., defendant and one Pelozzari came to Rose’s establishment in Benicia. Defendant demanded $1,500. Rose refused to give defendant money “and he pulled out a gun and slapped me [with the gun]. ’ ’ Pelozzari also produced a gun. Persons who lived and worked in the house came and went. Defendant repeated his demands and threats. About 10 p. m. Rose “finally couldn’t stand it any longer, and I called my maid, and I said, ‘Go see how much I have and give it to them.’ ” The maid handed defendant $500. Defendant and Pelozzari “said they were going to stay there until I gave them the rest of the money.” Defendant, with Pelozzari, remained all night, reiterating his demands and threats. Twice during the night a private night watchman knocked at the door of Rose’s establishment, as was his custom and duty; Rose or her maid came to the door and told him that “things were all right.” Rose had a telephone and, as stated, other persons were in the house. But Rose did not summon aid because defendant threatened “to get my whole family. . . . He was going to run over my little niece and get my husband and beat them up.” The next day (November 14, 1940) Rose, still in fear of bodily harm or death, drove to San Francisco in her car with Pelozzari, who kept his hand on his gun; defendant followed in his car. They went to a bank where Rose had a safe deposit box. Defendant accompanied her to the box. She took out $1,000 and handed it to defendant. Rose made ho complaint to any employe of the bank because “If I had said anything they’d only come back and get me.” She returned to her establishment and notified the parole board of the above events (defendant was on parole) but did not notify the police.

Rose testified that she next saw defendant “ [a] round [455]*455Christmas time” and that she did not see him again until July 4, 1941, when he came to her home armed with a gun and said, “Now, I’m off parole, . . . and from now on I’m boss; you’ll do what I want. ... You can’t turn me in to the Parole Board any more.” On July 8, 1941, defendant forced Rose, who was in fear of her life, to go to her bank in Berkeley and withdraw $1,200. With this money defendant bought an automobile. At about this time he beat her severely. She complained to the Berkeley police but “Nothing was done because he took me out of the state, ” on a trip across the country in the new car. Defendant “said he’d talked it over with his attorney, and that’s the only way out, he’d have to take me out of the State so I couldn’t testify on the other things he’d done to me.” Rose further testified, “ [I] didn’t know I was going Bast. I was knocked unconscious and I didn’t come to until I came to in Salt Lake City.” (But Rose also testified that before leaving for the Bast she took her dog to her sister-in-law to be cared for during her absence; she made no complaint of defendant’s conduct to the sister-in-law “because we never got along.”) Defendant and Rose stopped in various cities and visited relatives of Rose in Boston. They were absent from the state for about a month. An aunt of Rose returned with them to California. Throughout this time Rose, because of fear for the safety of her husband, made no complaint of defendant’s conduct, except that she once telephoned to her uncle in Oakland concerning her predicament; the uncle did nothing about the situation.

The testimony of defendant and others is directly at variance with all salient portions of the above testimony of Rose, both as to the offense charged and as to subsequent conduct of defendant which, according to Rose, caused the delay in making complaint of that offense. Rose’s maid corroborated her testimony as to the events of November 13,1940. Rose’s sister and sister-in-law testified that the maid did not live or work at the establishment on November 13 and 14, 1940; that they were employed there, doing housework, and were present on those dates; and that they did not see defendant, Pelozzari, or any men with guns. Rose’s brother testified that his wife (the above mentioned sister-in-law) had never worked for Rose. The evidence as to other matters is similarly conflicting. For example, according to the testimony of defendant (and as corroborated by a San Francisco police officer), after defendant and Rose returned from their trip across the country in Sep[456]*456tember, 1941, defendant learned that the Berkeley police, although they did not have a warrant, “would like to talk to Dante Manche tti.” Defendant went to Berkeley and talked with the police and the district attorney concerning Rose’s accusation “that I forced her at the point of a gun to go into a bank and draw out $1200 in Oakland to buy out the car . . . [The police, the district attorney, and the salesman who sold defendant' the car] had a discussion, and he [the district attorney] started to laugh, and he said, ‘You’d better go home.’ . . . and that’s the last I heard of that.” Thereafter, defendant testified, Rose “kept telling me all the time, ‘I’ll frame you if it’s the last"thing I do.’ ”

In the latter part of 1941, defendant left California. On December 15, 1941, defendant and Pelozzari were accused by indictment of robbing and kidnapping Rose on or about November 14, 1940. (Pelozzari appeared, was arraigned, and after seven continuances was released on his own recognizance on December 17, 1942. The disposition of the cause against Pelozzari does not appear.) In May, 1944, federal authorities brought defendant to California. According to defendant he then learned for the first time of the present charge.

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Bluebook (online)
175 P.2d 533, 29 Cal. 2d 452, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-manchetti-cal-1946.