People v. Mansour

230 P.2d 52, 103 Cal. App. 2d 592, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1207
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 19, 1951
DocketCrim. 4538
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 230 P.2d 52 (People v. Mansour) 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. Mansour, 230 P.2d 52, 103 Cal. App. 2d 592, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1207 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

Defendant demands that her conviction of armed robbery be reversed on the grounds of (1) errors in refusing to give certain instructions and (2) the “verdict is against the weight of the evidence.” She appeals from the judgment of conviction and from the order denying her motion for a new trial.

The victim of the robbery is one Boyd Welin, coowner of a pharmacy in Pasadena. Having entered his store at 8:30 a.m. he was soon alarmed by the rattling of the front door. A stranger entered and concealed himself behind a counter. As the merchant advanced toward the front, the intruder jumped out, drew a .38 caliber revolver and commanded the pharmacist to raise his hands, return to the rear and lie down. His hands were tied by the bandit who demanded money and narcotics. On being informed where to get the drugs and that the money was in a canister, he made a search but soon returned to tell Welin that was not what he desired; he wanted “morphine and dilaudide.” At that juncture, the colored porter, Tyler, arrived. After the latter had knocked a second time, the stranger signaled him to go to the rear door. Tyler called to Welin to inquire whether he was all right. The druggist’s affirmative answers were given at the direction of the robber. When Tyler approached the back door the bandit grabbed his coat in an attempt to jerk him across the threshold. But the porter ran and called for the police. Thereupon, *595 Baranik, for that was the stranger’s name, made his exit, crossed the street to a convertible car parked, about 150 feet from the rear door of the pharmacy, entered the right side of the vehicle which was driven rapidly away by appellant. A bystander having got the license number of the departing automobile, it was promptly spread by radio broadcast. Two police officers of Azusa pursued the fleeing car as they traveled 75 miles an hour while appellant kept in the lead. The pursuit ended in San Gabriel just after Baranik had escaped from the wild machine.

In response to the inquiring officer, appellant said, “he put a pistol in my back, put a gun in my back” which she repeated after having been reminded that the man’s clothes were still in her machine. At the police station she was asked where the man left the car and “how did you get into this mess?” She replied, “I stopped in Pasadena to get a sandwich and he had a pistol. He put it in my back. ’ ’ She stated that he was about 56, but declined to answer further. But her silence did not forestall a successful search. The officers discovered that the wayward couple had spent several days at the home of Mrs. Baseel, sister of appellant, in Pomona prior to the day of the robbery, pretending that they were married. Before noon on the day of the crime Baranik called at Mrs. Baseel’s, left his mackinaw coat, borrowed $10, stated that there had been some trouble and departed.'

At her trial appellant testified that she had been a gambler for more than 15 years; had lived with a gambler named Barnett (referring to Baranik) in Los Angeles and had with him visited Mrs. Baseel in Pomona; about April, 1948, she became addicted to the use of morphine, heroin and dilaudide after using them for a kidney ailment; such addiction had continued to the date of the robbery, January 28, 1950; Baranik was also a drug addict and procured narcotics for her; on the morning she drove to Mr. Welin’s pharmacy she had no kind of narcotic and had been without them for some time; when they could not find the man who had supplied them, Baranik suggested a druggist in Pasadena from whom the medicament might be purchased; she was very ill, had only $5.00; Baranik had money and was pretty sure he could get narcotics at the Pasadena store, but made no mention of a robbery. Since she was ignorant of their destination Baranik directed her course to Welin’s pharmacy and to the place for parking her automobile 150 feet down the street from the rear of the store. Because something was wrong with her *596 steering wheel she always used the largest space available. Her companion told her to. wait while he was trying to buy the coveted drug. She neither saw a revolver on Baranik nor learned from him that he possessed one. Very ill, she sat in her car waiting for him when suddenly a commotion jarred the quiet of the vicinity as Baranik came running, jumped into the machine and told her to drive and get away from there. She testified that after he had commanded her to drive away, she asked what happened before she started; that she was too excited to know where she was driving; that Baranik told her to drive faster, the police were coming; that she did as directed and made many turns; that Baranik changed coats and as he jumped from the car he.directed her to keep going but he never told her that a robbery had occurred.

She testified that she had no intention of aiding Baranik to commit a robbery when she drove him to the drugstore and that she had no such intent in driving away; that she feared perhaps the law had apprehended the druggist for selling narcotics; that her first knowledge of the robbery was at the preliminary hearing. She explained her statements to the police that a gun had been stuck in her back because it was true; she had stopped for a sandwich because she did not know what had happened and to avoid telling that she had been trying to buy narcotics. She admitted her denial of knowledge of Baranik and testified that she did not know he had a gun until a few minutes after he entered her car.

Baranik had visited the Baseel home during the preceding two and a half years and had often driven appellant’s con-Arertible ear.

The Instructions Refused

The emphasized assignment of error is the court’s refusal to direct the jury that where the evidence relied upon for conviction is wholly circumstantial it must be consistent with no theory other than the guilt of the accused. In support of her thesis she contends that since she denied all knoAvledge of Baranik’s purpose to commit a robbery there was no proof of her having knowingly aided and abetted him except such inferences as might be draivn from the circumstances shown. In line with such contention she submitted and the court rejected the following instruction: “You are instructed that in order to convict upon circumstantial evidence, it is necessary not only that all the circumstances concur to show that the defendant committed the crime charged, but it must also be shown that these circumstances taken as a whole are incon *597 sistent with any other rational conclusion, and it is not sufficient that the circumstances proven coincide with, account for, and, therefore, render probable the hypothesis sought to be established by the prosecution, but they must exclude to a moral certainty every other hypothesis, except the single one of guilt, or you must find the defendant not guilty.” Appellant contends that (1) such instruction was necessary for the reason that “the entire crime or a necessary element thereof was presented to the jury wholly by circumstantial evidence”; (2) the aid rendered to the actual bandit was given without guilty knowledge on the part of appellant. From the facts established, briefly outlined above, and from a scrutiny of appellant and her several conflicting statements the jury were not without proof from which it could be reasonably inferred that appellant had guilty knowledge of Baranik’s intention to commit a robbery.

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Bluebook (online)
230 P.2d 52, 103 Cal. App. 2d 592, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mansour-calctapp-1951.