People v. Massengale

261 Cal. App. 2d 758, 68 Cal. Rptr. 415, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1803
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1968
DocketCrim. 14227
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 261 Cal. App. 2d 758 (People v. Massengale) 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. Massengale, 261 Cal. App. 2d 758, 68 Cal. Rptr. 415, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1803 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

LILLIE, J.

This is an appeal by the People from an order setting aside an information following a motion by defendants under the provisions of section 995, Penal Code. The information charged Oliver Massengale, Jr., Charles Arthur Massengale and William Theodore Lindo with extortion (Myra Teed) (§ 518, Pen. Code), 1 extortion, attempted extortion and kidnaping Olive Fetherolf (§§522, 524,* 2 207, Pen. Code), kidnaping Harriet Ruth Brown (§207, Pen. Code), and attempted grand theft (§ 644, Pen. Code). No brief has been filed by respondents after notice duly given by the clerk under rule 17(b), California Rules of Court.

Myra Teed, 70 years old, lived alone. Around 10 a.m. on June 9, 1967, she stepped outside to pick up her trash cans at *760 the curb when defendants drove up in a truck. “They began shouting- to me that I should have the trees in my back yard trimmed. They should be topped”; they were all “yelling” at the same time. She had a rose bush growing on a trellis and one of them told her it was very dangerous, that it was going to grow into the roof. She testified, “Then they ran down the back yard. They wanted to top a liquidambar that I have down there. They insisted that they trim the liquidambar. I said, ‘I don’t want anything done. I don’t want anything trimmed. ’ They spied an elm. They wanted to top that. I said, ‘I don’t want anything done to my trees.’ So then they spied the avocados. They wanted to trim those. I said, ‘I want you to get off my property. I don’t want you here. Get off. I don’t want anything done.' They didn’t pay any attention to me. It was as if I hadn’t said anything. One of them jumped up in a tree, and he had a saw of some kind and he began sawing on the limbs of the avocado. He sawed off one of the limbs. He damaged the avocados. It was loaded with fruit. And I was yelling at them constantly to get off my property. I said, ‘You have no business here.’ I said, ‘I can’t afford to pay for all of this.’ One of them said, ‘Oh, yes. You have plenty of money. We know your kind.' And they were very belligerent, very aggressive and smart alecky. ’ ’

Off the avocado tree defendants broke a couple of old branches and cut off a limb which was covered with fruit, then one of them declared that they had cut off 15 branches— he counted every branch on the limb. Miss Teed told defendants, “If you don’t get off my property I am calling the police.” Defendant Lindo said, “Oh, no, you’re not. You told us to do this, ’ ’ and she said, 1 ‘ I did not. I told you to get off my property.” Then Lindo said, “Well, there are three of us” and he'pointed to each one of them, “and one of you.” By this time Miss Teed was frightened. Defendants continued to hack away at the limbs, but she went into the house and locked the door; “I began to be afraid, because I thought these men are dangerous; ... I was afraid, yes.” When she went into the house she did not call the police “because they threatened [her].” She watched them out of her window; they hacked up the limb, chopped off some branches and loaded them onto a truck although they left “quite a few.” She sat alone in the kitchen “being frightened.” Then defendant Lindo came to the back door and presented a bill for $77, telling her it was for 15 limbs at $3.85 a limb and $20 for hauling them away. She “was quite frightened” and paid the bill by check which she made out to Lindo; she paid *761 defendants the money “because [she] was afraid of them.” Shortly after they left “I began to think how foolish I was that I didn’t report it immediately, and I then reported it to the police. ...”

Olive Fetherolf was 85 years old and lived with her sister who was 72. About 12:30 p.m. on June 12, 1967, she saw defendants in her back yard. Defendant Lindo “said that there was a broken branch over the fence that was over a wire of my neighbor’s house and that if there was a storm or anything and the branch would hit this wire it would cause a fire and I would be responsible for burning my neighbor’s house.” She told defendants she could not see a broken branch and that she ‘didn’t want the tree trimmed.”; Lindo said, “I heard you say that, but the tree is going to be trimmed.” She told him she did not want it trimmed, but he motioned one of the defendants to climb a Jacaranda tree; then the other climbed up and they started cutting it. They left some of the limbs in the neighbor’s yard and sawed up some of the rest and took most of them away. She asked them how much they were going to charge her and they said $5.85 a foot. Then they started trimming a banana tree; there was a clump of them and the one in the center was dead; they said that one should come out. She told them not to take it out; “I said to leave it alone,” but they proceeded to take out the banana tree mutilating the others and tramping down the plants in the yard. In two hours Oliver Massengale approached her in the back yard and told her “they wanted a thousand dollars. They first asked for $1170.” He said it measured up that much at $5.85 a foot. She told him that she did not have $1,170 but she had it in a savings account. Oliver wanted to know the name of the bank and went into the house where he called it. She talked to the banker who told her she couldn’t get the money unless she came in for it. It was near closing time and “Oliver was afraid he wasn’t going to get any money, so he had to hurry to go to the bank and he said he would take me to the bank in his truck”; defendants took her and her sister Harriet Ruth Brown in the truck. Asked if she went with them willingly, Mrs. Brown answered “No.” Mrs. Fetherolf was asked if she want willingly and she replied “Not very willingly, no.” Asked “Did someone tell you you had to go to the bank,” she answered, “Sure. How could he get his money if I didn’t?” In Oliver’s presence she made out her personalized check payable to Oliver Massengale for $1,000 and signed it (Exh. 1). Oliver originally *762 asked her for $1,170 but told her he would make a very liberal discount of $170. Asked if she was afraid when she made the check out, she answered, “Well, I didn’t do it very willingly.” Donald Hanover, a tree surgeon doing business for 11 years in the valley, went to Olive Fetherolf’s home on June 14, 1967, and observed the work done by defendants; he testified that the charge for the work—for three men and equipment from the valley—and removal of the debris would cost $45.

It is contended by the People, and we think correctly so, that the order dismissing the proceedings under section 995, Penal Code, should be reversed. It is apparent that in granting the motion the superior court weighed the evidence and decided the issues which should have been decided at trial. Among other things, the court found that defendants’ conduct was “not menacing,” characterizing it as nothing more than “super salesmanship,” and they made “no threats”; and that the two women, “stupid housewives,” instead of telling them to get off their property “let the work proceed,” “started telling [defendants] what he [sic] is to do ’ ’ and when presented a bill put up a “ squawk. ’ ’ 3

*763

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Bluebook (online)
261 Cal. App. 2d 758, 68 Cal. Rptr. 415, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-massengale-calctapp-1968.