People v. Mazzurco

193 P. 164, 49 Cal. App. 275, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 106
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 14, 1920
DocketCrim. No. 905.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 193 P. 164 (People v. Mazzurco) 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. Mazzurco, 193 P. 164, 49 Cal. App. 275, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 106 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

*276 WASTE, P. J.

The appellant was charged with the crime of rape, in that he assisted and abetted one Salvador Giulia, in the commission of an act of sexual intercourse, accomplished by said Giulia, with force and violence upon Mary Schiro. He was convicted and from an order denying his motion for a new trial, and from the judgment of conviction and sentence he appeals.

According to the testimony of the prosecutrix, a young Italian woman, early .on the morning of April 7, 1919, while she was proceeding to her work in the city of San Jose,i she was seized and forcibly placed in an automobile by three men, Salvador Giulia, Sam Mazzurco, and one Carcuffa. She was conveyed to the ranch of appellant some six miles from the scene of the kidnaping. When she arrived at the house she was taken inside by the three men already named, assisted by Mona Mazzurco, Mrs. Frank Mazzurco, and the appellant. She was dragged by these people into a bedroom, where she was left with Giulia. Once or twice after that all the parties came into the bedroom, and the appellant, together with the others, assisted in forcibly taking off her clothes. She was left with Giulia, the door being closed and locked from the outside. Giulia then forcibly committed the acts of sexual intercourse upon her.

The appellant devotes a large portion of his argument to a discussion of the evidence of the complaining witness, which he claims was of a “very weak character.” The question of what degree of credibility should be given to the statements of the prosecutrix, while on the stand, and the weight to be accorded to her testimony was one addressed solely to the discretion and consideration of the jurors. (People v. Compton, 123 Cal. 403, 407, [56 Pac. 44]; People v. Durrant, 116 Cal. 179, 200, [48 Pac. 75].)

The defendant attempted to establish an alibi, as part of his defense. Three witnesses, one a neighboring land owner and the other two his employees, testified as to seeing the defendant at work in his orchard at various times during the morning upon which the alleged rape was perpetrated. Appellant argues from an analysis of their testimony that it was impossible for him to have been present in the house and to have assisted in the commission of the acts testified to by the complaining witness. But the jurors may have disbelieved the testimony tending to prove an alibi, or, what *277 is more probable, may have reached the conclusion that, either the witnesses for the defense may have been mistaken as to the hours during which they saw the defendant at work in the orchard, or that possibly he might have absented himself from his employment long enough to have taken part in carrying the girl into the house and in removing her clothes as she testified. (People v. Sears, 119 Cal. 267, 270, [51 Pac. 325]; People v. Shehadey, 12 Cal. App. 648, 657, [108 Pac. 146].)

Over the objection of the defendant, the court admitted the testimony of the prosecutrix, and several other witnesses, as to what occurred when she was forcibly seized in San Jose and carried in the automobile to the appellant’s ranch. The defendant was not present and took no part in the actual kidnaping. He contends, therefore, that the evidence should not have been admitted. Ciulla was madly in love with the Schiro girl, and sought to marry her. She rejected his proposal. There is evidence tending to show that a conspiracy existed on the part of Ciulla, Ciulla’s sister, Mrs. Prank Mazzurco, her husband, Prank Mazzurco, this defendant and appellant, the latter’s brother, Sam Mazzurco, his wife, Mrs. Sam Mazzurco, and one Carcuffa, to force, entice, or seduce the complaining witness, Mary Schiro, into a marriage with Ciulla. From all that transpired it appears that raping the girl, by Ciulla, was undoubtedly a part of this plan. It was in pursuance of this scheme that the girl was kidnaped, on her way to work, in the city of San Jose, by Ciulla, Sam Mazzurco and Carcuffa, and carried in the automobile to the home of this appellant. There, as testified to by the prosecutrix, she was forced to undergo the indignities already described, the appellant taking part in the acts of the ill treatment to which she was subjected. The evidence as a whole, if believed, was amply sufficient to establish such conspiracy. That being the fact, all statements, acts, and declarations made by any of the parties pending the commission of the crime, looking toward its consummation, were competent evidence against each and every conspirator. (People v. Lovren, 119 Cal. 88, 91, [51 Pac. 22, 638]; People v. Holmes, 118 Cal. 444, 456, [50 Pac. 675]; People v. Ciulla, 44 Cal. App. 719, [187 Pac. 46].)

*278 The court admitted, over the objection of the defendant, testimony of the prosecutrix that after Giulia had finished the acts of sexual intercourse with her she was allowed by him to leave the bedroom and go into the kitchen of the house. Several of the conspirators were there, and when she cried and asked for her parents she was told that she should now be ashamed to have them see her. Mrs. Mona Mazzurco then had a conversation with the girl, the purport of which was that as Giulia had accomplished his purpose with her, she was disgraced, no other man would ever care for her, or want to marry her, and she should marry Giulia. The defendant was not present during these conversations and now contends that the admission of this evidence was error, as being hearsay, not connected with the defendant, and a narration of something that happened after the commission of the rape. Whenever the objective of a conspiracy, in which several persons participate, is at an end, the conspiracy terminated, and the crime has been committed, the admissions of co-conspirators are not admissible against others (People v. Oldham, 111 Cal. 648, 653, [44 Pac. 312]), but the facts and circumstances here raised a question for the jury to decide as to when the conspiracy, if any there was, terminated, and whether the raping of the prosecutrix by Giulia was not merely a part of the design, and one advance in the attempt to force her to marry him. (People v. Holmes, 118 Cal. 444, 459, [50 Pac. 675].) There were apparently three well-defined steps in the method of procedure followed by the defendant and his associates. The first was kidnaping the girl. The second was putting her in Giulia’s embraces. The third, the attempted ingenious consummation of the plan, was to break down the girl’s resistance, while she was virtually a prisoner in appellant’s house, and laboring under the mental and physical distress caused by the treatment she had undergone, by representing to her that she was forever shamed and disgraced, in the sight of her parents and the whole world, and could only save herself from her humiliation by marrying Giulia.

The appellant united his own persuasive efforts with those of the other conspirators, after the rape, and following the conversation the girl had with Mona Mazzurco. In his talks with her he tried to impress her with “the chances” she was *279 throwing away if she rejected Giulia.

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Bluebook (online)
193 P. 164, 49 Cal. App. 275, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mazzurco-calctapp-1920.