People v. McCoy

153 P.2d 315, 25 Cal. 2d 177, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 307
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1944
DocketCrim. 4552
StatusPublished
Cited by166 cases

This text of 153 P.2d 315 (People v. McCoy) 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. McCoy, 153 P.2d 315, 25 Cal. 2d 177, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 307 (Cal. 1944).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

The defendant was tried upon an information charging in count I an assault with intent to commit rape and in count II an assault with a deadly weapon. The jury returned a verdict of not guilty as to the first charge and guilty as to the second. From the judgment of conviction and the order denying his motion for a new trial the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

As grounds for reversal the defendant urges the following points: (1)' Insufficiency of the evidence- to sustain the verdict *182 of guilty; (2) errors of law committed by the court during the trial; (3) refusal of the trial court to give certain proposed instructions; and (4) prejudicial misconduct on the part of both the deputy district attorney who prosecuted the cause and the trial judge.

The factual background of the assault charge upon which the defendant was convicted appears from the record to be as follows: The alleged offense occurred about 11:45 o’clock in the evening of March 28, 1943, when the defendant, á Negro, approached the prosecutrix on the sidewalk a few minutes after she had alighted from a streetcar at the corner of West Adams Street and Sixth Avenue, in the city of Los Angeles, and was walking alone toward her home. As the defendant came abreast of her he flourished a knife but said nothing. She backed away, but the defendant continued toward her and knocked her to the pavement by physical contact with the weight of his body. While she lay prone on the sidewalk, the defendant stood in a bent position over her holding the knife suspended a few inches above her face. As she started to scream the defendant placed his other hand over her mouth with such force and violence as to cause the inside of her lip to bleed, and he said “Don’t make any noise or. I’ll use this knife (or words to that effect).” Finally, she did succeed in working herself free enough to scream for help, and then, while the defendant was standing a bit to the right, she kicked him in the groin, whereupon he straightened up and ran away. Following this encounter with the defendant—some few minutes in duration—the prosecutrix had various scratches on her hands as evidence of her struggle.

With regard to his first point, the appellant urges that the evidence was insufficient to establish his identity as the perpetrator of the alleged crime. The record does not support his contention. At the trial the prosecutrix, in identifying the appellant as her assailant, expressly referred to the place of the attack as near the intersection where she alighted from the streetcar and stated that the lighting standard there permitted her, though the evening “was dark as any evening would be around midnight,” to observe the appellant’s features as he ran from the scene toward said intersection, exposing his face to the light. The appellant challenges the force of this identification testimony in relation to alleged uncertainties appearing in her account at the prelimi *183 nary hearing in this matter, as developed in the course of the prosecutrix’ cross-examination at the trial. Thus he refers to her doubtful statement made to police officers on two different occastions shortly following the attack: (1) in the early morning of March 29th when the appellant, found wandering in the neighborhood, was brought to the prosecutrix’ home for identification and (2) at a later interview that same day— that she was not sure the appellant was her assailant. But her purported uncertainty at those times was not unqualified as appears from her full testimony on the subject: “Q. And you told the officers at that time, in the presence of this defendant, who is now present in court, that you couldn’t identify him as the man, that you were not sure ? A. I again made the same statement I have made about three times, that I identified him on certain points. Q. Well, didn’t you tell the officers on the following day, March 29th, in the presence of the defendant, that you were not sure that he was the man? A. I told them that I didn’t know if I could identify him from a-large group of Negroes, other men, Negro men.” Thus it appears that the prosecutrix, sure of certain characteristics of the appellant which she was able to detail to the police officers, was only expressing a cautious concern as to her ability to “distinguish him from other men who might look something like him.”

Moreover the witness Garrett positively identified the appellant at the trial, and it appears that he was in an exceptionally good position to do so. Garrett testified that a few minutes after he alighted from a streetcar a short distance from the designated place of attack, he heard a woman scream and then saw the appellant running down the street; that he gave chase and they met at the lighted intersection; that he took a “swing” at the appellant but only grazed the latter’s shoulder; that the street light permitted him to see clearly the appellant’s features and certain peculiarities of his clothing. It further appears from the record that as the result of these circumstances, when the appellant was arrested and brought to Garrett’s home in the early morning of March 29th, Garrett was able without hesitation to recognize the appellant —"pon the basis of face, bearing and style of dress—as the person he had encountered a short time previously on the street in question. Nor was Garrett’s account shaken in cross-examination on any substantial points.

*184 In short, the claimed inconsistencies in the testimony of the prosecutrix and the witness Garrett are of such a trivial nature that they are ineffective to weaken the positive character of their statements as above outlined. As stated in People v. Farrington, 213 Cal. 459, 463 [2 P.2d 814] : “The strength or weakness of the identification, the incompatibility of and discrepancies in the testimony, if there were any, and the uncertainties of witnesses in giving their testimony were matters solely for the observation and consideration of the jurors in the first instance, and for the consideration of the trial court on motion for a new trial. It has approved the finding of the jury, and on appeal this court may not disturb such finding and the action of the trial court unless we can say, as a matter of law, that there was no evidence to support the conviction. (People v. Erno, 195 Cal. 272, 283 [232 P. 710].) On the record before us, we cannot say that this is such a case.” See, also, People v. Harsch, 44 Cal.App.2d 572, 575 [112 P.2d 654]; People v. Knight, 44 Cal.App.2d 887, 891 [113 P.2d 226]; People v. Holquin, 48 Cal.App.2d 551, 555 [120 P.2d 71].)

While the appellant denied that he was the offender and two witnesses at the trial testified in support of his alibi claim that at the time of the assault upon the prosecutrix he was just leaving a used car lot in another distant section of Los Angeles where he was employed as an attendant, this line of testimony merely operated to produce a conflict in the evidence on the point of the appellant’s presence at the scene of the attack, and it was for the jury to resolve. (People v. Spillard,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 P.2d 315, 25 Cal. 2d 177, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mccoy-cal-1944.