People v. McEvers

128 P.2d 93, 53 Cal. App. 2d 448, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 503
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 17, 1942
DocketCrim. 3589
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 128 P.2d 93 (People v. McEvers) 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. McEvers, 128 P.2d 93, 53 Cal. App. 2d 448, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 503 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

By information appellants were accused jointly with one Jack Jones of the robbery of Gertrude Coffey by means of force used against Mrs. Coffey and by putting her in fear. They were convicted by a jury of the ci'ime charged. Their co-defendant Jones was acquitted. The appeal is from the judgments on the grounds that the court committed prejudicial error: (1) in admitting testimony concerning the asserted confessions; (2) in modifying a correct instruction offered by appellant Davidson with reference to such alleged confessions which proposed instruction was peculiarly applicable and not otherwise covered; (3) in refusing still other instructions proposed by Davidson correctly stating the law as to the testimony of accomplices; (4) in giving instructions which covered an assumed issue.

On January 7, 1942, Mrs. Coffey was cashier in a market on East Olympic Boulevard in Los Angeles. McEvers ap *450 proaehed her with a basket of groceries. As she was about to check them, he pointed a gun at her and stated: ‘ ‘ Hurry, I don’t want to kill any one; act as though nothing was happening; put the bills in a sack; put the half dollars in a bag and do not make too much noise.” Thus the robber took about $1,183.68 and departed from the scene.

On the second day thereafter all three defendants were arrested and they were interviewed by the police in the robbery bureau of the city hall of Los Angeles.

At the interview McEvers stated that he had planned and committed, the robbery; that he and Davidson drove from the latter’s home on Hooper street to the market; that Davidson waited in his car on a side street while the robbery took place; that after the two had returned to Hooper street, they divided the money among themselves and Jones, giving each $380; that he had been with Jones and Davidson for a day and a half prior to the robbery.

At the same interview Davidson told the officers that he had driven the car and that upon their return to his home they divided the money three ways; that his unspent portion was in his trunk. Following the conference with defendants, the officers accompanied by Davidson, visited his home and recovered $190 from his designated depository.

After the foregoing admissions had been given in evidence by the officers, defendants attempted to refute them with testimony of promises made, of floggings administered, of frights provoked and of fears inspired by threats of violence and by being deprived of sleep and food. Inasmuch as McEvers was positively identified by four witnesses as the bandit who committed the crime and since he confessed his guilt to the jury in open court, there could be no reversal of his conviction because he could have suffered no prejudice by the rulings with reference to the admission of the confessions. (Const., Art. VI, § 4%.)

We proceed therefore to a consideration of the assignments on behalf of Davidson.

(1) When testimony as to the conduct and attitude of this defendant was offered in evidence, the jury was excused while the court heard his testimony as well as that of the officers concerning the occurrences at the interview in the robbery bureau. There is nothing in the recitals of such witnesses to suggest that the trial court did not exercise a reasonable discretion in considering and admitting testimony as to statements and behavior of defendants when accused. *451 In the absence of a showing of an abuse of discretion upon the part of the trial judge, we cannot say that his ruling was error. (People v. Luzovich, 127 Cal. App. 465, 470 [16 P. (2d) 144].) It was for the trial judge to determine whether the confession was voluntary. (People v. Lehew, 209 Cal. 336, 341 [287 Pac. 337].) In ruling upon the admissibility of statements purporting to constitute the confession of an accused, the court is governed largely by the circumstances surrounding the purported confession. (Ibid) The fact that it may have been made to an arresting officer or that the accused had been interrogated many hours does not render his statements involuntary. (People v. Siemsen, 153 Cal. 387, 394 [95 Pac. 863] ; People v. Dyer, 11 Cal. (2d) 317, 319 [79 P. (2d) 1071].) But after a voir dire session in the presence of the court alone, each of the parties present at the interview in the robbery bureau was examined before the jury; each repeated his own version of the incidents and the conversation between the officers and the accused and each was subjected to cross examination.

Thereupon the issue as to whether the confessions were free and voluntary, along with other issues of fact, was submitted to the jury with an instruction that it was for them to determine whether the statements by defendants to the police “amounted to a confession and were made free and voluntary without influence of hope or fear”; that if they were not so freely made, they should be disregarded; that the slightest menace or threat, or any hope engendered in the mind of the accused that he will be more favorably dealt with if he will confess, should exclude the confession. Under such instruction the jury decided that the statements of the accused did constitute confessions and that they were freely and voluntarily made.

Counsel’s eloquent portrayal of the savage mistreatment of appellants at the hands of the police is sufficient to arouse cold lethargy into heated action if the picture were true. But we are in no position to act upon his persuasions. The trial judge has determined that the facts were such as to warrant the admission in evidence of the statements. After their deliberations the jury impliedly found that such statements were confessions and that they were voluntarily made. In this connection it is contended that appellants were denied due process by reason of the brutalities they claimed to have suffered at the hands of the police. But after a jury and the *452 court both determined there was no brutality we cannot say there was a want of due process. Had the alleged maltreatment of defendants been established we could not do otherwise than reverse the judgment. But upon that issue there was a conflict in the evidence resolved against appellants.

(2) It is contended on behalf of appellant Davidson that in view of .the testimony that the brutality of the officers induced the alleged confessions, he was entitled to an instruction that “if the attitude of defendant in the face of the accusatory statements made by third parties in his presence, taken in conjunction with all the other facts and circumstances in the ease creates a reasonable doubt as to his guilt, it was the duty of the jury to acquit him.” Pursuant to such contention his counsel offered the following instruction which the court modified by striking the portion in brackets:

“The statements of third parties made in the presence of a defendant are admissible in evidence, not for the purpose of binding the defendant to the truth of such statements, nor as proof of his guilt, but they are receivable solely and alone that the jury may know the attitude of the defendant in the face of accusatory statements made against him by third persons in his presence.

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Bluebook (online)
128 P.2d 93, 53 Cal. App. 2d 448, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mcevers-calctapp-1942.