People v. Mendival

217 P. 793, 62 Cal. App. 712, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 391
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1923
DocketCrim. No. 954.
StatusPublished

This text of 217 P. 793 (People v. Mendival) 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. Mendival, 217 P. 793, 62 Cal. App. 712, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 391 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

SHENK, J., pro tem.

Appellant and his codefendants, Broulio Galindo, Jose Hernandez, and Faustino Rivera, were jointly charged with the robbery of the First National Bank of Arcadia on the fifth day of April, 1922. Appellant, Galindo, and Hernandez were convicted and sentenced. Rivera was in the hospital at the time of the trial and so far as the record shows his ease is undisposed of. Appellant alone has appealed from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The sole contention is that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict in that there is no evidence, so it is claimed, tending in any way to connect the appellant with the commission of the crime. No authorities are cited in appellant’s brief. It contains a short summary of the evidence, with the suggestion that in order to determine the question raised it will be necessary to consider the evidence *713 in its entirety and the request is made that this court read the transcript for that purpose. That has been done.

About 7:30 o ’clock on the morning of the day of the robbery the defendant and his codefendant, Galindo, went to the auto livery station of Parsons Brothers in Los Angeles and rented a Ford car without a driver. Appellant signed the receipt and rental agreement in which it was specified that the car was to be returned before midnight of the same day. To this receipt and agreement appellant signed the name of Joe Rivas, an assumed name.

A few minutes before 1 o’clock on the afternoon of the same day a Chevrolet touring car stopped in front of the bank. Three men got out of the car and entered the bank unmasked. They were plentifully supplied with firearms. Two of the men had two revolvers each and the third man had one. At the points of these guns the president, cashier, and two bookkeepers were ordered first to put up their hands and then to lie down on the floor. Presently a customer entered the bank. He, too, was required to join the officers and employees on the floor. While one of the trio kept watch over the victims the other two proceeded to pack into two canvas bags about $2,800 in currency and silver, $3,720 in bonds, and $2,700 in travelers’ checks. When the packing was concluded all persons reclining upon the floor were required to enter the vault.

The trio left the bank with the loot and boarded the waiting Chevrolet car, which departed speedily on the highway toward the south. Galindo and Hernandez were positively identified by several witnesses at the trial as two of the men who entered the bank. Rivera was positively identified at the preliminary examination as the third man. While these three were in the bank a fourth man, whom the prosecution claimed and the jury found to be the appellant, remained in the Chevrolet car, sitting under the steering wheel and keeping the motor running. No witness at or in the vicinity of the bank positively identified the fourth man as Mendival. Several saw the form of a man in the front seat of the ear. A telephone man who was in an office across the street testified that the man who remained in the car wore a light hat pulled down over the side of his face. Other witnesses testified that the man who remained in the ear wore a light grey cap. One witness stated that the com *714 plexion of the man in the ear resembled the complexion of the appellant as he saw him at the trial.

A rancher testified that shortly after 1 o’clock on the same afternoon he was about three miles southeast of the bank; that he saw the Chevrolet car with four men in it speeding along the Azusa road at about thirty-five miles per hour; that he recognized the defendant Galindo as one of the occupants ; that the car was proceeding in an easterly direction toward the Sawpit Wash; that the car struck the wash with such force that it almost overturned; that at about the time he saw the car disappearing in the wash he heard a whistle blowing which he recognized as the police alarm whistle of the city of Monrovia, a city adjoining Arcadia on the east, and that his suspicions were aroused; that he went to Monrovia and notified the police authorities as to what he had seen; that in the company of an officer he went in the direction in which the Chevrolet car was traveling and found it in a lonely spot on Chicago Park Island in the San Gabriel River; that there was no one in the car and that the radiator was hot; that the car was started and driven without difficulty ; that the license number plates had been removed and that there were fresh tracks of another automobile near the place where the Chevrolet car had been abandoned. Pieces of paper, such as are used in wrapping coins with the denomination of the coins stamped thereon, were found strewn on the floor in the rear of the car.

An automobile salesman testified that he was the owner of this Chevrolet car and that it had been stolen from his garage some time during the night before the robbery.

A motorcycle officer testified that about 2 o’clock of the same day he arrested the four defendants for speeding in Monterey Park, a few miles westerly from the island in the San Gabriel River; that they were riding in the Ford ear rented that morning from Parsons Brothers and were the only occupants of the car; that he gave them the usual ticket requiring them to report and permitted them to go on; that they proceeded toward Los Angeles and that the appellant was driving the car.

The robbery was immediately reported to the office of the sheriff of Los Angeles County. Two deputy sheriffs and the constable of Azusa township, who happened to be at the sheriff’s office, started in automobiles for the San Gabriel *715 Valley, wherein Arcadia is situated. As they were proceeding through Coyote Pass, about midway between San Gabriel Valley and Los Angeles, they stopped this same Ford ear which was speeding toward Los Angeles and placed the four defendants under arrest. The appellant was driving the car.

Five revolvers were taken from the four defendants. Some of these revolvers were identified by the officers of the bank as those used in the robbery. One revolver was taken from the person of the appellant. All of the defendants were wearing caps. Two dark-colored hats and several articles of clothing were found on the floor of the car. These hats were identified as those worn by two of the defendants when they entered the bank. Two empty canvas bags resembling in appearance those used as containers for the stolen property were also found, one on the person of Galindo and the other in the rear of the ear. The defendants were taken back to the bank that afternoon for the purpose of identification. The three who entered the bank were positively identified by the victims, but they could not identify the appellant because, as they stated, he did not come into the bank and they did not obtain a sufficient view of him to be able positively to identify him.

The cashier of the bank testified that a few silver dollars were found on the floor of the Ford ear when it was examined at the bank after the return of the defendants with the officers.

When questioned by officers as to what he was doing with the Ford car appellant stated that they had rented it for the purpose of going to San Gabriel for some oranges and that they had taken the guns along to shoot rabbits.

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Bluebook (online)
217 P. 793, 62 Cal. App. 712, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mendival-calctapp-1923.