People v. Moe

3 P.2d 354, 116 Cal. App. 740, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 411
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 22, 1931
DocketDocket No. 2093.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 3 P.2d 354 (People v. Moe) 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. Moe, 3 P.2d 354, 116 Cal. App. 740, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 411 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

Defendant Moe appeals from a conviction under a charge of murdering Carlisle Lord and from an order of the trial court denying his motion for a new trial.

[1] One of the points made by appellant is that the evidence in the cause was insufficient to justify the verdict against him.

Before we proceed to a discussion of that question, let us recite portions of the evidence which do not bear directly upon it but which are introductory to it. A Mr. Lassen and his wife, and Carlisle Lord, the father of Mrs. Lassen, lived together in a little house in the town of Walteria, which place is nearly fifteen miles — one witness says, with exactness, fourteen and six-tenths miles — from Long Beach. The *Page 742 house had a living-room which was entered from a front porch by means of a door directly opposite a door opening into the kitchen, which latter room was in the rear of the living-room. At one side of the kitchen was a small bedroom, occupied by Mr. Lord, with a door opening from the one room to the other. There was another bedroom in the house, occupied by the Lassens.

On the evening of January 20, 1931, soon after dinner and after dark, the Lassens and Lord were engaged in playing rummy in Lord's bedroom. The latter sat on the edge of his bed and his daughter and son-in-law occupied seats at a table placed between the three. Not long after the card game was started a neighbor, Mr. Huffine, came to the front door and was admitted upon knocking, by Mrs. Lassen. He entered the bedroom but did not engage in the game, which went on between the original participants. When Mrs. Lassen admitted Huffine at the front door one of them, it is not certain which, called the other's attention to a coupe model automobile parked in front of the lot upon which the house stood, between the driveway which passed to one side of the house and a walk which led from the street to the front door. This car cuts a material figure in the question to which our present remarks are introductory, and it was observed by a number of the witnesses in the case. They all testified that it was of a dark color, they all said that it was a coupe, most of them said that it was a Ford, at least three said that it was a model A Ford, and one said that it was a 1929 Ford.

We now return to the room in which the card game was in progress. A few minutes after Huffine entered the room — probably not more than three or four — a noise was heard at the front door and Mrs. Lassen arose from her seat and proceeded thither. Through glass in the door she perceived a man standing close to it. Upon nearing the door she observed that the man had already swung open a screen in front of it and had his hand upon the knob of the door itself. Upon the door being opened this man, whom the evidence later showed was one Joe Ward, inquired whether Otto was in, Mrs. Lassen responding that no such person lived in the house. About this time Mrs. Lassen discovered a second man standing behind Ward and partially concealed by his body. This second man was *Page 743 defendant Brown. Disregarding Mrs. Lassen's response about Otto, the two men advanced into the living-room, Brown having a "gun" in his hand. It may be observed here that Ward, during the proceedings which followed, so far as the evidence shows, never exhibited any weapon of any kind.

As the two men moved forward, driving Mrs. Lassen before them, she cried out, "There's a holdup here," whereupon her husband ran into the living-room through the kitchen and endeavored to push the intruders toward the front door. Brown called upon him to stop and threatened, pistol in hand, to blow his head off if he did not. Brown then struck Lassen just over the temple with his weapon, the blow dazing him to such an extent that he staggered and held his head in his hands. Immediately Ward and Brown passed Mr. and Mrs Lassen, entered the kitchen and were moving toward the open door between the kitchen and the room now occupied by Huffine and Lord, the latter having arisen to his feet. In the meanwhile Lord had procured a thirty-eight caliber revolver from near at hand — Huffine could not swear from where — and stood awaiting the invaders of the peace and quiet of his home. Firing commenced upon their appearance. Mrs. Lassen, who could see what was going on from her position in the front room, says that Brown fired the first shot. Huffine testified that Brown and Lord fired so nearly together that it was impossible to tell who discharged his weapon first. Five shots were fired in all, but an interval of a few seconds elapsed between the first two and the salvo of three. During or about this interval Mrs. Lassen passed the two men in the kitchen and fled through the back door leading from that room to the outside, calling for help, while Lassen went into the bedroom occupied by himself and his wife. Some time during the shooting Huffine crept across the bed in the room where the card game had been in progress and, escaping through a window, ran to a neighboring house for the purpose of calling the police. After the firing Brown, wounded severely by a shot through his body, ran through the house, made an exit by means of the front door, entered the Ford and was rapidly driven away by some occupant of the car. When he fled Ward was lying dead on the kitchen floor, while Lord lay on the bedroom floor mortally wounded. *Page 744 He died a few minutes later. All of the facts above stated are amply supported by the evidence.

We now come to the evidence which bears more strongly upon the question whether Moe participated in the murder of Carlisle Lord. It was the theory of the prosecution that Moe drove Ward and Brown to the Lassen home in the Ford car, with a guilty knowledge of their purpose in going there, and that he drove the wounded Brown away.

We are satisfied that there was ample evidence to support a finding that some person, whether a man or a woman we do not for the present say, was seated in the car as it stood in front of the Lassen residence. This automobile we shall hereafter sometimes, for convenience, refer to as Brown's car, as there is some evidence in the record that Brown owned it, or owned a car similar in appearance to it. David F. Emery, a neighbor of the Lassens and living on the same street, heard the first two shots and immediately went to his front door and looked out. He saw a person seated in Brown's car smoking a cigarette. J.G. Andrews, another neighbor living about seventy-five feet from the Lassens and across the street, got up and "went out in front" after all five shots had been discharged and saw someone seated in the driver's seat of the car. Before the first shots were fired Bernice Webb saw a Ford car which looked like Brown's. It passed back and forth before her home and that of the Lassens, going each way twice. The first shots were fired about three minutes after she saw the car the last time. On this last appearance the vehicle was moving toward the Lassen house. Each time she saw it the car contained three persons. While the Ford was passing back and forth she saw but one other car moving along the thoroughfare. This was a large sedan. Eddie Archer was walking along the street nearly across from Lassen's home, just after the shots were fired, having heard them from a little greater distance. He saw Brown's Ford standing before the house and saw a man run from the house and get into it. After he got in the car drove past Archer and he said that there were two or three persons in it, "but I did notice that there was more than one occupant in the car".

The next appearance of Brown was at the residence of Frank J. Branson in Long Beach. He arrived, badly *Page 745

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Bluebook (online)
3 P.2d 354, 116 Cal. App. 740, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-moe-calctapp-1931.