People v. Ogden

107 P.2d 50, 41 Cal. App. 2d 447, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 260
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 8, 1940
DocketCrim. 3385
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 107 P.2d 50 (People v. Ogden) 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. Ogden, 107 P.2d 50, 41 Cal. App. 2d 447, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 260 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

In an information filed by the district attorney of Los Angeles County defendant was accused in count I of the crime of kidnaping; count II charged the crime *449 of rape; count III a violation of section 286 of the Penal Code, and count IV alleged a violation of section 288a of the same code. Following denial of a motion to set aside the information, and the entry of not guilty pleas to all counts, defendant was tried by a jury which returned verdicts finding him guilty of kidnaping and forcible rape and not guilty of violating sections 286 or 288a of the Penal Code. A motion for a new trial was denied and judgment accordingly pronounced. From the order denying him a new trial and from the judgment of conviction defendant prosecutes this appeal.

Stating the evidence adduced at the trial in the light most favorable to the prosecution, as we are required to do following a guilty verdict, the record discloses that the prosecutrix, a woman 28 years of age, totally deaf, and who had been married, was earning her living selling flowers to the patrons of various clubs and cafes along and in the vicinity of Vermont avenue in the city of Los Angeles. About 8 o’clock on the night of December 12, 1939, in the Friars Club, she encountered defendant, whom she had not theretofore known, and to whom on that occasion she sold a flower. About 11:30 p. m. of the same night she again saw defendant at the 741 Club located across the street from the Friars Club. Defendant followed her out of the last-named club, and by motions indicated an offer to take her elsewhere to sell flowers, which invitation she rejected and re-entered the Friars Club, where she continued the sale of flowers. About 12:30 a. m. the prosecutrix left the Friars Club and went to other resorts in the neighborhood to sell flowers. Shortly before 2 a. m. she returned to the Friars Club to put her unsold flowers on ice preparatory to going home. Here she again encountered the defendant, who was coming out of the club as she was about to enter. Defendant renewed his invitation to take her elsewhere to sell flowers, which offer she again rejected, whereupon defendant took hold of her arm and motioned to a man called “Leo” to get his automobile, which the latter did, driving it up in front of the club. According to the testimony of the prosecutrix, defendant pushed her into the automobile, and as “Leo” drove the ear away she was seated in the single seat between the driver and the defendant. She remonstrated and told them she wanted to go back to the Friars Club, but they stopped at another club where she sold a couple of flowers; then the driver of the ear indicated he *450 was going in the other direction and that the prosecutrix was to go with the defendant. According to her testimony, expecting to be taken back to the Friars Club, she entered appellant’s car, but he drove to another club on Eighth and Western. With the defendant, she entered this club and was by him introduced to the owner, who gave her permission to come to his place and sell flowers. Just a few minutes before 2 o’clock they left this club, the prosecutrix telling appellant she wanted to go to the Friars Club before it closed at 2 a. m. The prosecutrix preceded defendant into the car. Noticing that defendant was watching her through the window of the automobile, she started to get out of the car, but appellant grabbed her and held her down while he put the car in motion and drove away. He had his arm around her neck and smothered her down against his clothes so that, according to her testimony, it was with difficulty she was able to breathe. Eventually she opened the door of the automobile with her foot, at about which time they came to a main thoroughfare, when she started to jump out of the car and defendant lost control of the automobile while trying to hCd her in it. Defendant then stopped the car suddenly, and regarding what there occurred the prosecutrix testified as follows (quoting from the transcript of her testimony taken at the preliminary examination, and which transcript, by reason of the deafness of the prosecutrix, was by stipulation used at the trial) :

“ . . . and I fell out on the street on my back, hit my head hard and it made me dizzy, on the hard pavement. He leaned over, I started to scream then and he leaned over and took ahold of the back of my hair to hold on to me and I said, ‘ Oh, they can’t hear me screaming,’ and at the same time he pulled me back in. He was pulling with all his strength to get me back in and I was pulling in the other direction with all mine, went like that until my hair all came loose, and it threw him off his balance and he fell on the street on top of me. I fell back on the pavement again when my hair came loose, it left me dizzy, we started struggling in the street there. I fought for a few minutes and then my hand was broken fighting with him, I didn’t have any more strength left, it was getting dark because of the blows on my head and I could not see, so he threw me back head first in the front seat of the car and sprawled over me so that I could not get away, *451 and he held me down like that and drove away. He drove for a long time holding me down, I didn’t see where we were going, it was up in the hills somewhere. He stopped at the top of the hill where it was deserted, no ears or anything. I sat talking to him, I didn’t know what he intended to do, I appealed to his nobility, asking him to take me home, I told him I had a mother and that I didn’t go in for such things, and he laughed at me for a while, put his arm around me and ordered me to take off my clothes. Meanwhile he was—
“Mr. Lavine (Defense Counsel who appeared for the defendant only at the preliminary examination and did not represent him at the trial): What happened to your clothes? Who took them off?
“A. While we were fighting the buttons were all ripped off and there wasn’t much to take off, just slipped off, he took them off, told me to get out and get in the back seat with him.
“Mr. Lavine: Did you slip your clothes off?
“A. No, he did. My hand was broken, I had to get out of the way, I could no longer object to anything he did do, I had no defense.
“Q. . . . Did he insert his penis in you?
“A. Yes.
“Q. In your vagina or in your rectum ?
“A. (Witness points to the word vagina in the written question.) lie started that and it didn’t seem to satisfy him and after a few minutes he gave it up. . . .
“A. I resisted against it as well as I could and it seemed hours we struggled, with him trying it over and over again. He did not give it up until he succeeded in his purpose. . . .
a
“A. After he raped me he let me dress again and asked me where I lived. I didn't want to tell him where I lived because it was on a dark street, and I didn’t know what else he would do, and I told him I lived at a hotel on Main street because I knew there were cars and things out at that hour and I could get away from him, so he took me down there and was telling me that he would take me out on Christmas, and tried to make a date for then.

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Bluebook (online)
107 P.2d 50, 41 Cal. App. 2d 447, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ogden-calctapp-1940.