People v. Palmer

173 P.2d 680, 76 Cal. App. 2d 679, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 766
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 1, 1946
DocketCrim. 4023
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 173 P.2d 680 (People v. Palmer) 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. Palmer, 173 P.2d 680, 76 Cal. App. 2d 679, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 766 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

Defendants were jointly charged in an information containing two counts with the crime of robbery, and the jury found them guilty of robbery of the first degree. Prom the judgment of conviction which followed, and also from the order denying the motion for a new trial, defendant Virginia McDavid alone has perfected this appeal.

It is here urged (1) that the evidence is insufficient to justify the judgment of conviction; and (2) that the court committed prejudicial error in the giving of instructions.

The record discloses that about 4 a. m. of November 24, 1945, two sailors, Larry L. Tyson and James E. Banks, were standing near a service station at 9th Street and Central Avenue in the city of Los Angeles, waiting for a trolley to return them to their naval base at Long Beach. At that time defendants were the sole. occupants of a Buiek automobile standing in the service station with appellant McDavid at the wheel. James Moore, the attendant on duty at the station, testified that a Buiek came into the station sometime between 2:30 and 3:30 a. m., on the date mentioned, at which *681 time a group of sailors were standing on the corner 30 or 40 feet distant from appellant’s automobile. Appellant called to the boys on the corner, and Tyson recalled that more than two of them walked over to the car. The attendant Moore did not hear appellant call to the boys, but he saw Tyson and some other boys go over to the Buick. Appellant asked Tyson where he was going and was told “Long Beach,” whereupon she offered a free ride to Long Beach in her car. The two sailors got in and sat in the back seat. Moore changed the battery in the Buick and made a memorandum of the license number of the car together with the name and address of the owner. He saw Tyson and Banks get into the car and saw them sitting in the back seat when the car drove from the station with appellant at the wheel and defendant Palmer sitting beside her. Shortly after they started off, appellant asked the boys, “Wouldn’t you all like to go out and have some fun before you go to Long Beach?”, to which they replied, “No, we weren’t going out to have any fun, We haven’t enough money.” Upon appellant’s suggestion, Banks took off his Navy pea jacket, climbed into the front seat and sat between appellant and defendant Palmer, whereupon appellant said, “We will go to one of my girl friend’s house, call up one of my girl friends, and we will go out and have fun.” The boys told her “she didn’t need to do that, we didn’t have enough money for that, and she asked us how much money we had.” Tyson told her he had $5.00 and appellant said ‘You all no got enough money to go anywhere and have fun. You can get out here, if you want to.” Meanwhile, appellant drove along without making a stop, and defendant Palmer talked to Banks about a certain watch, which Tyson said he saw Banks wearing when they got in the Buick. Defendant asked whether Banks would like to pawn his watch and Banks answered in the negative. Appellant stopped the automobile near Central Avenue and 27th Street, at which time the defendant Palmer, Tyson and Banks got out, Banks and Palmer preceding Tyson. The witness Tyson testified that defendant Palmer drew a gun on them and said “Well, I am just going to take the five dollars you all have,” and “snapped” the five dollars out of Tyson’s hand. The complaining witness Banks testified that defendant Palmer “puts a gun in my ribs and he takes my watch and five dollars and draws over on Pico. She (appellant) was driving. . . . She *682 asked how much money I had. I told her I didn’t have but five dollars . . . the fellow asked did I want to pawn my watch ... I told him I didn’t want to pawn it, to pawn my watch, so then he got out of the car . . . and we gets out too. . . . That is when he put the gun in my ribs. ’ ’ Said witness also testified that after defendant Palmer took his watch, he jumped in the car and drove off; that appellant was “under the steering wheel.” Tyson testified that he surrendered the $5.00 because he was afraid of Palmer’s gun. While Palmer was taking the watch and the money from the two sailors beside the Buick on 27th Street near Central Avenue, appellant was sitting behind the steering wheel watching Palmer and “told him to hurry up, called his name, and told him to hurry up, to make it snappy. ’ ’ She drove off as soon as Palmer jumped into the car with the loot taken from the two boys. Banks left his pea jacket in the car with his name stenciled on the inside. This jacket was later recovered from appellant’s automobile by the police. The two sailors returned to the service station at 9th and Central' where they obtained the license number of appellant’s car from the attendant Moore, who corroborated this fact, among others, and who also identified appellant as the person who took Tyson and Banks into her car.

Officer Collins apprehended appellant and Palmer when they drove up to the former’s home around 8 that morning, and although he searched Palmer and the car, no gun was found, nor was it found on the person of appellant. However, he did find inside the car the sailor’s pea jacket with the name J. E. Banks stenciled thereon. At the time of the arrest Officer Collins conversed with appellant and Palmer, who at first denied that any sailors had been in the car at the time in question. Palmer later admitted they picked up two sailors and appellant claimed the pea jacket found in her car belonged to a friend named “Bennie Barnes.” When accused, both appellant and Palmer denied having robbed anyone.

Appellant took the stand in her own defense and testified that while at the service station having the battery of her car changed, she sat behind the steering wheel with defendant Palmer seated beside her, and she noticed a group of sailors standing on the corner of Central Avenue and 9th Street; that neither she nor Palmer left the Buick while at *683 the service station, nor did she call to any of the sailors; that four or five sailors, including Tyson and Banks, walked up to the car and asked for a ride to Long Beach; that she told them she would take them because she was doing nothing but riding about; that whereupon Banks and Tyson entered the back seat of the Buick and a third sailor, who was later identified as Louis Jordan, jumped into the front seat; that after the battery was changed, she gave her name, address and the license number of her car to the attendant and immediately drove the ear from the station; that in the front seat, said witness was driving the car, Palmer sat beside her and Louis Jordan sat next the window; while Tyson and Banks sat in the back seat; that such seating arrangement was not changed thereafter; that upon leaving the station, she drove south on Central Avenue, and remarked that it was getting cold and that she would stop at her home for a coat and a drink to warm her up, at which time one of the sailors offered to get her a drink if she would get them some white girls and some marihuana; that Palmer did not participate in this conversation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 P.2d 680, 76 Cal. App. 2d 679, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-palmer-calctapp-1946.