People v. Parisi

261 P. 1072, 87 Cal. App. 208, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1927
DocketDocket No. 1386.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 261 P. 1072 (People v. Parisi) 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. Parisi, 261 P. 1072, 87 Cal. App. 208, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 124 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

The defendant was charged by indictment with the infamous crime against nature and upon trial was foiind guilty. He has appealed from the judgment of conviction and the order denying his motion for a new trial. As grounds for reversal he contends that the trial court improperly limited his cross-examination of the prosecution’s witnesses, and thereby deprived him of the right to show that his arrest and prosecution were the result of an attempted extortion; also that the court erred in arbitrarily refusing to grant him time to secure affidavits to be used on motion for a new trial.

The circumstances leading up to the defendant’s arrest, as they appear from the evidence, were as follows: The alleged crime was committed upon a boy eighteen years of age with whom and with whose family defendant had been *210 on friendly terms for many years. At the time of his arrest, and for some time prior thereto, defendant lived alone in a couple of rooms constructed mostly of windows and glass doors on the roof of a building which he owned on Kearny Street, San Francisco. During the early part of May the boy’s mother became suspicious of her son’s appearance and conduct, and, unknown to the boy, employed a private detective named Otts to ascertain the character of the boy’s habits and associates. While pursuing this employment, and about 6 o’clock on the evening of May 19th, Otts saw defendant talking to the boy on the street near defendant’s premises and overheard him apparently make an appointment to meet the boy at 8 o’clock, pointing in the direction of his, the defendant’s, apartment. Thereupon Otts informed the boy’s mother that her son had been frequenting defendant’s living quarters and was going to meet him there that night at 8 o ’clock. She replied that there was no objection in his doing so; that defendant had been a good friend to the family for many years, particularly since the death of her husband some six years before; that he had been like a father to the boy, and consequently she was glad to have the boy in defendant’s company. Being unable to convince her of a probability of improper relations existing between the two, and without notifying her or anyone else of his intention, Otts planned to conceal one of his operatives in or near defendant’s apartment at the appointed hour that night, which he succeeded in doing in the following manner: The rear portion of defendant’s premises facing an alley, contained a garage, the keys to which were in defendant’s possession, wherein were stored certain motor vehicles, one being a truck belonging to an acquaintance named Mrs. Donati, which she wanted to sell. Otts told the boy’s mother he desired to purchase the truck for a friend and to have Mrs. Donati meet them at the garage that night about 8 o’clock for the purpose of allowing him to inspect the truck. According to the testimony of the prosecution’s witnesses, none of them knew of Otts’ real purpose in asking to inspect the truck. The boy’s mother and Mrs. Donati were accompanied to the garage by the boy, his married sister, and Otts; whereupon defendant was summoned from his apartment by the boy’s sister to open the garage and -allow the inspection to be made. *211 While the defendant was thus engaged, Otts left the garage under the pretext of going to phone to the prospective buyer of the truck, and while gone succeeded in concealing his operative in the defendant’s apartment. Soon after Otts left the garage the women and the boy started to leave, but, according to the testimony of the boy, his mother, and his sister, defendant placed his hand on the boy’s arm and asked him to remain, which he consented to do. The women then left, and defendant, after closing and locking the garage, proceeded with the boy up the back way to his apartment, where, it is claimed the alleged criminal act was committed. During the perpetration of the act Otts’ operative came out from his place of concealment under the bed and called loudly for Otts, who, it seems, after leaving the garage, returned to the street to bring' the boy’s mother and his sister to the roof and then concealed himself near a window where he could observe what occurred inside defendant’s apartment. Immediately upon hearing his operative call for him Otts broke through the glass door and entered the apartment, followed by the boy’s mother and sister; and, according to their testimony, they saw the defendant and the boy just coming out of the bedroom, both partly disrobed. It is unnecessary to relate the details of the animated discussion which followed more than to say that, according to the prosecution’s witnesses the boy, in defendant’s presence, admitted that the crime charged had been committed upon him by defendant, not only that night but on frequent occasions since the death of his father, as a result of which he had become diseased. The defendant did not deny these accusations, so the prosecution’s witnesses testified, but tried to persuade the boy’s mother and Otts against causing his arrest, stating that such action on their part would only bi’ing disgrace upon the boy; that he would see to it that the boy was cured of the disease and that he would “fix the whole thing” by paying the boy’s mother a large sum of money, and, furthermore, that he offered to pay Otts fifteen hundred dollars, saying he had known similar cases to be fixed for one thousand dollars. All of these propositions were emphatically rejected, however, and the boy’s mother insisted that defendant be taken to prison. Thereupon she left for home, accompanied by her son and her daughter.

*212 At the trial defendant denied ever having had improper relations with the boy and charged that his arrest was the result of a scheme to extort money from him. In support of his claim of innocence defendant testified that on the night in question the boy left the garage with the others; that thereupon he locked the doors and proceeded toward his apartment alone; that about the time he reached the roof he observed Otts and the boy’s mother and his sister standing near his front door waiting, as he thought, for him to open the door; that the front door was fastened with a nail on the inside and that, consequently, he entered through the rear door, intending to pass through.the house to open the front door, but that as he entered the rooms he found the boy lying on the bed and at the same time saw a man with a pistol crawling out from beneath the bed, immediately following which Otts, the boy’s mother and his sister entered the room and accused him of having committed the criminal act charged.

The numerous rulings criticised by defendant run throughout the record, and are discussed in his brief in the order in which they were made. In considering the same here, we shall for convenience group them with reference to the subject matter to which they relate.

The direct examination of the boy’s mother and of Otts ended at the point where the women and the boy left defendant's apartment and started for home. On cross-examination defendant’s counsel sought to prove what had taken place subsequent to that time. The prosecution interposed numerous objections, mainly upon the ground that the testimony sought to be elicited was not cross-examination, and many of these objections were sustained. Defendant contends that as a result of these rulings he was deprived of the right to show that later on that night, at Otts’ office, an attempt was made to extort money from him.

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Related

People v. Mayes
177 P.2d 590 (California Court of Appeal, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 P. 1072, 87 Cal. App. 208, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-parisi-calctapp-1927.