People v. Patello

13 P.2d 1068, 125 Cal. App. 480, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 694
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 24, 1932
DocketDocket No. 2228.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 13 P.2d 1068 (People v. Patello) 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. Patello, 13 P.2d 1068, 125 Cal. App. 480, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 694 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment of conviction of the crime of arson and the crime of burning insured property.

The only point raised by them on their appeal is that the evidence adduced on the trial of the action was insufficient to sustain the judgment.

A consideration of the record herein discloses the following incriminatory circumstances, to wit: The defendants sustain the relation one toward the other of brother and sister. Together they lived as the sole occupants of a six-room, one-story building, of which, to the extent that it was being purchased on a contract of sale by the defendant Patello, and that at the time of the partial burning of the same he owed about $1500 on the purchase price thereof, of which sum he was delinquent in approximately the amount of $300, defendant Patello was the owner. The “sound” value of the building at the time it was burned was $1858, and its “replacement” value was $2,445; but, as appears from the evidence, the defendant carried an insurance policy on the building in the sum of $3,000. Defendant Plorio was the owner of the furniture stored in the said building, on which, although its “sound” value was but $594.65, she carried an insurance policy in the sum of $1500. At the time of the fire she was in poor health. She had no income, and her cousin and her brother had been advancing money to her for the purpose of paying doctor’s bills which she had contracted. The evidence shows that on the day on-which the fire occurred defendant Patello left the house in question at about 3:30 o’clock in the afternoon, and that the defendant Plorio left the premises at about 7 o’clock P. M. of the same day. Defendant Patello was engaged in the fruit busi *482 ness and was occupied in the conduct thereof from 3:30 o’clock in the afternoon until 11:30 o’clock on that night, at about which time he was arrested. On leaving her home, defendant Florio went to the house of a neighbor, which was directly across the street from the place of business of her brother Patello, at which former place she remained during the Avhole of the night on which the fire occurred. It appears that at her brother’s place of business she had left word for him to call for her at the place at which she was visiting as soon as he completed his business transactions for the day or the night; but that on his failure to call for her, defendant Florio spent the night with the neighbor as aforesaid. When arrested, defendant Patello stated in substance that “he absolutely did not know where she (his sister) could be reached”.

The fire in the home of the defendants was discovered at approximately five minutes after 9 o’clock P. M. On arriving at the house, the firemen found the windows closed, the shades drawn, and the front and the rear doors of the house locked. On breaking into the house, fire was discovered in each of three different rooms thereof. The door leading from the kitchen to the living room was locked on the living-room side, and each of such rooms was on fire. Hose was played on the fire and it “flashed up”. An odor of kerosene was present. In the kitchen a pasteboard carton about two-thirds full of a white substance with an odor similar to that of kerosene or coal-oil, was found, and connected with said carton was a streamer of cotton-batting which led “up over a chair and down on the floor”. The appearances indicated that a quantity of oil, apparently the draining from a crank-case of an automobile, had been poured on the floor. The bathroom floor was covered with oil with the odor of a petroleum product similar to crank-case drippings. Defendant Florio denied that there ever had been kept in the house any gasoline, coal-oil or cleaning fluids of the type that was found therein. In substance, defendant Patello stated that he did not know whether he had any insurance - on the property; “ . . „ that he believed the insurance policy had lapsed and . . . didn’t remember whether he had a renewal or not”. As to the furniture in the house, defendant Florio stated that “she didn’t recall whether she had it insured, or not”.

*483 With reference to the effect of circumstantial evidence of the guilt of a person accused of the commission of a criminal offense, the broad rule has been generally announced that to justify a verdict of guilty such evidence “must be not only consistent with the hypothesis of guilt, but inconsistent with any other rational hypothesis. The deduction to be drawn from these circumstances is ordinarily one for the jury, but where . . . every circumstance relied on as incriminating is equally compatible with innocence, there is a failure of proof necessary to sustain a conviction, and the question presented is one of law for the court. . . . ” (People v. Staples, 149 Cal. 405, 425 [86 Pac. 886, 894].)

In substance, the appellants contend that none of the evidence adduced against them, or either of them, nor all of the several items of such evidence combined, neither is nor was inconsistent nor incompatible with their innocence.

Taken literally and in its strict construction, it may not be denied that if applied to the facts of the instant ease, either piece by piece, or as an entirety, the principle of law announced in the Staples ease, supra, would indicate that purely from a legal standpoint the evidence was ‘ ‘ compatible with innocence” of the accused. But it is common knowledge that in practically every criminal prosecution that is dependent for its success upon circumstantial evidence each fact adduced is not only susceptible of a “rational hypothesis” of innocence of the accused, but also is possibly as compatible with his innocence as it is with his guilt. As a homely illustration, let it be supposed that a negro is being prosecuted for stealing watermelons -from a patch which lies across the road from a cemetery. The evidence shows that he was seen on the road just before he reached the watermelon patch, at which time he had no watermelons in his possession, but that after he had passed the watermelon patch he was seen running very rapidly, with a stolen watermelon under each arm. A “rational hypothesis . . . equally compatible with the innocence” of the negro might be that he found the watermelons in the road, and that he was running because he was afraid of ghosts. But in reliance upon the principle of law announced in the Staples case, as applied to such facts, would the trial court be justified or authorized to declare that there was “a failure of proof necessary to sustain a conviction”? It is manifest that if the answer must *484 be in the affirmative, then must fail a very large majority of the prosecutions for the perpetration of crimes which are secretly committed, wherein the proof not only as to the corpiis delicti, but as well of the criminal participation therein of the accused, must be presented, not by eyewitnesses, or by direct evidence of their commission, but perforce by facts which in their nature are wholly circumstantial. But as a legal proposition it is unthinkable that the language employed by the court in the Staples ease, to which attention has been directed, was ever intended by its author, or by the court as a whole, to have placed upon it such a construction as hereinbefore has been indicated.

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Bluebook (online)
13 P.2d 1068, 125 Cal. App. 480, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-patello-calctapp-1932.