People v. Paul

305 P.2d 996, 147 Cal. App. 2d 609, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2288
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 16, 1957
DocketCrim. 5728
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 305 P.2d 996 (People v. Paul) 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. Paul, 305 P.2d 996, 147 Cal. App. 2d 609, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2288 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

In an information filed by the district attorney of Los Angeles County, defendant was accused of escaping from the lawful custody of a deputy sheriff of Los Angeles County while in custody under a felony charge, to wit, robbery (Pen. Code, §4532, subd. (b)).

Following entry of a plea of not guilty the cause proceeded to trial before a jury resulting in a verdict finding the accused guilty as charged. His motion for a new trial was denied and he was granted conditional probation.

From the judgment of conviction arid from the order denying his motion for a new trial, defendant prosecutes this appeal.

With regard to the factual background surrounding this prosecution the record reflects that on the morning of January 3, 1956, between 1 and 1:30 o’clock, Mrs. Betty Lame was working alone as night clerk at a liquor store in Los Angeles County, when defendant entered the store. He had his right hand in his pocket when he entered the door. As he walked in, Mrs. Lame greeted him, but there was no answer; he merely “gave her an angry look.” The defendant walked to where the refrigerator delicatessen case begins. Mrs. Lame spoke again, and the defendant just continued walking up the customer’s part of the store in an easterly direction toward the beer case. Mrs. Lame then asked if she could help him. Less than one minute elapsed before he reached the easterly end of the refrigerator case.- The defendant turned into the aisleway between the delicatessen case and the beer case. As he walked out of Mrs. Lame’s line of vision, where she was stationed behind the counter, she continued to observe him in the mirror.

When defendant turned into the aisle leading to the private part of the store (the owner’s living quarters), Mrs. Lame said, “You can’t go back there; that isn’t customer area.” Defendant made a partial turn and looked at her as though, according to her testimony, to say, “Oh, I can’t?” He then continued to walk to the back of the store.

Mrs. Lame became frightened because “. . . his expression and his actions were not that of a customer . . . He had not offered to buy anything, and he was going some place where *612 he was told not to go.” She jumped over the counter, and went out the door.

Then she looked through the window of the store, but did not see the defendant. She then stopped two boys in an automobile and asked them to call the police. Mr. Fowler, the driver of a second car, was also stopped. Mrs. Lame asked him to call the police, and told him a man had entered the store, gone back to the living quarters, and was going to hold the place up.

Mr. Fowler called the police from a filling station. Deputies Vaughan and Swenson, who were on patrol, drove to the station where Mr. Fowler told them that there was a man holding up a woman at 6912 South Central, in the liquor store, or words to that effect. Mr. Fowler and the police drove to the store.

The two boys in the first car returned about three to five minutes after Mrs. Lame had talked with Mr. Fowler. They remained with Mrs. Lame until the police arrived.

During the 15-minute interval between the time she vaulted the counter 'and the police arrived, she had looked in the window several times, but did not see the defendant. About three to five minutes before the police arrived, while she was standing in front of the store with the two boys, she saw the defendant in back of the beer case, and facing toward the aisle leading to the living area, where the owner frequently kept large sums of money. The defendant turned, saw Mrs. Lame outside, and then came out of the store. He told Mrs. Lame and the two boys, that he was looking for a preacher.

When the police arrived, Deputy Sheriff Swenson covered the defendant and the two boys, who were in front of the store, with a shotgun, and told them to put their hands up. He then “shook them down.” The defendant was carrying no weapons.

Mrs. Lame told the police, immediately on arrival, that the defendant had come in the store, wouldn’t speak, and went back into the living area where he was not supposed to go, after he had been told it was not customer area, and that he remained there approximately 15 minutes. She also told them she thought he was going to hold up the store; and that valuables were kept in the living area in back of the store.

Mr. Fowler testified that when the defendant was told to put his hands up, he was informed that he was under arrest. The officers testified, however, that there was no arrest made at that time.

*613 While the defendant was kept under surveillance outside the store, Deputy Swensen and Mrs. Lame went inside. There, Mrs. Lame told him that the defendant had come into the store, did not answer when she spoke to him, went into the back after she told him not to, and stayed in the store approximately 15 minutes. Mrs. Lame went behind the counter, demonstrated her position, and showed Deputy Swenson how the defendant acted. She told him that when the defendant walked in the front door he had a “fierce” look on his face; that she had spoken to him and he had said nothing, but continued in a deliberate manner toward the rear of the store, and as he started behind the counter, she told him it was not the place for customers. Mrs. Lame also told Deputy Swenson that defendant had been in the store quite a long time and that she thought his purpose in going behind the counter was to determine if anyone else was in the store. Mrs. Lame was not sure whether anything was disturbed or missing, because the defendant had been out of her sight.

Deputy Swenson then came out of the store and told Deputy Vaughn what Mrs. Lame had said, and that the defendant “looked like a fairly good robbery suspect.” Deputy Swenson asked the defendant a number of routine questions in straight English, but the answers were incoherent. So he used slang, and said to the defendant, “There is no use shucking and jiving. We know what has been happening around here. Let’s see what’s shaking,” and other similar statements. The defendant placed his hands down, looked through the “close of his eyelids,” rolled his head back and said, “Let’s dance.” Deputy Swenson formed the opinion that defendant was under the influence of narcotics.

Deputy Swenson and Mrs. Lame went back inside the store, after which Deputy Vaughn questioned the defendant and also formed the opinion that the latter was under the influence of narcotics. Deputy Vaughn asked the defendant his name, and where he lived, but received no answer. When the defendant was asked what he was doing there, he replied, “I was looking for a preacher in a C-47 Cadillac.” Deputy Vaughn requested the defendant to remove everything from his pockets, and found a Los Angeles County jail property envelope stamped with an “N,” which is the type given to narcotics suspects at the jail. The defendant stated that he had been arrested approximately one month prior for narcotics, and was a “poor sick hyp.” He said that he had taken a “shot” that afternoon, and that he was using “that real *614 good brown stuff.” The defendant also said that he had entered the store “to do some harm.”

After defendant had made these statements, he was informed that he was under arrest for suspicion of robbery and narcotics.

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Bluebook (online)
305 P.2d 996, 147 Cal. App. 2d 609, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-paul-calctapp-1957.