People v. Peck

185 P. 881, 43 Cal. App. 638, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 872
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 18, 1919
DocketCrim. No. 482.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 185 P. 881 (People v. Peck) 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. Peck, 185 P. 881, 43 Cal. App. 638, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 872 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant, jointly with one Elton Frazier, was charged with the crime of extortion. He demanded and received a separate trial, was found guilty by the jury, and was sentenced to state’s prison, and now prosecutes this appeal from the judgment.

*641 On January 27, 1919, the prosecuting witness, Louis Wing, was living on a farm near Crescent Mills, in Plumas County. He testified that he had known the defendant Peck for fifteen or twenty years and the defendant Frazier for about three years; that, at about five minutes to 3, on the morning of January 27, 1919, the defendants came to his house, knocked at the door, and asked to come in. Peck said he was cold and asked Wing to build a fire, which he did. As to what then occurred, Wing testified: “Peck says, ‘Take a chair and sit down and be sociable,’ which I did in my underclothes, and he says to me, ‘Will you dance to my fiddling?’ I says, ‘I have, George, and I guess I can again,’ and he says, ‘Well, you are going to, now.’ I looked up—he had a gun stuck in my face. I asked him what he would do. He says he was going to kill me. I asked him what I had done. There was a rock put in some grain at the ranch when he was threshing there and the grain didn’t belong to me, but it didn’t do any harm. The rock was found before it went into the machine. He said I knew how it got in there and I was going to tell him. I told him I was just as innocent as a new-born baby and I didn’t know who put it in there. . . . And he kept on going to make me tell.” There was some further conversation in which Frazier said Wing had called him a slacker, which the latter denied. The witness testified that Peck said, “You know very well if we go away and leave you here you will get me arrested.” Wing said, “I promised him faithfully that I would not if he would let me go. At that time he ordered Elton Frazier to pull that gun and he did, but he never pointed it at me. . . . George Peck wanted me to put up something to keep my mouth shut after I faithfully promised him I wouldn’t get him arrested, which I did; I put up $62.25. It was $63.25 and I asked him for one dollar back, and he gave me a dollar and took the $62.25 away with them when they left the house.” It appeared that the money was in Wing’s pants pocket in his bedroom. He testified: “Peck ordered Frazier to go and get it and Frazier went and got it and counted it out on the table, and I asked him for this dollar back and he gave it to me and he shut the purse up and handed it to Peck and that is the last I see of the money until I went back from here and it was given to me by different parties.” *642 Asked why he permitted the defendants to take the money, Wing said, “Through fear, I had to give it up to them. I would give them anything I got for to get them to stop.” He said he told them where the money was and made no objection to their taking it. He was asked if defendants gave any reason for taking the money, and answered, “It was put up as a forfeit so I wouldn’t get them arrested for pulling those guns on me and threatening my life.”

It further appears that, on the afternoon of the twenty-seventh day of January, the defendant was at the home of his brother, Joseph Peck, residing a short distance from the house occupied by Wing and in which the trouble occurred. Mrs. Peck, the wife of Joseph, remarked to the defendant that she saw Wing and the “Stampfli bunch” (the Stamp-Sis were residents of the Crescent Mills section and friends of Wing), going toward Quincy (the county seat of Plumas County), and, she said, “I .wondered what they were going for,” and the defendant replied, “I guess he was going over to have me arrested.” Mrs. Peck asked defendant what reason Wing had for having him arrested, and the accused explained the episode occurring at Wing’s house early that morning, but said it was all merely a joke or “done for fun.” The defendant then left his brother’s house and within a few minutes thereafter Glen Peck, son of Joseph and Mrs. Peek, appeared at the latter’s home, gave his mother Wing’s purse and the money taken from Wing by defendant and Frazier, and requested her to deliver the purse and its contents to Wing. Mrs. Peck took the purse and the money to Wing's house and placed them on a table in one of the rooms. Wing, on returning home, found the purse and the full amount of money taken from him as above explained.

It is first contended by appellant that the crime committed, if any, was robbery and not extortion. This question was first raised by a motion made by defendant that the court instruct the jury to bring in a verdict of not guilty, after the district attorney, in his opening statement, had told the jury that the defendant had taken the money from Wing by putting him in fear of bodily injury because of the display of firearms,

*643 1. At the common law, extortion was confined to the unlawful taking by any officer, by color of his office, of any money or thing of value that is not due to him, or more than is due or before it is due, and it is so defined. In most of the states the crime of extortion is defined by statutes which are substantially declaratory of the common-law offense. (8 R. C. L. 315.) In some instances, however, the statutory definitions have extended the scope of the offense beyond that of the common law so as to include the unlawful taking of money or thing of value of another by any person, whether a public officer or a private individual, and this is so in California, as will be observed from the language of section 518 of the Penal Code, which reads as follows: “Extortion is the obtaining of property from another, with his consent, induced by a wrongful use of force or fear, or under color of official right. ’ ’

[1] Thus, it will be noted, in this state the crime may be committed by any person, but to constitute the crime of extortion in any case, the taking of the property must be with the consent of the person from whom it is obtained; and it is the fact that the property taken must be with the consent of the person from whom it is obtained that distinguishes the crime of extortion from that of robbery, the latter crime being defined as “the felonious taking of personal property in the possession of another, from his person or immediate presence, and against his will, accomplished by means of force or fear.” (Pen. Code, sec. 211.)

From the evidence, the jury were warranted in finding these facts, as impliedly they did: That the defendant assaulted and threatened to inflict bodily injury upon Wing upon the pretext that the latter had said some unkind things about the accused; that Wing was very much frightened and was possessed of a fear that the defendant and his companion, Frazier, had called at his house with the intention of injuring him and that they intended to do so; that after Wing explained and protested that he had not made the statements about the defendant attributed to him by the latter, the accused asked Wing to promise him that he (Wing) would not institute a proceeding in the courts against him for assault; that Wing promised not to do so if the defendant would not injure him, and that thereupon *644

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 P. 881, 43 Cal. App. 638, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-peck-calctapp-1919.