People v. Pineda

106 P.2d 25, 41 Cal. App. 2d 100, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 208
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 10, 1940
DocketCrim. 3395
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 106 P.2d 25 (People v. Pineda) 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. Pineda, 106 P.2d 25, 41 Cal. App. 2d 100, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 208 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

Appellant was charged in an information containing two counts with assault with intent to commit murder and with the crime of burglary. The jury returned its verdict finding appellant guilty as charged, and also found that he was armed at the time of the commission of each offense. This appeal is prosecuted from the judgment of conviction, it being urged: (1) that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction upon either count, “inasmuch as there was no proof as to the intent with which the shots were fired . . . (or) of the intent with which the entry into the building was made”; (2) that the court erred in failing to instruct the jury on the subject of intent; (3) that the court erred in refusing to give a certain instruction requested by appellant.

The facts which form the basis of the instant prosecution may be summarized briefly as follows:

Around the hour of 1:30 o ’clock in the morning of March 20, 1939, one Benjamin F. Sanford, who operated a grocery store in the city of Burbank, residing in a building at the rear thereof, was awakened by the buzzer of his electric burglar alarm at the head of his bed. He shut off the alarm and *102 looking through a window in Ms apartment saw two men trying to open one of the windows in the rear of the store building. A light was shining in the yard between the two buildings, the distance between them being approximately twenty feet. He waited until the men had opened the window with a bar and one of them had crawled into the store, when he called the police department of the city of Burbank and reported a burglary. He then obtained a shotgun from a closet and stationed himself at the door of his apartment facing the rear of the store. Shortly thereafter officer Loyd arrived in response to the call, and walking up to one of the intruders who was standing outside a window at the rear of the store, he ordered him to put up his hands or he would kill him. At that moment a shot was fired at said officer Loyd, either by the man standing outside the window or by the man who was inside the store. The man on the outside, who was later identified as John Lorton, surrendered to the officer who disarmed and handcuffed him. In the meantime, the man who had been inside the store came to the door holding a revolver in his hand and was told by Mr. Sanford to stick up his hands. He thereupon went back inside the store followed by officer Loyd, who was immediately fired upon, the shot creasing his arm. Officer Loyd jumped behind a pillar and two more shots were fired, the officer returning the fire. One of the shots allegedly fired by the assailant glanced off a wooden butter case, four or five feet from the ground, near the place where officer Loyd was standing; another shot struck the pillar behind which said officer had taken refuge, at a point three feet and ten inches from the ground; a third shot struck a gum rack and pierced the wall above the place where officer Loyd was standing.

At the trial officer Loyd testified with respect to the gun fight in the store as follows:

“ ... at that time Mr. Sanford said there was another man in the building, and with that I went to this rear door which was partially open, swung it wide open, looked in, and it looked to be kind of a storeroom, flashed my light and there was no one there, and then I saw a switch on the wall, so I went over to the switch and put the light on, the switch on, and with that, instead of lighting up the whole building, it threw a light directly over me and just as the light came on there was a shot and I felt my arm apparently numb. . . . *103 I jumped behind a pillar, an upright pillar, about five feet from me, which is about ten inches square, and I waited for an instant, and I called to this man, whoever he was, to stand up. ... I could not see anyone, no, but the rest of the store was in semi-darkness. I called to him twice but there wasn’t any sound, or any reply, and not knowing where the man was, I took my cap off, kind of held it to one side, and when I did there was another shot. Well, that gave me the location of where this man was, and then I returned the fire, and after I had shot the one time there was another shot towards me; I did not know at the time where that shot had gone. I returned two more shots and then everything was quiet, so I kept waiting, thinking I would hear some person, and I saw the front door start to open; you could just see the light from the street and the only thing I could see, it looked just like over the top of a man’s head or hat, as he slid out the front door, and that is when I called to officer Evans, when I saw this front door start to open, to look out, that he was coming out. Immediately a'fter that there was a shot outside, so I went back then and took the man that Mr. Sanford was guarding. ’ ’

Appellant was arrested in Porterville and brought back to Burbank by Chief of Police Adams of the latter city, who testified that he had a conversation with appellant on the return trip, to-wit: “I was talking to him about the burglary of the Sanford Market and the shooting of the officer—shooting at him, rather, and he said yes, that he did, but that he did not mean to hit the officer, that he shot at him to scare him so that he could get away. I asked him what kind of a gun he used. He said it was a 30-30 rifle with the barrel sawed off. ... I said, ‘Well, you know that we had Johnny’ ■—speaking of Johnny Lorton—I said, ‘You know we had him up and tried him on the charge and he testified that you made him go in there and shoot at the officer and burglarize this place or that you would kill him.’ He says, ‘I did not say that.’ He says, ‘Johnny and I went out there together. We broke in the store ... I went in first and . . . Johnny held the gun,’ meaning the 30-30, and also that Johnny had a revolver and that ‘if Johnny wanted to get away or wanted to kill me, ... he could have, because I am the one that went in the store. ’ So then when we got down home I booked him and locked him up . . . and then I called Johnny in the *104 office and Pineda (appellant) in the office, and I asked Pineda to tell me the same story he had told me yesterday, so he related the same story ... in the presence of Lorton. First, Lorton said that it was not true, that Pineda was lying, so then he changed his mind and Pineda says, ‘Well, why don’t you tell the truth?’ He (Lorton) changed his mind and said it was not true, that he had just lied to just get out of the other ease.” This witness also testified that on the day of the preliminary trial, Lorton took the witness stand and related the same conversation that he had told him.

Appellant took the stand in his own defense, denied firing the shots or entering the building, and attempted to place the blame on one Frank Lopez, whose whereabouts was not disclosed. Appellant admitted he told Chief of Police Adams that he had been a participant in the burglary and had shot at officer Loyd; that he made these admissions because he was trying to protect his friend, Frank Lopez.

John Lorton, the man who was caught at the scene of the crime and who was later tried and acquitted, testified on behalf of appellant. On direct examination he said it was not appellant who had been at the store with him on the night in question, but Frank Lopez. On cross-examination, he admitted perjury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 P.2d 25, 41 Cal. App. 2d 100, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-pineda-calctapp-1940.