People v. Rabalete

82 P.2d 707, 28 Cal. App. 2d 480, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 567
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 20, 1938
DocketCrim. 3109
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 82 P.2d 707 (People v. Rabalete) 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. Rabalete, 82 P.2d 707, 28 Cal. App. 2d 480, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 567 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

In an amended information containing two counts appellant was charged with violations of subdivisions 2 and 3 of section 337a of the Penal Code, which section denounces as a crime the maintenance or occupancy of a place for the purpose of recording or registering bets on horse races; or the receiving, holding or forwarding of bets or wagers upon such contests. Trial had before the court sitting without a jury resulted in the conviction of appellant on both counts. This is an appeal from the judgments and from the order denying appellant’s motion for a new trial.

The factual background of the prosecution’s case was supplied in the main by the testimony of police officer M. Stuart Jones, who in substance testified that he had been employed in the vice division of the Los Angeles city police department since February of 1937, and that for some three months he had devoted himself exclusively to investigating bookmaking establishments and was familiar with the routine procedure and machinery of these establishments. On the third of January, 1938, the officer went to the Douglas Building, 255 South Spring Street, in the city of Los Angeles, about 1 o’clock in the afternoon. At this address the defendant maintains a large bookstore on the ground floor of the building, with approximately one hundred feet of open frontage upon the street. There the officer saw the defendant and several others behind the counter making notations on paper and taking money from different people. While the officer was talking to a man behind the counter he heard the defendant, five or six feet from him, in conversation with another unidentified man, utter the following words: “242 to show.’’ At the same time the defendant was handed some paper money which to the witness looked like a dollar bill. After this statement was made the defendant, according to the witness, made a notation on a slip of paper, turned directly about, walked about six feet to a shelf, took down a book and placed the slip of paper therein. The book to which refer *482 ence was made was volume II of “World’s Popular Encyclopedia”, and was identified by the witness at the trial as being the book in which the slip was placed by the defendant, after which the book was received in evidence. Certain slips of paper were found in this book which were also received in evidence. The police officer testified that in connection with his official duties as an investigator of bookmaking establishments, he had theretofore seen slips of paper similar to the ones taken from the book, and that they were commonly called “betting markers” and were used for the purpose of recording bets on race horses. The witness also stated that the letters A, B and C, which appeared on these “markers” were used to indicate respectively bets placed on the winner of the race; the horse to come in second in the race; and the horse to come in third. O'n the counter in the store, about eight feet from where the books were, there was found a back sheet of a racing form which bore the .date, January 3, 1938. This form purported to contain the names of entries of horses, races, the post times of races, and other information relating to them. At the trial the officer compared the number 242 appearing on the “marker” numbered exhibit 1 with the racing form received as People’s exhibit 8, and found that this number appeared opposite the name of a horse, “Ladino”, which was to race at the New Orleans Fair Grounds on January 3d. The witness also testified that the markings on exhibit 1 indicated that one dollar had been bet on this horse to come in third. In this connection it should here be remembered, however, that the evidence clearly showed that none of the markings upon these exhibits or betting slips were in the handwriting of the defendant, although the officer testified he saw the defendant writing something upon one of the slips or markers and place the same in the book. It was also testified by the officer that he personally attempted to place a bet on a horse with the defendant, but the latter refused to accept the bet, the officer’s testimony in this connection being as follows: “He said that he (the defendant) didn’t know me and I would have to get somebody to know me, that knew me, that he couldn’t take my bet.”

Following this last-mentioned episode, the officer went out upon the sidewalk and around the corner of the building, where he received a signal from a fellow officer; whereupon *483 both policemen reentered the store, at which time, the testimony indicates, somebody said “Cops!” and everyone made a hasty retreat, with the exception of the defendant, who was the owner of the store. Upon the person of the defendant was found the sum of $192, and when the arrest was made a search of the premises revealed numerous sheets, called “National Scratch Sheets”; also a full pad of slips similar to those received in evidence. The “National Scratch Sheets” were so-called “tip sheets” which are sold at newsstands and contain the entries, names and numbers of horses and recommendations of favorites in various horse races.

Appellant first challenges the validity of the conviction under count 1 of the amended information on the ground that the trial court fell into error in admitting into evidence a fragmentary part of a conversation had between appellant and an unidentified man, and which words, it is contended by appellant, constitute the only evidence from which his guilt could be inferred. As heretofore stated, the conversation occurred when the officer first entered the store, when, according to the officer, he observed appellant “take his pencil and mark on paper and repeat, ‘242 to show’. That is all the conversation I got. ’ ’ The officer then testified with reference to the conduct of the defendant in placing the slip upon which he had written in a book as hereinbefore set forth. Defendant’s objection to the introduction into evidence of the three words uttered by him was overruled and his motion to strike the same was denied.

The importance of this ruling becomes at once apparent, because it was conceded at the trial that when the book into which the officer testified the defendant placed the slip upon which he had written was seized and examined, none of the racing paraphernalia in the form of betting markers or slips abstracted from the book bore any of defendant’s handwriting. Therefore, to connect defendant with the taking of a bet, his guilt must be predicated upon the assumption that the words uttered by him, “242 to show”, indicated the taking by him of a bet upon a horse race which it was proved at the trial was being that day run at New Orleans, and in which race a horse named Ladino, bearing number 242, was running. While it is true that some slips, forms and other paraphernalia common to establishments maintained for the *484 reception of bets on horse races were found at the book store, the evidentiary value, if any, of such paraphernalia was in our opinion correctly appraised by the court in the following language addressed to the district attorney:

“ . . . But you have not connected the defendant with them. The mere fact that he has a large book store with a large number of books in it and you find several books segregated in one place and you find something in one of those books, unless you can find defendant had something to do with it or he at least knew it was there, I don’t see how you tie him up with it.

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Bluebook (online)
82 P.2d 707, 28 Cal. App. 2d 480, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rabalete-calctapp-1938.