People v. Roach

306 P.2d 523, 148 Cal. App. 2d 364, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2371
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 1957
DocketCrim. 3286
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 306 P.2d 523 (People v. Roach) 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. Roach, 306 P.2d 523, 148 Cal. App. 2d 364, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2371 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

Defendant was convicted by a jury of second degree burglary. He appeals from the judgment of conviction.

Questions Pbesented

1. Alleged error of the trial court in admission of certain evidence including evidence of other crimes and evidence for purposes of impeachment.

2. Was the testimony of the accomplice Winn corroborated ?

Evidence

On March 22, 1956, defendant and one Winn entered the Pie-N-Pac Market in El Cerrito. The two came up to the check stand. Defendant went on through. Winn placed some articles on the stand. Winn apparently noticed that Smith, the assistant manager of the market, was looking at him while phoning. Winn told the checker he had forgotten something, left the check stand, walked to the mayonnaise section, pausing there, and then left the store without going back to the check stand. Smith could only see his head as he walked along. There was no one else around. Smith immediately went to the mayonnaise section and found there four cartons of cigarettes which were not there two minutes before. Suspecting that defendant and Winn were attempting to steal cigarettes, Smith had the police called and instructed clerk Sanders to follow Winn and get the license number of his car. Sanders testified that the two men were together in various parts of the store. It was when Smith went to the phone that Winn said he had forgotten something and went to the mayonnaise section. Sanders followed Winn and took the license number of the ear that Winn got in. Defendant was then in the driver’s seat.

March 31, 1956, Winn entered another Pie-N-Pae Market (this time in Berkeley). Defendant waited for him in his ear. It bore the license number taken by Sanders. The store employees had been alerted to the attempted theft at the other store and had been given the license number of the car involved. Finding the license number to be the same, the store manager called the police. Assistant Manager Barton saw Winn putting cigarettes in the lining of his jacket. As *367 Winn was leaving the store Barton followed him. Outside the store Barton hollered to Winn, who then started running. Barton ran after him and saw him throw down three or four cartons of cigarettes. During the chase Barton saw defendant in his car following as near as possible Winn’s line of flight and honking his horn. Winn cut across lots and was eventually caught by Barton. Winn still had some cartons of cigarettes bearing the store stamp in his jacket.

Winn testified at the trial as a prosecution witness. He admitted that he and defendant had stolen from other stores and that on March 31st they had gone to the Berkeley Pic-NPac Market in defendant’s car to steal something so they could finance a trip to San Francisco. Winn obtained the jacket from defendant. It had slits in it. (Apparently these made it easier to insert the stolen cigarettes.) Defendant waited in his car for Winn.

1. Admission of Evidence, (a) Defendant following chase.

Barton, after describing his chase of Winn, was asked if he noticed anything unusual while doing so. He then testified to seeing defendant following in his car honking his horn. Defendant’s contention that this evidence was inadmissible is without merit. In the first place, he made no objection to it. Secondly, it tended to show defendant’s connection with the crime and to corroborate Winn’s testimony that defendant was waiting for him to return to the car with the spoils. As said in People v. Bennett, 132 Cal.App.2d 569, 576 [282 P.2d 590], a conspiracy may be proved by indirect evidence and inferences justified by the circumstances. The circumstances here were entirely different from those in People v. Stevens, 68 Cal. 113 [8 P. 712], where the court held inadmissible evidence that one Harrigan and two others, none of whom were in anywise connected with the defendant in the case, were looking in the window of a store where the defendant was endeavoring to sell boots similar to those which had been stolen, and ran away when they saw the witness coming. Here defendant’s connection with Winn and the use of the car in a prior attempted theft as well as this one were well established.

(b) The incident of March 22d.

Defendant contends that the evidence before related concerning the attempted theft of cigarettes is not sufficient, to establish the commission of a crime and therefore inadmissible at the trial of this separate offense. Defendant re *368 lies upon the language of People v. Albertson, 23 Cal.2d 550 [145 P.2d 7], where the court, after pointing out that evidence of other crimes may be admitted when it helps to disclose motive, intent, premeditation, guilty knowledge, malice or a common plan or scheme, stated that such proof, however, should be received with extreme caution and must show some connection between the other crime and the crime charged, and it must be shown with reasonable certainty that the accused committed the other crime. The test as given in that case is that the proof must afford “ ‘substantial evidence’ ” (p. 579) that the prior offense was in fact committed by the defendant. The evidence that Winn and defendant were attempting on March 22d to steal cigarettes and were only deterred by the fact that Winn assumed that the store manager, whom he saw telephoning and watching him, was calling the police, is substantial and meets that test. Comparing the modus operandi between the attempted crime and that charged we find it to be the same. In both the same two persons were involved in a common plan, the same criminal intent appeared, Pie-N-Pac Markets were involved, the same car, which belonged to defendant, used, and even the same brand of cigarettes chosen. See People v. Grimes, 113 Cal.App.2d 365 [248 P.2d 130], which discusses the effect of similar modus operandi and also points out that the question of whether the other offense shows a general pattern, scheme, or plan and are sufficiently similar and possess a sufficiently high degree of common features with the act charged to warrant the inference that if the defendant committed the other acts he committed the act charged, is a primary question for the trial court to determine and then to instruct the jury as to the limited purpose for which the evidence is admitted. This the court did in our case.

(e) Impeachment.

Plaintiff called as its witness defendant’s brother-in-law Watts, confined in the Alameda County Prison Farm for “Vag addict and petty theft.” Plaintiff asked without objection “have you been involved in taking merchandise from various stores in this area with your brother-in-law?” The witness said “No.” Thereupon, claiming surprise and damage, plaintiff asked, again without objection and in some detail, if the witness had not told the examiner and Inspector McDonough that he had, and that he, the defendant and Winn had done so. The witness first said he did not remember.

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Bluebook (online)
306 P.2d 523, 148 Cal. App. 2d 364, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-roach-calctapp-1957.