People v. Robinson

239 Cal. App. 2d 579, 49 Cal. Rptr. 25, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1798
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 1966
DocketCrim. No. 10828
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 239 Cal. App. 2d 579 (People v. Robinson) 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. Robinson, 239 Cal. App. 2d 579, 49 Cal. Rptr. 25, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1798 (Cal. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

JEFFERSON, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment entered upon defendant’s conviction of murder in the first degree. The jury fixed the penalty at life imprisonment. Defendant previously was tried and convicted for the same offense and given the death penalty. However, the judgment was reversed and the case remanded for a new trial by our Supreme Court in People v. Robinson, 61 Cal.2d 373 [38 Cal.Rptr. 890, 392 P.2d 970].

On Saturday night, February 3, 1962, there was a dance held at the Fox Hills Country Club which lasted until the early morning hours of Sunday, February 4th. After all of [581]*581the patrons had left the club, Lewis Grego, the bartender, gave the night’s receipts from the cash register in the main dining room to Cyril Morrisey, the night manager. Morrisey placed the money in his office safe and followed Grego back towards the dining room. As he entered the dining room he heard Grego shout, “There’s three of them.” He saw that Grego was surrounded by three persons wearing masks over their faces. One of these persons had an object resembling “a rod or a broomstick” in his hand. He then heard “two explosions.” He remembered nothing after that until he awoke in a hospital three weeks later.

When the police arrived at the country club at about 1:30 a.m. they found Grego dead. His body was slumped in a booth in the dining room. Morrisey was observed lying wounded on the floor nearby. Grego had been killed by a shotgun blast in the face and neck. Morrisey had shotgun wounds in the back. Numerous particles of shotgun wadding as well as two spent shotgun shells were found near Grego’s body. On the club parking lot the police officers found an abandoned black 1950 Ford convertible facing down the driveway of the club toward the exit. It was parked across rather than in between the delineated white parking lines. The car’s gears were jammed and it was inoperable. The rear license plate was covered by a rag. A cloth mask was found lying about three car lengths away from the automobile. Another similar mask was found on the club golf course. Two of four identifiable fingerprints lifted from the Ford were identified as defendant’s. One of the prints was on the dashboard, about a half inch from the starter, and the other was on the ashtray.

At about 2:30 a.m. on February 4, deputy sheriffs Franzese and Walener were on patrol when they heard an all-unit radio report that a robbery and shooting had occurred at the Fox Hills Country Club. At 3 a.m. they were called and instructed to go to a certain location where they would meet an officer who would give them further instructions concerning this robbery. They met the officer as instructed and were told that a car was found abandoned at the country club which the police thought was involved in the robbery; the car was registered to 1100 West 49th Street (no name was given); they were to find the registered owner. They were also told that it was believed a shotgun was used in the robbery “due to the injuries of the victims.” The deputies [582]*582proceeded to 1100 West 49th Street and found it to be a four-unit apartment house. They arrived at about 4:15 or 4:30 a.m. They observed that the lights were on in the lower right side apartment. The other three apartments were dark. They walked through the entry hall and approached the door of the lighted apartment. The door was open “a foot or so.” They knocked and identified themselves. They could see a man (defendant), who was fully dressed (with a jacket on), sitting on the floor of the room, and another man standing in his shorts nearby. The officers “didn’t want to get shot,” and therefore, as “a matter of just precaution,” they stepped inside the apartment with drawn guns and ordered both men to face the wall and to put their hands on the wall.

One of the officers asked who owned the 1950 Ford convertible, and defendant replied that he did, motioning to his pocket and at the same time explaining that he had the pink slip in his pocket. The officer removed the pink slip and a set of car keys from defendant’s pocket. (The car keys were later found to fit the ignition of the 1950 Ford found in the Fox Hills parking lot.) Alfred Campbell, the man in the room with defendant, stated that he had owned the car previously, having sold it to defendant the day before. (Campbell was the registered owner.) Defendant told the officers that the ear had been stolen from him the previous day or evening. However, a Los Angeles police unit dispatched to go to the apartment house to make out a stolen car report did not arrive until 4:30 a.m. on February 4th shortly after defendant was arrested.

At the time of his arrest defendant also told the officers that his cousin lived in the apartment upstairs on the left side of the building. Willie Hickman, the person to whom defendant referred, was employed as a night porter at the Fox Hills Country Club. He was on duty the night of the murder. He and another night porter, Arthur Johnson, together with the victims Grego and Morrisey, were the only persons still on duty when the shooting occurred. Defendant had been employed at the club for about four months sometime before the shooting. A search of Hickman’s apartment turned up an empty gun case and a piece of cloth similar in material to the masks found at the country club. A shotgun was discovered in the foliage near the entrance to Holy Cross Cemetery which is next door to the country club. The spent [583]*583shotgun shells found next to Gr ego’s body were fired from this gun.

Defendant’s grandfather, Willie Vann, owned a shotgun. He discovered that it was missing sometime during February 1962. He also owned a gun case designed to carry the shotgun. He testified that neither the gun found at the cemetery nor the gun case found in Hickman’s apartment were his. However, he admitted that at the preliminary examination he had testified that they were similar to his missing gun and gun ease.

On the night of the shooting at Fox Hills, a 1950 Chevrolet was stolen from its parking place about 5 blocks away from the country club. It was later found parked 6 or 7 blocks away from the apartment where defendant was arrested.

Defendant was seen by a neighbor standing beside a black Ford convertible with two or three other men at approximately 6:30 Saturday evening February 3. The neighbor observed that there was a shotgun inside the car which resembled the shotgun found outside the cemetery.

During the course of the trial, the court, out of the presence of the jury, heard testimony on the issue of the admissibility of a recorded confession made by defendant to the police after his arrest. The court ruled that the confession was inadmissible on the grounds that it was secured through physical duress and coercion, and because defendant had not been advised of his rights to counsel and to remain silent prior to the confession. However, after the prosecution’s case was completed and the defense had rested, the court allowed the prosecution to reopen its case to permit the jury to hear a statement made by defendant just prior to the formal confession. The following testimony was heard by the jury:

“By Mr. Webb : [Deputy District Attorney.]
“Q. Sergeant Wrona, directing your attention to February the 5th, 1962, were you at Lennox Station any time during that day ? A. I was.
“Q. And was your partner, Sergeant Wrona, with you? A. Sergeant Human.

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Bluebook (online)
239 Cal. App. 2d 579, 49 Cal. Rptr. 25, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-robinson-calctapp-1966.