People v. Ross

264 P. 314, 89 Cal. App. 132, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 148
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 9, 1928
DocketDocket No. 1398.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 264 P. 314 (People v. Ross) 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. Ross, 264 P. 314, 89 Cal. App. 132, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 148 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

Appellant was found guilty of the crime of rape and has appealed from the judgment of conviction and the order denying his motion for a new trial. Iiis defense was that he was not present at the time or place of the alleged crime, and on this appeal he contends that the testimony offered in support of his alibi, when considered with other circumstances shown by the evidence, proves that he is the victim of mistaken identity, and that therefore the verdict is contrary to the evidence.

It appears from the record that the crime was committed upon a young married woman named DiFiori in her home on a small ranch just outside the city of San Jose, where she lived with her husband and infant child. On the day in question, October 18, 1926, she had been left alone with her baby while her husband went to San Jose to repair his automobile. About ten minutes past noon a strange man called and inquired for her husband, stating that he was a salesman from Cuthbert’s garage and wanted to interest him in the purchase of an automobile. The prosecutrix told him that her husband was in San Jose at Drake’s garage, *135 but was expected home soon for lunch. The man said he would return later and started to leave.BGelieving he had gone, she went into the bedroom to feed her baby. As she picked up the child she heard the outside screen door open and someone walk into the house. She jumped up hurriedly and had proceeded as far as the foot of the bed when this same man suddenly appeared at the bedroom door armed with a pistol which he pointed at her and said: “Don’t scream or I will shoot you." You know what happened to those other women will happen to you if you make any objections to what I am going to do.” In explanation of the foregoing threat it may be stated, as suggested in appellant’s brief, that there was considerable excitement and fear in certain parts of the state at this particular time on account of several women having been ravished and brutally murdered in their homes by an unknown criminal. Having these crimes in mind and being terrified by the man’s threat, the prosecutrix made no outcry. Thereupon he forced her backward on to the bed and while pressing the pistol against her perpetrated the crime charged. As he left the room he threatened to “come and get” the prosecutrix if he saw “anything in the papers or anything like that.” The prosecutrix followed bim out of the house on to the porch for the purpose of obtaining the number of the license plate on his automobile which he had parked in the yard, but upon observing her the man turned and pointing the pistol at her exclaimed: “Go back in the house or I will shoot you”; whereupon she stepped back behind the screen door. Just then her husband drove up in an automobile and stopped on the highway at the entrance to their property to look into the mail-box, and while he was doing so this man drove out of the property close to and waved his hand at him. As DiFiori then drove toward the house he saw that his wife was much excited and crying, and she told him what had happened. DiFiori quickly turned his machine around and took up the pursuit of the man, chasing him down the highway into San Jose, where the man followed a circuitous route for some distance and finally disappeared. During the pursuit down the highway and soon after leaving the scene of the crime the two machines were driven past two road employees of the county who were sitting on the side of the highway eating their *136 lunch. The attention of these men was especially attracted to the first machine on account of the excessive rate of speed it was traveling, one remarking to the other, “That guy is coming like somebody was after him”; and for that reason, as they afterward testified, they carefully observed the driver of the car and his machine, noting, among other things, that the machine bore no rear license plate. They also recognized DiFiori, with whom they were acquainted, as he followed closely behind the first car. The prosecutrix definitely fixed the time of the commission of the crime at ten minutes past 12, having looked at the clock just before she entered the bedroom to feed her baby, and her testimony as to the time was corroborated by that of her husband and of the county employees. The man was described by the witnesses as having worn a dark suit of clothes and a gray hat, and the machine as being a Ford coupe with white wire wheels. The husband also noted when the car passed closely by him at the entrance to his home that the rear license plate was missing and that one of the rear tires was of the make known as a “Royal Cord.” Full descriptions of the perpetrator of the crime and of his automobile were furnished the sheriff’s office soon after the man disappeared on the streets of San Jose.

The day following the attack appellant was apprehended in a small grocery-store in San Jose owned by appellant’s mother-in-law and which appellant and his wife helped to operate, and was positively identified by the prosecutrix and her husband as being the perpetrator of the crime. They were equally positive in their identification of him at the trial. They also identified an automobile belonging to appellant’s wife as being the one he was using at the time. It was a Ford coupe equipped with white wire wheels, the rear license plate was missing, and one of the rear wheels was mounted with a “Royal Cord” tire; and appellant admitted when arrested and also at the trial that he used this car in going to lunch about 11 o’clock in the morning, on the day the crime was committed. Moreover, appellant admitted that he owned a dark suit of clothes and a gray hat, the only discrepancy in the description of the clothing being that his suit was made of blue serge material, whereas the prosecutrix described the suit this man was wearing as being dark with a fine white stripe; but owing to the feeling *137 of terror with which the prosecutrix was seized at the time of the attack, it is not strange that she was mistaken as to a minute description of her assailant’s clothing. Soon after his arrest appellant denied ever having owned a pistol, but when told of a statement made by his mother-in-law to the effect that he had owned such a weapon, claimed that some time prior to the date of the crime he had given the pistol to a friend in Oakland. The two county employees also positively identified appellant as being the man who was being pursued down the highway, and they likewise identified his wife’s automobile as being the car appellant was at that time driving.

With reference to appellant’s alibi, he testified that on the day in question he was in charge of the grocery-store until about 11 o’clock in the morning, when he was relieved from duty by his wife so that he might go to lunch at the home of his mother-in-law, which, the evidence shows, was located not far from the store, but about three miles distant from the home of the prosecutrix; that he drove to his mother-in-law’s home in his wife’s coupe, and after washing and shaving, sat down to lunch; that after he had eaten he walked back to the store, arriving there about ten or fifteen minutes past 12, and that his wife then went home to lunch, leaving him alone in the store, where he remained the rest of the day. His testimony as to his movements was corroborated generally by that of his wife and her mother.

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Bluebook (online)
264 P. 314, 89 Cal. App. 132, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ross-calctapp-1928.