People v. Serpa

154 P.2d 6, 67 Cal. App. 2d 327, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1315
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 1944
DocketCrim. 2303
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 154 P.2d 6 (People v. Serpa) 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. Serpa, 154 P.2d 6, 67 Cal. App. 2d 327, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1315 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*329 KNIGHT, J.

The appellant, William Serpa, was found guilty by a jury of the crime of second degree robbery, and he has appealed from the judgment of conviction and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The robbery was committed in the Mission District, San Francisco, by two men. The identity of one of the men was not ascertained, and so far as the record shows he has never been apprehended. Appellant was taken into custody on the same day the crime was committed, and later charged with the commission thereof. As a defense to the charge he sought to prove an alibi, but it was rejected by the jury; and the first point urged by appellant in support of the appeal is that the evidence is insufficient to support the jury’s finding on the question of his guilt. There is no merit in the point.

Appellant was a shipyard employee; and at the timé of the robbery he was on parole from San Quentin Prison wherein he had served part of a sentence for second degree burglary. At the time of his arraignment he answered that his true name was William Serpa, but at the trial he testified that his true name was Herbert William Serpa. The victim of the robbery was Adolph M. Lapsic. Less than two months prior to the date on which he was robbed he had received an honorable discharge from the United States Marine Corps on account of a fractured spine sustained by him while filling an assignment as instructor of engineering at a training camp near San Diego; and it was mainly on his testimony that the conviction herein was obtained. While his testimony was conflicting on some points, it is beyond question legally sufficient to support the finding of the jury that appellant was one of the robbers.

Among the essential facts established thereby were the following: During the latter part of the month of December, 1943, Lapsic was living on Valencia Street, and a few days before Christmas, about 10:30 o’clock in the evening, he visited a so-called tavern located on Valencia Street between 16th and 17th Streets. Among those present were a number of sailors, and the appellant and a companion whose identity was not ascertained, but who was described as “a heavy set man.” During the evening Lapsic made the acquaintance of appellant and his companion, and at closing time a party consisting of appellant, his companion, Lapsic, and two or three of Lapsic’s friends, one of whom was a woman, left the tavern together and went to a nearby apartment house wherein liquors were sold. Upon arriving there, however, they found *330 that the place was filled. It was then past midnight, and rather than wait around to get into the place, Lapsic’s friends went away,' and' he remained with appellant and his companion. After the others had gone appellant and his companion invited Lapsic to go to appellant’s apartment to have some drinks, and Lapsic consented. Soon afterwards, appellant arid his companion leading the way, all three entered a blind alley, whereupon the heavy set man seized Lapsic from behind, arid as he did so either he or appellant said: “This is a .stick-up.” The heavy set man then proceeded to pinion Lapsic’s arms behind him, and press something against Lapsie’s hack which Lapsic took to be a weapon of some kind. Thereupon the two men took from Lapsic his wallet, a seventeen-jewelled gold wrist watch, and his Marine Corps insignia ring. They then proceeded to undress Lapsic to look for a riioney belt, after which they extracted the money from the wallet and gave him back the empty wallet, his ring and fifty cents for carfare. Appellant then' ordered Lapsic to walk toward the farther end of the alley, and threatened that if he turned around during the next fifteen minutes they would blow his brains,put. Lapsic waited about five minutes and then notified the police. ; Meanwhile appellant and his companion disappeared. , About. eight o’clock that evening Lapsic again went, to the tavern and looking through the doorway saw appellant standing at the bar. Lapsic immediately went across the street and phoned to the. police. Two officers responded ip. a patrol car, and Lapsic pointed out appellant as one of the men ,who had robbed him. One of the officers said to Lapsicj “A?e,you positive?” and Lapsic replied, “Absolutely, that is the man.” The officers then placed appellant under arrest and took- him to the -police station. There appellant denied having participated in the robbery.; but according to the. officer’s testimony appellant went on to say that he was ‘.‘■behind the- eight ball” because he was on parole from San Quentin, and that if he was arrested on the charge of robbery h,eknew “he-was a cinch to go back”; and that if he could “do,-it” he would “pay the man off so much a week, to get out of this fuss. ’ ’ Later, at the trial, Lapsic again positively identified appellant as one .of the men who had robbed him. In view of the foregoing facts it would seem that no argument is required to demonstrate that the evidence is legally sufficient to sustain the verdict.

The witnesses by whom appellant sought to .prove an alibi were,. besides himself, his sister and a girl then living *331 with his sister, and the substance of their testimony was that on the night of the robbery appellant was visiting his mother at her home in San Rafael; that he arrived there about eight o’clock in the evening and did not leave until about two o’clock the next afternoon. It is evident, however, that the jury was not convinced of the truth of the testimony • thus offered by appellant to establish an alibi; and under well'settled rules it is within the exclusive province of the jury to pass upon the credibility of the witnesses and to determine the weight that shall be given to this testimony. In other words, the alibi testimony offered by appellant and his witnesses at the most merely raised a conflict in the evidence. Moreover, in addition to Lapsic’s positive testimony, that appellant was one of the men who robbed him, the bartender of the tavern testified in rebuttal to the effect that he believed that he saw appellant on the night of the robbery sitting in a restaurant across the street from the tavern; that while he was not sure appellant was the man he saw, he was 1 ‘pretty positive of it”—that he “looked like the man.”

In further support of the appeal counsel for appellant calls attention to portions of Lapsic’s cross-examination showing discrepancies between the testimony given by him at the trial and that given by him at the preliminary examination, relating to the amount of money of which he was robbed and as to what occurred in the tavern during the evening before closing time. Appellant was doubtless entitled to cross-examine as to those matters for the purpose of impeachment, but obviously, even though such discrepancies were shown, the subject matter thereof was not of vital importance to the prosecution’s case, for the reason that the determinative issue of fact the jury was called upon to decide was not as to how much was taken from appellant nor what occurred in the tavern, but was whether appellant was one' of the men who committed the robbery; and the record shows that the positive • testimony given by Lapsic on that issue was neither sélf-cohtradictory nor weakened by cross-examination.

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Bluebook (online)
154 P.2d 6, 67 Cal. App. 2d 327, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-serpa-calctapp-1944.