People v. Silva

292 P. 330, 48 Cal. App. 728, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 470
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 28, 1920
DocketCrim. No. 526.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 292 P. 330 (People v. Silva) 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. Silva, 292 P. 330, 48 Cal. App. 728, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 470 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant was by information charged with and by the jury convicted of the crime of grand larceny in the superior court of Sacramento County, and appeals from the judgment and the order denying bim a new trial.

The specific charge stated in the information is that the defendant stole the sum of $480 from one John Glavich, in the city of Sacramento, on the twenty-ninth day of December, 1919.

[1] The principal point upon which the defendant relies for a reversal is that the evidence does not support the verdict, and in the outset it is just as well to announce our conclusion to be, after a careful examination and study of the evidence, that the contention of the defendant that there was not legal justification for his conviction is well taken. The consideration of this point will require rather an extended review herein of the evidence. In doing this, we shall, except in a few instances, narratively state the facts as they were shown by the evidence.

One Lena Casella, a female, was, in the month of December,. 1919, the owner of and conducted a lodging-house at 1017% Second Street, in the city of Sacramento. On the twenty-fourth day of December of said year said John Glayich, a resident of Sutter City, in Sutter County, went to Sacramento and on that day hired a rcom in the lodging-house of Mrs. Casella. Glavich, when he hired the room in said house, had in his possession approximately the sum *730 of six hundred dollars, in currency, which he carried in a leather wallet or purse in the hip pocket of his pantaloons. During the four or five days immediately preceding the twenty-ninth day of December, 1919, the time at which the defendant appeared upon the scene, Glavieh had remained in his room almost constantly and on all those days he and Mrs. Casella diverted themselves by drinking more or less intoxicating liquors, the latter furnishing the liquors and the former paying for the same. While to a greater or less extent Glavieh was, during all this time, under the influence of intoxicants, he was at no time or on no occasion in such a condition of inebriety as to render him insensible to what was going on or what he did. Up to the time that the defendant had found his way to the Casella lodging-house, Glavieh had expended about one hundred dollars of the sum of which he was possessed when he first appeared at and secured lodgings in the Casella apartments.

On the twenty-ninth day of December, 1919, about the hour of 6 o’clock P. M. or a trifle later, the defendant, as already stated, went to the Casella lodging apartments. Here it is to be said that there is no testimony in the record, other than that of the defendant himself, showing the circumstances under which or the reason for which the defendant visited said lodging-house on the occasion mentioned, and we must, therefore, rely solely upon his testimony for information as to those matters.

The defendant, whose home was in Sonoma County, was, at the time of the alleged larceny here complained of, and had been for some time previously, employed at the Sisters’ Hospital, in the city of Sacramento. He testified that on the day and at the hour above stated he left said hospital for the purpose of calling on an acquaintance by the name of Jack Mosher, who, on a previous occasion, had told him that he (Mosher) was rooming at the Casella place, and who had invited the defendant to come to the said lodging-house and pay him a visit. The defendant had never been in Mrs. Casella’s apartments prior to the evening on which the alleged larceny was committed, and had never previously met Mrs. Casella. On arriving at the lodging-house on the evening referred to he entered the apartments and met Mrs. Casella and inquired for Mosher. Mrs. Casella *731 informed Mm that, although Mosher had a room in her house, he was not at that time in his room or about the place. The defendant was then invited by Mrs. Casella to accompany her to her kitchen and there have a “drink” with her. He accepted and, going into the kitchen, he there met Glavich for the first time, the latter then being a stranger to him. The defendant remained at Casella’s for some time and with the landlady and Glavich had a number of drinks of intoxicating liquors.

We return now to the testimony presented by "the people.

Glavich testified that, just before the defendant appeared at the lodging-house, he took the poeketbook containing his money from his pocket in the presence of Mrs. Casella. He further testified that he did not exhibit the poeketbook after the defendant went into the kitchen nor at any time while the defendant was present did he take the purse from his pocket. He also stated that he did not know whether or not the defendant knew that he had any money on his person. The witness said that neither he nor Mrs. Casella, or Silva left the room after Silva entered it. At some point of time between the hours of 8 and 10 o’clock, Glavich continued, he placed his hand in the pocket in which he had always carried the poeketbook' and then discovered that it was missing, and thereupon, addressing Mrs. Casella, asked her to return to him the poeketbook. She denied having it or knowing anything of its whereabouts. He then asked the defendant if he had his money, to which the latter answered in the negative. He thereupon said to both Mrs. Casella and the defendant that he intended going after an officer for the purpose of having the defendant arrested and, suiting his actions to his words, left the lodging-house and soon returned with two police officers, who asked both Mrs. Casella and the defendant if either had the money of Glavich or knew where it was, and they replied that they neither had his money nor knew anything about it or its whereabouts.

I The complaining witness was asked if he did not testify at the preliminary hearing of the charge that the last time he saw Ms poeketbook was about 5 o’clock of the day on which the defendant appeared at the lodging-house, and he replied that, while he had no recollection of so testifying on the occasion named, he might have done so, and that if *732 he did it was the truth, as (he continued) the circumstances occurring on the day he lost his purse were fresher in his mind when the preliminary hearing was held than they were at the time of the trial..

P. W. Cameron, one of the police officers to whom Glavieh made the complaint of having been despoiled of his money, and who accompanied Glavieh to the lodging-house to investigate the complaint, testified, in substance, as follows: That he and another officer went to the lodging-house to investigate "the complaint made by Glavieh, and found Mrs. Casella and the defendant in the kitchen. Glavieh, he said, at that time accused Mrs. Casella of having taken his money. He did not then charge the defendant with taking the money or. of knowing anything about it. The officer asked both Mrs. Casella and the defendant if they or either of them had taken the money, and each strenuously denied having done so or having any knowledge of where his money was. The two officers thereupon searched every room in the place and then Officer Cameron, with a flash-light, went to the toilet, accompanied by the defendant, and “searched around” in there but found no trace of the pocketbook or the money.

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Bluebook (online)
292 P. 330, 48 Cal. App. 728, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-silva-calctapp-1920.