People v. Sims

64 Cal. App. 3d 544, 134 Cal. Rptr. 566, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 2097
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 1976
DocketCrim. 27889
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 64 Cal. App. 3d 544 (People v. Sims) 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. Sims, 64 Cal. App. 3d 544, 134 Cal. Rptr. 566, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 2097 (Cal. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Opinion

HASTINGS, J.

In a jury trial the defendant Eugene Sims was convicted of rape in violation of Penal Code section 261, subdivision 3 and kidnaping in violation of Penal Code section 207. Probation was denied and as to each count defendant was sentenced to the state prison for the term prescribed by law; the sentence as to Count II was stayed pending appeal, said stay to become permanent upon a judgment affirming the conviction. Defendant has appealed from the judgment.

A pretrial hearing was held pursuant to Evidence Code section 402 to determine the admissibility of a voice identification of defendant by the victim. The evidence adduced therein is as follows: Sharon S., the victim, stepped behind a screen in the courtroom and closed her eyes. Six different men, including defendant, then read seven statements that had been made by the assailant. At first Sharon could not recognize any of the voices because it was “too confusing.” Upon examination she said that the persons identified as numbers one and six were definitely not the assailant and that the voice that “sounded close” was number four (defendant’s voice). She did not have any particular reaction to voices two, three and five.

At the trial, Sharon, an employee of the Antelope Valley Hospital Medical Center, testified that on March 27, 1975, she got off duty at the hospital at 12:15 a.m., and as she was walking to her car to go home she noticed a light colored station wagon parked nearby. The man standing by the station wagon said to her, “Do you know this guy?” and started walking towards her. The man then repeated the question and grabbed her by the throat as she turned to run away. She could not see all of his *549 face because he had “a piece of cloth” draped on his head. He told her not to move or he would “rip [her] tonsils out.” He then put his fingers in her mouth, shoving her jaw downward, and forced her to walk behind a small wall where he forced her to the ground. He questioned her about money and told her to “shut up” eveiytime she asked him not to hurt her. He also told her that she “must really love” herself. She was then blindfolded, her hands were tied behind her back, and she was forced to walk around in circles in a squatting position before he walked her to his car. He placed her inside his car, retied her hands, tied her legs and went through her purse. After they drove for about 10 or 15 minutes, the car stopped and the man said, “I am going to ball you now.” During the ride she noticed that the car heater was “very noisy” and the car smelled greasy and oily. She recalled that the man smoked a lot and he played the radio very loudly. She was forced into the rear of the car onto a mattress where he forced her to have sexual intercourse. After completing the act he placed a quilt over her body when she told him she was cold. Subsequently, there was a second act of intercourse. While still blindfolded she felt the stuffing coming out of a rip in the front seat of the car. He then drove her back to an area close to the hospital and released her. She walked to the hospital and was examined by a Dr. DeTrana.

Between 5:45 a.m. and 6:15 a.m., on March 27, Sharon returned with several deputies to the area where she was originally accosted. Deputy Jelletich examined the footprints in the area and saw that Sharon’s shoe left a print similar to other footprints in the area. (She was wearing the same shoes as when she had been assaulted.) Footprints paralleling Sharon’s prints appeared to form a man’s plain soled shoe with a hobnail heel. The wind was blowing and there was not enough time to preserve the prints so that a plaster mold could have been made.

Defendant was arrested April 5. On April 7 and 8, Sharon accompanied various deputies to a “tow lot.” When they first pulled into the lot she asked if the station wagon (defendant’s automobile) was the car she was supposed to examined because it was similar to the car she had seen the evening she was attacked. On closer examination the car appeared to her to have the same greasy and oily odor. The car also had stuffing exposed as did the car in which she was sexually assaulted; the heater made the same noise, the ash tray was full of cigarette butts, and there was a quilt in the car that felt similar to the one that had been placed over her body, however, there was no mattress in the back seat.

*550 Deputy Baker dusted the interior of the station wagon for prints but could find none.

Lucille Chiles lives across the street from defendant’s sister. Defendant had been living at his sister’s home from February of 1975, until the date of his arrest. Mrs. Chiles testified that defendant’s car was often parked near her house. She also stated that on March 30, 1975, she saw a small mattress set out next to the trash cans across the street from her house. The next day was Monday, the 31st, a trash pickup day. The mattress was small enough to have fit in the back of a station wagon.

On April 14, Deputy Jelletich took a pair of defendant’s shoes to the area where Sharon was first grabbed by the assailant. He made imprints in the dirt and concluded that defendant’s shoes were the same shoes that had made the prints he had seen on March 27.

Glenda Young had known defendant for approximately seven to eight years. She testified that she had seen a mattress in the back of his station wagon in March. On April 10, defendant telephoned her and said that “it would sure help out” if she could say that he had been at her house the evening of the 26-27th. She told him that she could not remember whether he had been there or not and was not going to say he had been there. At trial she stated that she knew “distinctly” he was not there on the night of the 26th from 11 until “whatever time that was on the 27th” that the offense occurred.

Donald Nay, defendant’s cousin, testified that he had been in defendant’s car and knew that its heater was very noisy. One night near March 27, he was riding with defendant in defendant’s car near the hospital when defendant said that the nurses get off their shift around 11:30 and they would be walking home so “it would be a good place to pick up a couple of girls.” 1 He denied that the defendant had used the word “grab.” Nay also said that he had seen a mattress in defendant’s car but never was in the car when the mattress was in it.

At trial defendant read seven statements made by the assailant. Sharon testified that there was no question in her mind that his voice was the voice of her attacker. She admitted before the juiy that she did not conclusively and positively identify defendant’s voice at the pretrial *551 hearing. She said that defendant’s voice sounded “familiar” at the pretrial hearing, but that at the trial she was able to identify his voice “conclusively and positively.” The trial was her first opportunity to hear defendant’s voice alone. She could not identify defendant visually. Sharon also faced the wall while she listened to a “jingling” sound (that of defendant’s belt buckle). She identified it as the sound she had heard as she was walking from the car just prior to her release.

Defendant’s brothers, Curtis Sims and Dueal Sims, also read the seven statements to Sharon while she had her eyes closed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 Cal. App. 3d 544, 134 Cal. Rptr. 566, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 2097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sims-calctapp-1976.