People v. Skipper

190 Cal. App. 2d 206, 11 Cal. Rptr. 681, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2284
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 17, 1961
DocketCrim. No. 7213
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 190 Cal. App. 2d 206 (People v. Skipper) 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. Skipper, 190 Cal. App. 2d 206, 11 Cal. Rptr. 681, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2284 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

FORD, J.

Clifford Purvis Andrews and the appellant Skipper were accused of the crimes of grand theft and burglary. Skipper has appealed from a judgment of conviction of petty theft and burglary and from the denial of his motion for a new trial.

The contentions of the appellant relate to the propriety of the admission of certain evidence and of statements made by the assistant district attorney in his arguments to the jury. Pertinent portions of the record will be set forth or summarized herein.

Henry Graham was a coowner of a business in Carpintería [208]*208known as Coastal Liquors. He testified that while he was in his store on December 18, 1959, the appellant entered. No other person was present. The appellant removed a bottle of soda from a cooler and took it to the counter. Mr. Graham asked him if there was anything else he wanted; the appellant answered that there was not. Mr. Graham recorded the sale on the cash register and reached for a half-dollar which the appellant had in his hand. Thereupon the appellant said, “Just a minute. I want some candy.” The cash drawer was then open; therein was a substantial sum of money including about thirty-five $10 bills. Leaving the drawer open, Mr. Graham walked over to the candy stand with the appellant. The appellant dropped some coins on the floor and Mr. Graham picked up several which he returned to the appellant. But the appellant said that there was a dime still missing. The witness testified: “I kept looking for it, which I was on my hands and knees on the floor, and he kept chanting, ‘Man, don’t you see? There it is down there. Don’t you see it? There it is. Get it.’ ” But Mr. Graham finally told the appellant that he could not find the coin, whereupon the latter said, “To hell with it. Forget it.” Mr. Graham got up and then saw the codefendant Andrews. At the same time he saw a $10 bill in the place in the cash register where he kept coins and he said, “Somebody has been in my cash register.” Andrews said, “Well, you see it wasn’t me. You see where I am standing.” The appellant walked over and put down II cents; he started to leave and bumped into Andrews. Andrews came over to the counter with a bottle of wine. Mr. Graham went to the door and wrote down the license number of the parked automobile which the appellant had entered. Andrews asked him what he was doing and, upon being told, said, “It don’t make any difference to me. I don’t know the man.” When Andrews left the store, he entered the automobile into which the appellant had gone. The automobile was then driven away. About $290 was missing from the cash register, mainly in $10 bills. Later that day Officer Wire apprehended the two men together. Officer Burke testified that Andrews had in his possession nineteen $10 bills and Skipper had four $10 bills in addition to other money.

During the course of the trial, certain testimony given by Karl Gordon Wisely was admitted as against Andrews. The jurors were admonished that such evidence was not to be considered “in any way as reflecting upon any possible guilt of Mr. Skipper on the charges on which he is [209]*209being tried."1 Moreover, the jurors were told that as to Andrews the evidence could be considered only for a limited purpose: “This evidence is not to be received as evidence of his guilt as such in this case that you are trying . . . but for the limited purpose of showing that he had some plan, some scheme, or some mode of operation which it might become important for you to consider with respect to his guilt or innocence in the charges which are now being considered by you." The Wisely evidence related to an incident in a grocery store in Summerland on June 27, 1959. A woman entered the store and looked at stockings. A man came in with a newspaper which he had taken from a rack just outside the door. He unfolded the paper and held it in an extended position in front of Mr. Wisely, thereby blocking his vision, and engaged him in conversation about the headlines for three or four minutes. Then the man directed Mr. Wisely’s attention to some candy. As Mr. Wisely bent over towards the candy, the cash register was in back of him. He had opened the cash register drawer so as to make change for the newspaper sale and, when the customer made the request for candy, he did not close the drawer. While he was bent over, he heard the “click" of the metal rollers which held down the paper money. He then turned around and saw another man holding a bar of soap in his right hand and money in his left. That man ivas Mr. Andrews, the appellant’s co-defendant in the present case. Mr. Wisely held on to Andrew’s wrist until he released the money; it was $190 in bills of $5.00 and $10 denominations. The other man denied that he was with Andrews, but Mr. Wisely saw the woman and the two men enter an automobile which had been parked in an adjacent service station.

It is appellant’s contention that “the introduction of the evidence concerning the Wisely theft deprived defendant [appellant] of a fair trial on the ground that the jury could not erase from its mind that Mr. Andrews had used a confederate in the Wisely theft in exactly the same manner that the prosecution argued Mr. Skipper was used in the alleged [210]*210theft at Mr. Graham’s store.” That contention lacks merit. The evidence was properly received as against the defendant Andrews because evidence of another crime committed by him showing a similar modus operandi was admissible as tending to identify him as the prepetrator of the crime for which he was then on trial. (People v. George, 169 Cal.App.2d 740, 745 [338 P.2d 240]; People v. McCarty, 164 Cal.App.2d 322, 326 [330 P.2d 484] ; People v. Ross, 98 Cal.App.2d 805, 809-810 [221 P.2d 280].) The appellant is no more in a position to allege prejudicial error because of the admission of such evidence as against his codefendant than he is to assert error for a failure to grant him a separate trial upon his motion because of the anticipated use of such evidence. Of the latter situation, it was stated in People v. Santo, 43 Cal.2d 319, at page 332 [273 P.2d 249] : “A defendant is not entitled as a matter of right to a separate trial. (See Pen. Code, § 1098.) A motion for a severance must be decided upon the showing made at the time of the making of the motion and not upon what may have transpired thereafter at the trial. (People v. Pierson (1934), 139 Cal.App. 734, 736 [34 P.2d 755].) The judge admonished the jury to consider evidence which was admissible against only one defendant in connection with that defendant only. It is not necessarily an abuse of the trial court’s discretion to refuse a motion for separate trials made on the ground that damaging testimony admissible against one defendant and not admissible against another may be received; in the absence of a strong showing to the contrary it is to be presumed that an instruction such as the one given here sufficiently protects the defendant. (People v. Isby (1947), (30 Cal.2d 879, 897 [186 P.2d 405].)” (Emphasis added.) See also People v. Parker, 122 Cal.App.2d 867, 871 [265 P.2d 933]; People v. Bennett,

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Bluebook (online)
190 Cal. App. 2d 206, 11 Cal. Rptr. 681, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-skipper-calctapp-1961.