People v. Smith

221 P.2d 140, 98 Cal. App. 2d 723, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1926
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 1, 1950
DocketCrim. 2652
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 221 P.2d 140 (People v. Smith) 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. Smith, 221 P.2d 140, 98 Cal. App. 2d 723, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1926 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

WOOD (FRED B.), J.

Defendant was convicted of burglary in the second degree—entry of a building, the office of the Santa Clara County Building Inspector, Hall of Records, San Jose, with intent to commit theft therein. A charge of a prior conviction of a felony was found to be true. The appeal is from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

Two points are made upon this appeal: (1) Insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and (2) error in the giving of instructions to the jury.

As to the Sufficiency of the Evidence

A typewriter belonging to the county and used in the county building inspector’s office was removed, without permission, some time between 5:30 p. m. of May 18, 1949, and 8 a. m. of the next day.

At about 7:30 p. m. of May 18, defendant took this typewriter to a tavern at 13 South Market Street, San Jose, offered it for sale, and sold it to the tavern proprietor for $28, stating that he was selling it for a finance company that hgd repossessed it, selling it for the balance due. He executed a receipt therefor in the name of “Russell Eggert,” but did at the time exhibit identification cards which showed his true name, and on the witness stand he said he signed Eggert’s name because it was. Eggert’s typewriter.

At about 5:20 p.m. of May 18, defendant went to this • tavern, spoke to an employee there, offered a typewriter for sale, was told to telephone the proprietor at his house about the typewriter, apparently did telephone him, and then returned with the typewriter about 7:30 of that evening.

The proprietor, suspecting that the typewriter may have been stolen, called the police department and asked if it was all right if he bought it, and was told it would be, so long as he got a receipt for it.

*725 In response to a call, two city police officers arrived at the tavern about 8 p.m. The receipt for the sale of the typewriter had already been executed. They asked defendant where the typewriter came from and he stated he got it from Russell Eggert, that Russell was parked opposite a firehouse about 100 yards from the tavern, in a ’37 Dodge coupe, with Washington license plates; that Russell was parked there waiting for defendant; that it was Russell’s typewriter—it had come from Dohrman’s in Seattle; that defendant could prove it if he could get hold of Russell; that it was in the car when Russell was driving; that they left San Francisco that afternoon around 4 o’clock; that they were in need of money; that Russell asked defendant if he would go and sell it, and was waiting for defendant on the street; that the typewriter was in the car when they left San Francisco—in Russell’s ear, in the back.

The officers took defendant around in their car in an attempt to locate Eggert. Defendant stated that if Russell was not there he could locate him at the De Anza Hotel. After they made a tour of the district in the vicinity of the tavern looking for Eggert and were unable to find him, they went to the De Anza Hotel and checked, but no one by that name had signed up for a room. They again checked, but nobody had signed in at the hotel under the name of Eggert. The officers testified that they checked at the hotel as late as 2 a. m. of the following morning and could not find Russell Eggert or the Dodge coupe.

After they were unable to locate Eggert, defendant told the officers he did not come down with Eggert that afternoon, but came down on a bus. When asked when he last saw Eggert, he told the officers “yesterday,” which would be May 17, and that he had not seen him since. Defendant testified that he did not tell anyone that the typewriter was in the automobile that he came down in, and that so far as he knew he did not tell the officers he came down in the ear. He testified that he left San Francisco on a bus at 3 p. m., or a little after, and must have arrived at San Jose after 5 p. m.

The officers found but $26.02 upon the person of the defendant, aside from some loose change which was upon the bar and which, at their suggestion, he put in his pocket; defendant had told them he was broke and this was why he was selling the typewriter. Defendant testified that on that day, about four hours before he was put in jail, he drew $47 from his employer *726 in Daly City, paid about $15 of it for his board at Daly City, in advance, retaining the balance thereof; that he thought the policeman gave it back to him at the bar; that he received $28 from the tavern proprietor; that he did not know how much the proprietor gave him; that he did not give him any; that when the police took defendant the proprietor took the money; that defendant had the money in his hands; that beside that defendant did not have $30 or $35; that he had just what he turned over to the police, $26.02; that he laid it on the bar; that he had all of his paycheck except what he paid for board.

Concerning his possession and sale of the typewriter, defendant testified upon direct examination that Eggert was in the business of buying and selling service stations, including the equipment; that Eggert had this and another typewriter and an adding machine, told defendant he purchased them legitimately, and otherwise than this defendant did not know. Asked, upon cross-examination, if he told them at the tavern that he was repossessing the typewriter for a finance company, defendant said “That was all the information I had.”

When defendant was apprehended by the officers at the tavern, there were two pencils found on his person, of the same kind as those used by the county building inspector’s office, though not identified as having come from that office. At the trial, defendant stated he stole those pencils from San Quentin; that he did not steal them, that he took them with him, that they had a whole batch and he filled his pockets up.

The officers testified that defendant told them the evening he was arrested that he had been earlier that evening to the county jail in an attempt to locate Charles Hambaugh, to ask him a favor. Hambaugh, the county jailor, testified that a few days before the trial defendant said he was down that way at possibly 5:30 in the evening, that he came with the possibility to stay all night, to sleep in the jail, and that defendant spoke to Deputy Sheriff King, who was the jailor at midnight. Defendant, on direct examination, referring to Officer Cannell’s statement with reference to Hambaugh, said that Cannell got it turned around; that defendant came down to see the district attorney’s office; that he did not come down to see Mr. Hambaugh, and that he came to ask if they would recommend that defendant go back to Carolina. But upon cross-examination defendant stated that shortly after he first went to the tavern to offer a typewriter for sale he went to the county jail, talked with Mr. King, deputy sheriff, asked if Hambaugh was working; that defendant wanted a place to *727 spend the night, and told King he had the money but could not afford to spend it. The jail was situated about 25 feet from the county building inspector’s office.

There is testimony that defendant had knowledge of means of access to the room where the typewriter was kept and used.

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Bluebook (online)
221 P.2d 140, 98 Cal. App. 2d 723, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-smith-calctapp-1950.