People v. Sugarman

251 P. 949, 80 Cal. App. 321, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 58
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1926
DocketDocket Nos. 1360, 1361.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 251 P. 949 (People v. Sugarman) 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. Sugarman, 251 P. 949, 80 Cal. App. 321, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 58 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

*322 CRAIG, J.

The appellant Sugarman and one Harry Berman were charged by two counts of an information filed by the district attorney of Los Angeles County with burglariously entering a store and building in the city of Los Angeles, and with having on the same date committed grand larceny therein. Appellant Passarello was likewise charged with burglary and grand larceny upon the same premises, on the same date. The cases were consolidated and tried together in the superior court and the appellants were convicted upon each charge. This is an appeal by Sugarman and Passarello from the respective judgments and orders denying their motions for a new trial.

A witness for the People, by the name of Sam Geller, testified upon the trial that on March 31, 1925, his tailor-shop at 4415 Central Avenue, in Los Angeles, was entered, and that trousers and bolts of cloth of a value of about $1,200 were stolen; that portions of the rear door were broken off, and that the lock with which he had previously fastened the door had been removed; that he thereafter identified all of his stolen property at the preliminary examination of the defendants. This witness further testified that the defendant Berman lived near said store, and that he had known Berman for about six years. The proprietor of an automobile livery testified that on March 31, 1925, he rented to Berman a Ford touring car bearing license number 996644, which the witness thereafter found at the Lincoln Heights police station, in custody of certain officers. A railroad towerman swore that on the last-named date a Ford touring car approached the railroad tracks near his tower and stopped; that three men alighted therefrom; that one of the men was tall and one was much shorter than the others; that “there was a distinct difference in all three of their sizes”; that the men left the machine, whereupon the witness and a companion, named Charles Bill, inspected it and found therein the trousers and cloth which were produced at the trial and identified by Geller. Bill corroborated the testimony of the towerman, and identified Passarello as one of the men formerly seen in the Ford, he further averred that Berman and Sugarman resembled the other two. It also appears that the auto livery obtained the rented Ford from the police station; that Berman visited *323 the livery to pay the rental bill and was arrested. Thus it was shown the automobile which was rented to Berman was the same machine which the defendants deserted, in which Geller’s goods were found, and which subsequently was held by the police, registered by them at the station, and returned to its owners.

When Berman was apprehended he made a confession, which he repudiated at the preliminary examination, saying that he had been threatened with violence unless he so testified; upon redirect examination at the trial Berman testified 'that Passarello had told him that he would be beaten up in the jail if he did not deny such confession.

Previously to the trial Berman pleaded guilty and requested probation. When called by the prosecution as a witness he testified that he had known Passarello and Sugar-man for some years; that on March 31st he first met Sugar-man; that he rented the Ford car, and the two men thereafter took Passarello in the car and all three drove to Geller’s .place of business, where the witness remained in the car, and his two companions robbed the store, placed the goods in the machine, and that the three then drove in a circuitous route, finally arriving at the railroad tracks where the towerman and the witness Charles Bill testified to having first seen them; that someone called to them that a train was approaching, whereupon they backed up, jumped from the machine and ran toward north Broadway; that Berman and Sugarman rode with some person to Second Street, while Passarello took a street-ear, and that all three men again met at Temple Street. Berman further swore that Passarello advised him to leave town; that Sugarman told him to telephone the livery that the Ford had been stolen; that he called the livery, and, being informed that they had recovered the car, he went there to pay the rental bill, but was arrested.

A police officer testified that when Sugarman was arrested he was asked 'if he was with Berman at the time of the robbery, to which Sugarman replied, “Yes, I will tell you everything when we are alone.” That Berman was asked in the presence of Sugarman as to whether or not he had burglarized the Geller store, and that Berman admitted that he had, and that Sugarman was with him, to which the latter made no reply. Police officers also testified to a *324 conversation between Sugarman and Berman, wherein Berman asked the former if he had told them anything, and that Sugarman said: “Don’t say anything about it; don’t let them know that I was in on the job; I am on seven years’ probation now.’’ Sugarman admitted on the stand that he was with Berman on the 31st of March, but denied having had any connection with the robbery. It appears that Passarello was present at the preliminary examination of Berman and Sugarman, and that he was there positively identified by the witness Charles Bill as one of the men who alighted from the Ford car as heretofore recited. Bill also identified Passarello at the trial as one of the former occupants of the machine who ran away, and swore that he and one Williams immediately searched the car and police officers were summoned.

It is earnestly insisted that the testimony of Berman, an admitted accomplice, was not corroborated, and that therefore the verdict and judgment appealed from are contrary to both the law and the evidence. The principle stated in a brief excerpt from People v. Ames, 39 Cal. 403, quoted by the appellants, is opposed to this contention. It was there said, with reference to section 1111 of the Penal Code: “As we construe this provision, the corroborating evidence must, of itself, and without the aid of the testimony of the accomplice, tend, in some degree, to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense. It need not, of course, be sufficient to establish his guilt; for, in that event, the testimony of the accomplice would not be heeded.’’ It was there further said that aside from the testimony of the accomplice, “there was no evidence whatever in this case ‘tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense.’ ” In the instant case the circumstances and the evidence of many witnesses strikingly substantiated in detail the story told by Berman from the' witness-stand. The loss of the property, descriptions of the men at the railroad yards, recovery and identification of the goods, and of the automobile, positive identification of Passarello, remarks of Sugarman overheard at the police station, and other details which we deem it unnecessary to relate, all contributed to establish the fact that the offense had been -committed by these three men. We think that the accomplice was abundantly corroborated.

*325 The jury found appellants guilty of burglary in the first degree, but the trial court decided that the offense was burglary of the second degree, and sentenced them accordingly.

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Bluebook (online)
251 P. 949, 80 Cal. App. 321, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sugarman-calctapp-1926.