People v. Vezerian

193 P.2d 944, 85 Cal. App. 2d 708, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 973
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1948
DocketCrim. No. 4198
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 P.2d 944 (People v. Vezerian) 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. Vezerian, 193 P.2d 944, 85 Cal. App. 2d 708, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 973 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

Defendant was charged in an information with the crime of murder following the shooting by him of Richard Carreon on August 24, 1946. He ’was tried twice. In the first trial the jury was deadlocked and the court declared a mistrial. The cause was reset and a new jury sworn which found defendant guilty of manslaughter, a lesser offense and one included in the crime of murder, as charged in the information. Judgment was pronounced and defendant was sentenced to state prison with a recommendation that he be confined at Chino, and that the Parole Board favorably consider his application for parole. This appeal is prosecuted from such judgment of conviction and also from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

It is here urged (1) that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict and that the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence; and (2) that the court misdirected the jury in matters of law, and that it refused to give certain instructions requested by defendant.

An examination of the record discloses that on the night of August 24, 1946, the Fernando Briones were entertaining about 20 couples at a barbecue in their home and between 10 and 11 o’clock they ran out of beer, whereupon Theodore and Eddie Duron, brothers of Mrs. Briones, Charles Porter and Richard Carreon, all boys between the ages of 17 and 19, volunteered to go out and purchase more beer. Theodore Duron testified that he and his companions went walking around the block from the Briones house, called at one liquor store but were unable to get any beer there, and that he went ahead of the others, entered the liquor store of defendant and inquired of the latter and his brother, John Vezerian, if they had any beer and if he could get two cases. They answered him in the affirmative, and defendant began to fill 'cardboard cases with the beer; meanwhile the other boys arrived, and [711]*711the witness’ brother, Eddie Duron, asked the price of the beer. Defendant replied it was $6.70 a case “or something like that”; whereupon said Eddie Duron stated that was too much and asked what make it was. Defendant made some reply and he and Eddie Duron began to argue about the beer. Said witness testified that defendant told Eddie that if he didn’t like the beer he could get out; “to get the hell out.” The witness stated they were still arguing but that all of the boys started to walk out and that Bob Porter said “we will get out,” and as they were walking out defendant put his hand on Eddie and pushed him and that Eddie turned around and he and defendant started fighting in the middle of the store. The witness Theodore Duron stated he heard defendant say something about getting a gun, and that he in turn made a motion across his body and said, “don’t get it, don’t get it, because I got one too, ” in an attempt to “bluff” defendant. Said witness was wearing no coat, only a khaki shirt. He testified that Eddie Duron and defendant were fighting back of the counter and that he jumped over the counter to stop defendant from getting to the cash register and thus prevent appellant from getting his gun; that he managed to stop defendant before he got to the cash register; that he pushed defendant as far as he could and hit him a few times; that defendant put his hands down and the witness thought he had hurt him, so he jumped over the counter, grabbed his brother Eddie and ran out of the store; that they ran east on Fourth Street 50 or 60 yards, turned into a vacant lot and ran home, and that as they ran they heard “three straight shots”; that none of the boys had a gun; that said witness had had two or three glasses of beer and one shot of whiskey at the party.

The witness Eddie Duron testified that on the evening of August 24, 1946, he attended a wienie bake at the home of his sister, Mrs. Betty Briones; that about 20 couples were present; that they had four cases of beer to start with and when it ran out late in the evening, his brother-in-law asked him and his brother, Theodore Duron, to go out and buy more beer. That, accompanied by Bob Porter and Richard Carreen, they walked around the block and went into a liquor store but were unable to get any beer; that meanwhile, his brother Theodore had gone ahead and was in defendant’s liquor store talking to him when the other three boys arrived; that defendant was standing in front of the refrigerator; that the witness then asked defendant what the beer would cost and was told $7.80 a case; that the witness asked why it [712]*712was so high and defendant replied that it was Mexican imported beer, “so I picked up one bottle and looked at the label. It was Mexican imported beer. I forget now the name of it. I put it back and told him that was too much for us, that the beer wasn’t really worth that much to us. ... I told the boys, ‘Let’s not get it. It’s too high.’ . . . At thaf time Dan Vezerian for one reason or another he got sore and he said, ‘If you don’t like the price get the hell out of here. ’ And Bob Porter said, ‘We are going.’ At that time Ricke (Carreon) was standing toward one side and my brother was on the other side and Bob Porter was near the middle of the store, toward the entrance there, so when he said that we turned around and started to walk out. At that time Dan Vezerian followed me. He pushed me on the shoulder. He pushed me hard enough to knock me down, but I was lucky. I more or less expected it because he got mad when I told him it was too high price to pay for the beer, so I didn’t fall. I turned around and we both started fighting. ... he struck me the first blow by striking me in the back while my back was turned, and I was going out toward the door. All four of us were going out. At any rate, when the fight started I remember just then Dan Vezerian saying, ‘Well, I am going to get a gun,’ and he jumped over the counter. ... He jumped right over and started to go to the cashier’s box. . . . before that when he pushed me we started to swing at each other. That took a very little while, and he said he was going to get a gun and Bob Porter said, ‘Wait a while. I will get them out of here.’ . . . We didn’t know what he (defendant) would do with the gun. He was mad and naturally we thought he was mad enough to shoot us and my brother who was a soldier then, he had his uniform on, his summer uniform with just a shirt. He threw a bluff, what you call a regular bluff. He said, ‘I have a gun too, so don’t go for your gun.’ . . . When my brother made the statement that he had a gun Dan Vezerian had gone over the counter just then and I jumped in front of him, that is between Dan Vezerian and the cash register where I thought he had the gun. ... So right there me and him both started fighting. I did my best to force him up towards the entrance there. . . . And I hollered to Bob Porter and Ricke and my brother, I turned around and hollered to them to get out of there. . . . Ricke and he (Bob) went out the door. My brother stood in the door. ... I thought at first he was going out with them, but he didn’t. I pushed Dan Vezerian up there. What I wanted to do was push him [713]*713up far enough that I could jump over the counter, run out the front door and get a chance to run away without getting shot. Dan Vezerian got away from me. I tore his shirt. I remember I tore his shirt sleeve trying to hold him. He got away from me and he ran around the counter. I remember that very clearly. And he (my brother) stopped with Dan Vezerian right before he got to the cash register, just about a foot and a half away from it and I jumped over the counter to the middle of the store. My brother pushed Dan Vezerian up to the end; then he jumped over and we both ran out of the front door. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
193 P.2d 944, 85 Cal. App. 2d 708, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-vezerian-calctapp-1948.