People v. Wall

95 Cal. App. 3d 978, 157 Cal. Rptr. 587, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2028
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 16, 1979
DocketCrim. 18825
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 95 Cal. App. 3d 978 (People v. Wall) 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. Wall, 95 Cal. App. 3d 978, 157 Cal. Rptr. 587, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2028 (Cal. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Opinion

ELKINGTON, J.

Defendant Wall was convicted upon a jury’s verdicts of rape by force and violence in violation of Penal Code section 261, subdivision 2, and of false imprisonment (Pen. Code, § 236), a lesser offense necessarily included in the crime of kidnaping (Pen. Code, § 207) charged in the information. He appeals from a judgment under which he was sentenced to state prison.

We state Wall’s appellate contentions as they are phrased by him.

I. Contention: “The court improperly excluded testimony of Dennis Colvin.”

The proof of defendant Wall’s guilt depended entirely upon the credibility of the complaining witness, one Ronda, 18 years of age. She testified to the following events.

Early one morning around 1 o’clock Ronda was standing with 15 to 20 people, mostly friends “of [the] same age group,” on a Main Street corner in the City of Pleasanton. Defendant Wall, a stranger to her, drove up and stopped “right out in the street.” He “motioned [Ronda] over and wanted to know what was going on.” She answered, “nothing,” and “he asked if he could join us, . . .” She responded, “well, it’s a free country, you can do what you want,” and then directed him in parking his car. He got out of the vehicle and the two talked briefly, exchanging their names. He soon “took [her] arm” and led her to his car; she went with him “voluntarily,” entered the car, and sat down. He closed the door, started the engine, and “took off.” She “was scared,” and “was trying to get out, and I was also screaming to my friends”; but she was apparently unheard. *982 She tried to get out, but she was unable to because “he had a hold of my hair.” She continued “[c]rying, screaming, and . . . told him please don’t hurt me. . . .” After driving a few blocks Wall stopped and turned the engine off. Despite her “struggling,” “kicking” and “scratching” she was unable to leave the car, and Wall managed to lower her panties. For a “[cjouple minutes” he engaged in sexual intercourse with her against her will. Finally she was able to open the car door, whereupon “he halfway pushed me out, and I halfway rolled out of the car.” She got to her feet and “ran” back to her friends on the Main Street corner, where “[b]ecause they didn’t help” her, she “punched one of [her] friends in the face.”

Ronda promptly reported the affair to the police, and about five hours later she was examined by a doctor. The doctor found no physical evidence of rape. Blood, but no sperm, was found by him in her vagina. He concluded that the blood resulted from a menstrual period following her admitted recent abortion. Blood in the “crotch” of her underwear was consistent with the menstrual bleeding. The doctor examined her “head to toe” for “bruises” or “abnormalities” or other signs of violence; he found none, except “a bluish discoloration over her right hip area,” which Ronda had pointed out to him.

Wall testified on his own behalf. He generally agreed with Ronda’s version of their meeting. She had asked: “Why don’t you join us?” He said “okay” and after the two of them had parked his car, she “asked if I would take her in my car to a party on the other side of town.” He agreed, they drove off, and then Ronda started making several suggestions, such as: “ ‘Well, after we leave this party we’ll go to this other place, if nothing’s happening there we’ll go here,’ is what she was saying. ... I told her I didn’t mind taking her to the first party that she suggested, but that I had to get up in the morning, I had to get up early and it was a late hour, and I didn’t care to chauffeur her around. . . . She made several remarks about my being a big boy and I can stay up late, and she became very hyper, you might say, . . .” She became “abusive,” “agitated,” and “belligerent.”

Wall then started to drive back to the comer of Main Street where he had met Ronda; she “became outraged at the fact that I was going to take her directly back to her friends,” and then she said, “Well, look, son of a bitch, if you’re going to do that, just let me out of here.” Wall then slowed down and while the car was still moving about five miles per hour she jumped from it. She got to her feet and started running toward the Main Street corner.

*983 Wall further, and expressly, denied having sexual intercourse with Ronda, and her accusations of violence.

It will be noted that the issue before the jury and the trial court was the credibility of Ronda. Indeed, it may be said that it was the only issue.

During the trial Wall’s attorney, out of the jury’s presence, made an offer of proof that one Colvin, admitted by Ronda to be an “ex-boyfriend,” could testify that she had threatened to make a false accusation of rape against him. The trial court, ruling that such testimony might be adduced, concluded that “it is not evidence which is prohibited by [Evid. Code’s 1974 amendment of] section 1103, subdivision (2), . . . because it is not offered to prove or to disprove the question of consent which that section seems to be concerned with.” The evidence was permitted on the issue of Ronda’s credibility, the court stating: I think it is supported as a trait of character for fantasizing, and, as such, would go to the very issue before the court and the jury.” (Italics added.)

Colvin thereafter testified before the seated jury to the following.

He had been Ronda’s “boyfriend for approximately a year and a half.” There came a time when in Oakland, riding together in Colvin’s car, the couple had an argument over a “date” he had had with another girl. Ronda became “hysterical” and “she started hitting me and kicking me, and as I was driving down the road she opened the door . . . and tried to jump out.” After a struggle she did jump out. The car was stopped and Colvin got out and ran after her while she was running down the street, “screaming and yelling [obscenities], and so forth, and people were looking out the windows.” She demanded to be left alone, and she “told me if I didn’t leave her alone she’d start screaming rape. ” (Italics added.) Colvin was able finally to induce Ronda to return to his car, but the boyfriend-girlfriend relationship was ended.

Following Colvin’s testimony the trial court had second thoughts about its ruling, stating that the testimony was “more specifically characterized as evidence of a specific instance which is tending to prove a trait of character offered to attack the credibility of the witness and, as such, is prohibited by section 787, so the district attorney’s motion to strike the testimony of Mr. Colvin on the grounds of impermissible character evidence will be granted.”

*984 The jury were then instructed: “You’ll recall that yesterday before the defendant testified, a Mr. Dennis Colvin was called by the defense to testify. He testified to a certain experience which he had in the City of Oakland with the victim in this case, Ronda .... The district attorney has asked this court to strike his testimony concerning that instance on the basis that it is impermissible character evidence. The district attorney’s objection to that testimony has been sustained by me, and I instruct you that you are to disregard the portion of Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 Cal. App. 3d 978, 157 Cal. Rptr. 587, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wall-calctapp-1979.