People v. Whitacre

248 P. 924, 79 Cal. App. 27, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 24
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 26, 1926
DocketDocket No. 1282.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 248 P. 924 (People v. Whitacre) 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. Whitacre, 248 P. 924, 79 Cal. App. 27, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 24 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

CRAIG, J.

The grand jury of Los Angeles County indicted the appellant and one Vincent Marsiglia, charging them jointly with having committed grand larceny and robbery in said county, on or about January 18, 1924. Appellant was tried alone upon two counts of the indictment and was convicted. A motion for new trial was thereafter presented, which was denied, and this is an appeal from the judgment and ruling upon said motion.

There is no dispute as to the robberies having been committed, as alleged and as shown by the evidence, appellant’s sole defense being that he was not in Los Angeles County at the time of their perpetration. It appears from the testimony of the People’s witnesses, H. C. Smith and George L. Smith, that while they were driving into the city of Inglewood, on or about the above-mentioned date, they were stopped by a Japanese, who was soon joined by the defendant Marsiglia, and were conducted to the rear room of a building occupied by said Japanese and his family. Both of the Smiths testified that as soon as they entered the building this appellant threatened them with a revolver, commanded, “Stick up your hands,” and held them at bay while Marsiglia searched them; that about forty dollars was taken from the person of H. C. Smith and about fifteen dollars *29 and other personal property from George L. Smith. The Smiths were then driven into an adjoining room, and one of them testified that appellant told them that if they attempted to leave the room within five minutes they would have their heads blown off. The witness, Mainhardt, testified that appellant and Marsiglia held him up and took his automobile from him in the city of Inglewood on the night of January 17, 1924.

Both of the Smiths and Mainhardt recognized appellant and pointed him out among several other men at the county jail two or three weeks before the trial of this case, and at least five witnesses positively "identified him in the courtroom while testifying on June 4, 1925, nearly a year and a half after the offense was committed.

Appellant testified that he was not in Los Angeles County on the date of the robbery; that he had been sick and was unable to work, but that one Jack Stender wrote him from San Diego, offering him a job; that he went to San Diego between January 10th and January 18th, but did nothing more there than work on Stender’s automobile a few days, whereupon he left San Diego for the state of Illinois; that he went as far as Yuma, Arizona, on the Arizona Eastern, and there transferred to the Bock Island lines. His own counsel asked him if he was sure that he transferred to the Bock Island at Yuma, to which he answered in the affirmative. Stender testified that he was a marble setter, and that he employed appellant to help in setting stone, but that the material failed to arrive as expected, and that appellant worked on his automobile a few days and departed. This witness at first asserted quite positively that appellant was in San Diego on January 18, 1924, but finally admitted that he kept no records, and his memory being remarkably deficient as to other dates and events, at last said that he had not thought about the 18th of January being later than the second week. of said month, and .that he had not had time to look it up.

Two sisters . and the mother of appellant testified for him, but the latter said that she did not know where he was on the date of the robbery. His counsel asked each of the sisters where he was just prior to Christmas, 1928, to which objections were sustained; one of them testified that she saw him in San Diego very nearly the 18th of January, 1924, *30 that she bought his ticket and saw him board the train, she presumed for the east, but that she did not know where he went, and that she did not see him on the 18th. The other sister swore that she did not know whether he was at San Diego or Los Angeles on that date, but that she knew he could reach Los Angeles from the southern city within three or four hours.

It is urgently insisted from the foregoing facts that inasmuch as appellant’s employer was the only witness who knew of his whereabouts on the date of the offense, and that he testified “positively that the defendant was on the eighteenth day of January, 1924, employed by him” in the city of San Diego, and one of his sisters purchased his ticket and saw him board the train at San Diego—although she did not know where he went—that the trial court erred in that it denied him a reasonable amount of latitude in examining the witnesses. Appellant testified that at the time in question he was “pretty positive” that he was on the train, going east. Five witnesses positively placed him at the city of Inglewood, committing robbery with a deadly weapon; and his sisters testified that they could not swear that he was not at Inglewood at that time. The jury doubtless viewed the testimony of Stender as being extremely uncertain in the face of voluminous positive testimony to the contrary. Had appellant in fact been at work in the city of San Diego on January 18th, it would not have been impossible for him to have left the train, if he had boarded one that day, and to have arrived at Inglewood within a few hours by automobile. But there is no definite proof that he boarded the train on the 18th, though there is evidence that he was in Inglewood on the night of Thursday, following the 15th of January, 1924, in a Hudson supsr-six automobile. It was admitted that Thursday following January 15, 1924, was January 17th, and it appears that the robbery was committed on the eighteenth day of January of that year. Appellant’s witnesses were asked if they knew where appellant was before Christmas, 1923, or on January 12, 1924, and having shown on voir dire that they could not answer the questions, they were asked whether or not appellant was in the city of Los Angeles on the 18th of January, 1924, to which the district attorney objected that the evidence sought *31 was “incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and no proper foundation laid.”

The objections were sustained, and properly so, if for no other reason than because the presence or absence of appellant in Los Angeles was_ not in issue. The People’s witnesses had testified to the commission of the robbery in Inglewood and not in Los Angeles. The materiality of the testimony offered by the defendant as to his whereabouts on any given date is wholly dependent upon the question as to whether or not it rebuts evidence produced by the prosecution on the same subject. While the People are permitted considerable latitude in their proof as to when the offense charged was committed, this in no way varies the rules of evidence concerning the materiality or competency of rebuttal testimony. In the instant ease none of the People’s witnesses fixed the date of the alleged robberies as other than the 17th or the 18th day of January, 1924. Hence the whereabouts of appellant before Christmas, 1923, or even on January 12, 1924, was in no way material. Such proof would clearly have no bearing upon the issues of the alleged crime on cither the 17th or the 18th of January. Evidence as to his whereabouts on other dates, or as to the fact that he was not in Los Angeles on the 18th, would be wholly immaterial, and we think, therefore, that the rulings of the trial court in this behalf were clearly proper.

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 924, 79 Cal. App. 27, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-whitacre-calctapp-1926.