People v. Wolfe

257 Cal. App. 2d 420, 64 Cal. Rptr. 855, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1799
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 26, 1967
DocketCrim. 13335
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 257 Cal. App. 2d 420 (People v. Wolfe) 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. Wolfe, 257 Cal. App. 2d 420, 64 Cal. Rptr. 855, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1799 (Cal. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

LILLIE, J.

—Defendant was charged with burglarizing the residence of Richard Terrell (§459, Pen. Code); the trial court found him guilty of burglary, second degree. He appeals from the judgment.

Defendant is a brother-in-law of Raymond Terrell; he worked for Raymond’s brother, Richard, and had been in Richard’s home. While the Richard Terrells were on vacation in July 1966, their home was entered from the rear window by breaking the window screen and screen lock, and a rifle stored in the front closet was stolen. Upon their return on July 16, 1966, Mrs. Richard Terrell received information from Raymond that defendant had taken Raymond’s credit cards from a table in his house and had used the Bank of America card to buy property worth $200, he was certain that defendant had taken the rifle, and she should call the sheriff’s office.

Richard Terrell talked to Sergeant Fletcher, Norwalk sheriff’s office, and based on defendant’s past background and the fact that Raymond had told him that about the same time as the theft of the rifle defendant had stolen a number of his credit cards, told Sergeant Fletcher he thought defendant had burglarized his home and stolen a rifle. Sergeant Fletcher testified that he believed Richard told him that defendant was on either parole or probation. Later the same day Raymond *423 called Sergeant Fletcher and said he believed defendant had stolen a number of credit cards from his home; he had received a call from the proprietor of a dress shop advising him that someone used his credit cards there and at a men’s shop next door for merchandise in a sum in excess of $50 and left in a 1955 gray Buick, license No. JOC 035, and from the description given he felt that it was defendant. Then Sergeant Fletcher received a third call from Officer Smyth of Lynwood who said that he had been apprised by Raymond of the events at the dress shop and men’s wear store; he was conducting an investigation of defendant and knew defendant was in and out of the apartment of his girl friend, Alma Dwyer, at 3333 Carlin Street, Lynwood, and was staying with her “on and off,” and knew from the manager of the apartment house at that address that on the previous evening he had seen Alma take a rifle into the apartment; and he would stake out the Carlin Street address. Later Officer Smyth again called Sergeant Fletcher telling him that defendant had arrived at the apartment driving a gray 1955 Buick, license No. JOC 035. At that time Sergeant Fletcher requested Officer Smyth to take defendant into custody.

About 10:30 p.m. Officer Smyth and another Lynwood police officer in uniform knocked on the door of Mrs. Dwyer’s apartment; she opened the door and the officers went in, directed their flashlight on defendant who was in the hallway leading to the bedroom, arrested him, put their guns on him and searched him. They started to search the apartment and Mrs. Dwyer showed Officer Smyth the rifle in the closet and freely and voluntarily gave it to him. Mrs. Dwyer testified she would not have given them the gun had they not “barged” into the house. Defendant testified that he asked Officer Smyth what the ‘1 probable cause ’ ’ for coming into the apartment was, and the officer replied that he had been told a dark-haired girl fitting Alma’s description was seen bringing the gun into the apartment; that the officer suggested that Mrs. Dwyer call someone to watch the children in case she was taken into custody; and that he asked the officer whether she would be taken to jail if he told them what they wanted to know, and Officer Smyth replied that it would be up to the Norwalk sheriff.

Sergeant Fletcher received a call from officer Smyth advising him that defendant was in custody and that he had recovered a rifle similar to that reported in Richard Terrell’s burglary. Sergeant Fletcher relayed to Deputies Omohundro *424 and Galindo the address of the apartment and the information received by him from the two Mr. Terrells and Officer Smyth, and told them to go to the address where the Lynwood officers had defendant in custody. Deputy Omohundro was met by Officers Smyth and Jessinghaus who said they had arrested defendant for suspicion of burglary and recovered the stolen rifle which had been brought from a closet by a woman in the apartment and the stolen credit cards from defendant’s pants pocket. The rifle was lying on a counter in the apartment. Deputy Omohundro asked defendant to step outside where he identified himself and his partner, told him he was being placed under arrest for burglary and advised him of all of his constitutional rights. 1 Asked if he understood these rights defendant said that he did. Then defendant asked whether Mrs. Dwyer would be taken to jail if he told them what they wanted to know; Deputy Omohundro replied that it would depend upon what was told them. Defendant stated freely and voluntarily, without promises or threats to induce him to make a statement, that he had taken the rifle and the credit cards; he and another person had entered the house of Richard Terrell in the early evening of July 15 through a rear window and taken the rifle; he needed money and he had taken the rifle with the intent to commit a robbery and then return the rifle to its proper place in Terrell’s home before the burglary was discovered; he was just borrowing the rifle and intended to return it. Defendant testified only on the issue of the voluntariness of his statements; he said that he made them to the police in the hope that Mrs. Dwyer would not be jailed, and otherwise he would not have made those statements.

Defendant neither offered a defense nor testified on his own behalf.

Appellant’s contention that he entered the Terrell home “merely to borrow’’ the rifle, not permanently to deprive the owner of it, and that there must be a showing that when he entered Richard Terrell’s residence he intended to perpetrate a felony within the premises and there is no proof of such intent because the felony he intended to commit was a robbery to be perpetrated later elsewhere not in Terrell’s home, is pred *425 icated on his extrajudicial statement to Deputy Omohundro that he intended only to borrow the weapon for the purpose of using it later to commit a robbery and return it upon completion of the intended crime before the absence of the weapon was discovered by the Terrells.

For a burglary conviction the prosecution must prove that the entry was made “with intent to commit grand or petit larceny or any felony’’ (§ 459, Pen. Code), but the intent to commit larceny means the intent to deprive the owner of his property permanently. (People v. Garrow, 130 Cal.App.2d 75, 83-84 [278 P.2d 475].) Direct evidence of specific intent is seldom available in burglary prosecutions and the proof is almost entirely circumstantial. (People v. Henderson, 138 Cal.App.2d 505, 509 [292 P.2d 267].) While burglarious intent can reasonably be inferred from an unlawful entry alone (People v. Jordan, 204 Cal.App.2d 782, 786 [22 Cal.Rptr. 731]), the circumstances attest defendant’s intent to steal the rifle.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 Cal. App. 2d 420, 64 Cal. Rptr. 855, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wolfe-calctapp-1967.