People v. Yates

236 P. 185, 71 Cal. App. 788, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 538
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1925
DocketDocket No. 1147.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 236 P. 185 (People v. Yates) 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. Yates, 236 P. 185, 71 Cal. App. 788, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 538 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

Defendant was convicted on the charge of robbery. He appeals from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

Briefly, the evidence shows that as a messenger from a station of the Pacific Electric Railway Company located at the city of Sherman approached a bank with approximately four thousand dollars in cash in his possession, for the purpose of depositing the money in the bank, he was halted by two men named Hanna and Goslyn, respectively, who ordered the messenger to place the money in an automobile in which the two men had been riding—at the same time telling the messenger that he was “covered” with a pistol by a third man who was standing across the street from the place where the messenger was being robbed. The messenger complied with the order, and the "two men, Hanna and Goslyn, escaped, but were shortly thereafter arrested and subsequently convicted of the crime of robbery.

On behalf of the People, Goslyn testified to the details of the robbery as committed by him and Hanna with defendant Tates as the “lookout.”

*791 A witness by the name of Moore testified, without objection thereto, that about fifteen days before the robbery occurred defendant had tried to induce Moore to assist defendant and a third man (who was not present at the conversation and with whom Moore was unacquainted) in the commission of the crime but that, while Moore told Yates in effect that he would assist in the contemplated “holdup,” he was “just kidding, playing with him, and . . . didn’t think he was going to do it, and (Moore) . . . didn’t mean anything like that”; that later defendant brought to see the witness the man to whom defendant had referred in their conversation regarding the proposed robbery, which man inquired particularly of Moore regarding the defendant and his occupation—that is, whether or not defendant was a policeman; that on the evening of the day after the robbery had taken place he and defendant had a conversation including the following: “He (defendant) said, ‘They made the holdup down in Sherman” I said, ‘Yes, who was it?’ He said, ‘I don’t know, but I believe it was this fellow that came over here with me.’ I said; ‘Yes, how do you think so?’ He said, ‘Because I told those fellows how to do it, and since the day we came over here I haven’t seen that fellow, so I thought that this thing was over.’ He said, ‘I didn’t think that this fellow was going to do it, so I thought I would call it off.’ He said, ‘I did not see this fellow any more and I didn’t hear anything about this thing, and this fellow, he got somebody else, I guess,’ he told me, ‘and went and done it himself, and he didn’t want to get me with him because maybe he had another best friend than I was,’ and he says, ‘and wanted to give him the part instead of me.’ I asked him, ‘Are you sure you wasn’t with him?’ and he said, ‘No.’ Then I had to go, and I told him, ‘I will be right back.’ He said, ‘I will be right back, too.’ So I told him, ‘All right.’ He went out and come back in about a half an hour and he brought a newspaper, and then he told me, ‘Come here, Tom.’ So I stopped and I asked him what, and he says—he looked around and he says, ‘I don’t like to talk to you right here.’ I asked him why, and he said, ‘Oh, I feel nervous. Let’s go around, the back there.’ I told him, ‘All right. ’ We went in the corner where the cars were parked. I told him, ‘But we can’t see the paper here. What is it?’ So I light the dash-light off of a car and he *792 read the paper for me where it says about the holdup, and then it says on the paper about a fellow with a, wearing a mustache, black suit on and black hat on, and then the way the paper said I told him, ‘That is you, Yates,’ and he said, ‘Yes, that is me; it can’t be anybody else.’ Then I looked at him and I says, ‘No, it ain’t’ And he says, ‘Why? What makes you think so?’ I told him, ‘Because the paper says the fellow with a black mustache and you haven’t got it.’ He said, ‘Yes, but I shaved it off.’ Oh, I laughed, and then he started to get nervous and shaking there, and I told him, ‘What was the matter?’ And he says, ‘Nothing, Tom; I just feel this way because if this fellow pulled off this thing, the one I talked to, he might want to get me into it too.’ I said, ‘Why, you didn’t make the holdup with him?’ He said, ‘No, but I planned it to him, told him how to make it,’ he says. So I told him, ‘That don’t make any difference, I guess,’ but he said, ‘Yes, it does, ’ and I told him, ‘Yes, and what do you want to do now?’ Then he thinked it over and he told me, ‘I guess the best thing I could do was to get out of town, to be safe.’ I told him, ‘Yes, you can do that, too, if you don’t feel safe enough here.’ Then he told me, then he thinked it over again, and he said he had a friend in Sherman, and I told him this way, I told him, ‘No, if I would be you I wouldn’t go away if I wasn’t with him when they done the holdup, if it is that way you say you haven’t seen him for fifteen days, I wouldn’t go away. ’ He said, ‘Oh, yes, Tom. I got scared. I know I planned this thing and they will get me in it.’ ... So I told him—then he ask^d me—then he told me he would like to get out' of town anyway. So I told him, ‘Where do you want to go to?’ He said, ‘I would like to go to Riverside,’ and I told him, ‘Well, why don’t you catch the stage?’ He said, ‘No time for the stage now. ’ ‘ The stage runs until 7:20 or 8:30, ’ he told me, ‘and the last stage has done passed,’ and he got no time to catch it, ‘and then I haven’t got no money.’ ‘Well,’ I told him, ‘If you want a dollar, I can lend you a dollar. ’ ” That thereafter on that evening the witness lent defendant one dollar; procured an automobile and induced one Tona to take defendant to the city of Riverside, where defendant had said that a brother of his was living.

Tona testified that on that night he took defendant to Riverside, where they arrived at about 2 o’clock A. M. the *793 next day, and that defendant there produced one dollar with which they bought five gallons of gasoline for use in the automobile in which they had ridden from Los Angeles to Riverside.

A witness named Moreno testified that he accompanied defendant and Tona on the trip to Riverside, and that on one or two occasions on the way there, when it became necessary to make some repairs on the automobile, “he (defendant) got out a couple—when we were going out, he got out in a couple of places and hide (hid) over in the trees while we were fixing the machine.’?

There was also testimony to the effect that on the day when the robbery took place defendant lived in and was familiar with the city of Sherman and with the practice and method adopted by the Pacific Electric Railway Company and its messenger in depositing funds in the manner which was employed or attempted to be employed on the occasion in question, and that defendant had means of knowledge of the amount of cash likely to be in the possession of such messenger at such times.

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Bluebook (online)
236 P. 185, 71 Cal. App. 788, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-yates-calctapp-1925.