People v. Zammora

152 P.2d 180, 66 Cal. App. 2d 166, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1170
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 4, 1944
DocketCrim. 3719
StatusPublished
Cited by107 cases

This text of 152 P.2d 180 (People v. Zammora) 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. Zammora, 152 P.2d 180, 66 Cal. App. 2d 166, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1170 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

In an indictment returned by the Grand Jury of Los Angeles County, 22 defendants were jointly charged, in count I, with the crime of murder and, in counts II and III, with the crime of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder. After the entry of “not guilty” pleas as to all counts of the indictment, trial was had before a jury, resulting in the acquittal of five defendants on all three counts. Of the remaining defendants, five were acquitted of the murder charge, but were convicted of minor offenses necessarily included in the remaining two counts. The other 12 defendants were convicted on all three counts; three being found guilty of murder in the first degree and nine of murder in the second degree. This appeal *174 is prosecuted by the last mentioned 12 defendants, against whom verdicts of “guilty” were returned, as follows:

Count II
Defendant Count I Count III
Henry Leyvas Murder 1st Degree Guilty as Charged
Jose Ruiz Murder 1st Degree Guilty as Charged
Robert Telles Murder 1st Degree Guilty as Charged
Manuel Delgado Murder 2nd Degree Guilty as Charged
John Y. Matuz Murder 2nd Degree Guilty as Charged
Jack Melendez Murder 2nd Degree Guilty as Charged
Angel Padillo Murder 2nd Degree Guilty as Charged
Ysmael Parra Murder 2nd Degree Guilty as Charged
Manuel Reyes Victor Robt. Murder 2nd Degree Guilty as Charged
Thompson Murder 2nd Degree Guilty as Charged
Henry Ynostroza Murder 2nd Degree Guilty as Charged
Gus Zammora Murder 2nd Degree Guilty as Charged

Epitomizing the factual background which gave rise to this prosecution, it appears from the record that, on the evening of August 1, 1942, a birthday party was in progress honoring Mrs. Amelia Delgadillo. The party was held at her home and was attended by her husband, other members of her family and some twenty or thirty other invited guests. The record discloses that some eight or eleven uninvited' persons were also in attendance.

The Delgadillo home is located on what is known as the “Williams Ranch,” situate in the vicinity of Slauson and Atlantic Boulevards in the county of Los Angeles.

At the birthday party, on the evening in question, the guests indulged in dancing out in the patio to the music of an orchestra, which played from 9 p. m. until 1 a. m. After the departure of the musicians, a radio was placed in the back yard and members of the family with a few remaining guests continued dancing until approximately 1:45 on the morning of August 2nd.

Sometime before midnight, several of the defendants in this ease had gone to a small pond or reservoir also located on the Williams Ranch about a half mile west of the Delgadillo home, and designated by the boys and girls who, from time to time, congregated there, as “Sleepy Lagoon.” While the aforesaid group, consisting of some of the boys who later became defendants in this case and their girl companions, *175 were at “Sleepy Lagoon,” they were set upon and beaten by another crowd of boys identified only as “boys from Downey.”

The record also discloses that some eight or ten of these so-called “Downey boys” were among the uninvited guests at the Delgadillo party, and, earlier that evening, two of them became involved in an argument with their host and his son-in-law, because their host told them there was no more beer. One of those boys “grabbed” a chair in a threatening manner, but the other “grabbed” him with both hands on his shoulders, turned him around, and pulled him back outside of the patio gate. The witness, Eleanor Delgadillo Coronado was sitting in the patio across from the gate. She testified: “When I seen him, and I got up and then went to the kitchen door . . . because . . . when I seen these two boys come up, I thought they were going to start trouble or something. ’'

Following the aforesaid attack upon some of these defendants by the so-called “Downey boys” at “Sleepy Lagoon,” the former left the scene of the altercation and repaired to the vicinity of Vernon and Long Beach. Avenues, some five miles distant from “Sleepy Lagoon.” This last named location, it appears, was a place at which a group of young people from the 38th Street neighborhood congregated. We think it is a fair statement to say that the defendants who had been beaten up at “Sleepy Lagoon,” smarting under the effects of the beating administered to them, returned to the vicinity of Vernon and Long Beach Boulevards for the purpose of enlisting the aid of their friends and going again to “Sleepy Lagoon” for the avowed purpose of “fighting it out” with the boys from Downey. Thus reinforced, a number of boys and girls, including the defendants, ranging in age from 14 to 22 years, went out towards “Sleepy Lagoon” in several automobiles, variously testified to as being from five to ten in number. There is evidence that, prior to embarking upon the last mentioned trip, one of the defendants, Angel Padillo, who accompanied the caravan, obtained a box of shells for his 22 rifle, which he took with him. The evidence on this point is in conflict, but, in any event, it is conceded the rifle was not utilized in the commission of the alleged homicide or either of the two assaults charged against the defendants. Upon arrival at “Sleepy Lagoon,” it was discovered that the boys from Downey had departed. There *176 upon, some of the party disembarked from their automobiles and proceeded on foot to the Delgadillo home, where the aforesaid party was in progress, while others proceeded thereto in their automobiles, where most of them alighted from their vehicles.

What transpired thereafter will be discussed presently, but we pause here to give consideration to respondent’s claim that, in returning to “Sleepy Lagoon,” the defendants had entered into an unlawful combination or conspiracy, the object of which, as the result of their malignant hearts, was' to commit murder in satisfaction of their lust for revenge.

We have painstakingly read the reporter’s transcript in this case, containing, as it does, more than 6,000 pages. We have studiously read and considered the briefs filed herein, which total some 1,400" pages, and from a reading thereof we are persuaded that" there is no substantial evidence to support the claim that when the defendants left the vicinity of Vernon and Long Beach Avenues they had “murder in their hearts” or even that they had then formed any intent to go to the Delgadillo home. As we view the evidence, it strongly supports the theory that some of the defendants were intent upon meeting the “Downey boys” and engaging in a fist fight with them in retaliation for the attack made upon some of the defendants earlier that night at “Sleepy Lagoon.” It was only when these defendants discovered that the objects of their search had departed from “Sleepy Lagoon” that they determined upon going to the Delgadillo home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 P.2d 180, 66 Cal. App. 2d 166, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-zammora-calctapp-1944.