Rhodes v. People

381 P.2d 30, 152 Colo. 210, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 403
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 29, 1963
DocketNo. 20,041
StatusPublished

This text of 381 P.2d 30 (Rhodes v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhodes v. People, 381 P.2d 30, 152 Colo. 210, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 403 (Colo. 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the Court.

We will refer to plaintiff in error as the defendant or by name. He was informed against for the crime of first degree murder to which charge he entered a plea of not guilty. Upon trial the jury returned a verdict of guilty and fixed the punishment at life imprisonment. Motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, and judgment entered on the verdict.

As grounds for reversal counsel for defendant argue:

1. That the court should have directed a verdict in favor of defendant.

2. That the court erred in admitting the testimony of Dr. Hunt.

[212]*2123. That the court erred in admitting in evidence “extra judicial statements of the accused.”

A brief summary of the facts concerning which there is no substantial dispute is as follows: August 5, 1960, a thirteen-year-old boy found a human leg in the bottom of a gully along a rural roadway known as Union avenue near the intersection with Quebec street in Arapahoe county. The sheriffs office was notified and officers investigated. They found the remains of a decomposed human body lying in a depression or “shallow grave.” The so-called “grave” was actually the embedded indentations caused by the body lying in old grass clippings and debris which had been dumped there. The grass clippings had been so depressed by the body as to show the complete outline of the corpse, and the places where the head, torso, buttocks and legs had rested were readily discernible. At a point immediately below the depression in which the head had lain there was found part of a leather belt which had been tied into a noose. The belt had grass clippings and human hair on it. The skull was found across the road a short distance from the torso and legs; a lower jawbone was found approximately fifty yards distant from the body; a neckbone was found twenty-five feet from the jawbone; the foot bones were missing, as well as the right arm. An animal tooth was found imbedded in an eye socket of the skull; articles of clothing and a watch were found which were identified as being that worn and owned by Phyllis Ann Columbo who was last seen alive in the late afternoon of June 9, 1960, at which time she had registered as a student in Opportunity School in Denver.

Prior to June 9th the deceased and the defendant were well acquainted. They lived close to each other in apartments on South Lincoln street in Denver. They spent the Decoration Day holiday together and had visited her mother together. Defendant was then employed at Gates Rubber Company and his work shift began at 11:00 P.M. On several occasions defendant [213]*213upon leaving his work in the early morning had gone to the apartment of deceased and had breakfast with her, and on several occasions took her to the store in Englewood where she was employed. He had been given keys to her apartment and at least on two mornings after her disappearance he entered her apartment where he prepared and ate his own breakfast. The landlord then requested that he turn over to him the keys to the apartment. Defendant made no report of Phyllis’ disappearance. The missing persons bureau was notified by others. Defendant was interviewed. He promised the police that if he left his then address he would notify them. Shortly thereafter he did notify the police that he was going to an address in California, where he was subsequently placed under arrest.

The district attorney called a witness who testified that she and her husband went for a drive in their car on the evening of June 9, 1960; that they drove south on the Valley Highway to Belleview where they turned east; that:

“As we drove out east from Valley Highway we went off the pavement on a dirt road. At the following intersection the headlights of the car shone on a car that was pax-ked on the south side of the road. I could see that it was a black Mercury with a white top.”

The witness went on to say that this was about 10 o’clock; that she recognized the car as that belonging to the defendant. She further stated that a man and a girl were in the car but she could not see who they were; that the girl’s hair was brown or brunette and the driver’s hair very much darker; that the location was at Dayton and Belleview and that the couple appeared to be having an altercation. She stated that she saw the defendant about one week thereafter when he was talking to the owner of the auto body shop where her husband was employed and that in defendant’s presence she said to her sister: “That is the kid that was parked out in [214]*214the boondocks with his girl friend the other night, they were fighting.”

She further stated that upon making that statement to her sister she looked at defendant and he was as white as a sheet and as white as the shirt he had on that day. Her knowledge of the car was amply sufficient to enable her to identify it as being the car of the defendant. Although this testimony was later discredited substantially by other evidence, the weight to which it was entitled was a matter for the jury. The substance of the testimony relating to the parked automobile was admitted by the defendant in a signed statement hereinafter considered.

William Maraggos, an investigator for the sheriffs office, testified in substance as follows: That he went to California accompanied by his assistant, Roy Vogt, and Clyde Vallano, a Denver detective. They contacted defendant on Saturday, August 15, 1960. They went with him to his apartment and from there they went to the sheriff’s office in Los Angeles and talked to defendant for one and one-half hours then sent out for sandwiches and coffee. Rhodes did not say much. He admitted he knew the deceased. He first denied he had picked her up on the night of June 6, 1960, but said he had taken her to work on that morning and that he had not seen her since; that he had returned to her apartment on the mornings of June 10th and 11th and fixed himself some breakfast and then the landlord asked him for the key because Phyllis was not around.

Rhodes asked Maraggos what he had found. He then said: “Could I have done it without remembering it?” Maraggos replied: “That is possible, I am not a doctor but that is possible, it has happened in the past.” Defendant then said, “Well, I must have done it.” He was then placed in jail in Los Angeles. Monday, August 17, he was given a hearing in court in Los Angeles; he was advised of his rights; given time to talk to a Public Defender in Los Angeles, and went out with that de[215]*215fender, presumably for a conference. On the trip back to Colorado the officers stopped in Las Vegas where defendant was lodged in jail. They did not discuss the matter with defendant in any way during the trip. They arrived back in Littleton on August 17, 1960, and and August 18th, after defendant had been given time to rest, he was questioned. August 19th defendant made a written statement in his own handwriting in the presence of Vogt, Maraggos, J. L. Skidmore and of Charles Thurston, who was a friend of the defendant. Rhodes was told when he wrote the statement to tell the truth as close as he could remember, and was told that he did not have to make a statement; nevertheless, he wrote the following:

“Frank Gilbert Rhodes

“June 9, 1960 I took Phillis to work at Whites in Ingelwood. She said she was going to register at Opertunity school and she wanted me to pick her up at the Cup and Saucer. I picked her up between 8-8:30 P.M. that night. We went for a ride south on the Valley Hiway.

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Related

Downey v. People
215 P.2d 892 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1950)
Bridges v. Lintz
346 P.2d 571 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
381 P.2d 30, 152 Colo. 210, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhodes-v-people-colo-1963.