Defendant appeals from order denying new trial, presenting solely the contention that the trial court abused its discretion in denying defendant’s motion for new trial.
Record
Defendant was convicted of robbery in the first degree. He appealed from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for new trial.
(People
v.
Gaines
(1961)
*626 No Abuse op Discretion
A brief review of the evidence at the trial taken from Gaines, pages 129-130, is in order. At approximately 7:45 p. m. October 28, 1959, two men, one armed with a revolver, obtained about $100 by the robbery of Mrs. Patricia Earner, a ticket-booth cashier at a drive-in theater. The two men drove to the booth in a pale green older model General Motors car. Mrs. Earner saw them seated in the front seat, both with nylon stockings over their faces. One held a gun and asked her for money. The driver got out of the car, went to the side of the booth, reached in and took certain moneys. He asked if there was anything else. She gave a negative answer. She heard him say, “ ‘Now don’t forget the count’. . . .” As the men drove away, Mrs. Earner observed the license number of the ear. Later she identified a ear found by the police as the one used in the robbery. An examination of a car belonging to Wendell Lewis, arrested with defendant, disclosed a fully loaded .22 caliber automatic pistol underneath the spare tire, a nylon stocking in the hub cap, and some ammunition in the glove compartment. Lewis admitted the robbery and implicated defendant. Later Lewis gave a second statement which was recorded. When the officers played the recording of this statement, defendant made statements which we held were not admissions against interest and should not have been admitted in evidence. At the trial, most of the recording was read to the jury.
Defendant claimed an alibi which was supported by six witnesses. Shortly after the robbery Patricia Earner examined 28 photographs and recognized the defendant’s as being that of one of the robbers; she picked defendant out of a lineup of five men. At the trial she identified both Lewis and defendant as the men who robbed her, although at the preliminary examination she indicated that defendant’s voice seemed different than on the night of the robbery. Nevertheless her identification of defendant at the lineup, from the pictures and in court, was positive.
On the rehearing defendant produced Lewis’ affidavit. In his affidavit, Lewis admitted the robbery. He verified defendant’s story that he had seen defendant before and after the robbery at Tony’s Place, where the six other witnesses placed defendant. He claimed that defendant was not his companion in the robbery; that his accomplice’s name, “as far as I know, is Dave Rielly.” He had met Rielly three weeks before, and Rielly had told him that he had escaped from an institution *627 in Oklahoma. Lewis further stated that he had maintained silence when defendant was “mistakenly identified by two witnesses” because he wanted to get even with defendant who he thought had informed about his possession of the gun. He also had thought the jury would find defendant innocent which would afford him an excellent chance of being found so, too. Rielly, according to Lewis, was about Lewis’ age, about 5 feet 8 inches tall and light complected. In addition, Lewis stated that Gaines and he “had done something together about four or five years ago. ...” Lewis indicated that if a new trial were had he would testify in accordance with his affidavit.
Detective Sergeant Hutchings who had investigated the robbery, in his counteraffidavit made the following statements: He had known defendant and Lewis for the past seven years; they had participated in several burglaries and petty thefts in 1954. The information that led to their arrest came from Mrs. Mayes and her son. Mrs. Mayes told Hutchings that between 5 and 6 on the night of the robbery Lewis and defendant came to the Mayes home; that Lewis stated that he wanted to borrow a pair of nylon stockings. She noticed “that they had in their possession a pistol.” Her son Edward told her that defendant and Lewis had asked him to go on a robbery. Edward told Hutchings substantially the same story as did his mother. The son is now deceased. Mrs. Mayes is an itinerant worker, whose whereabouts are unknown. Lewis told Sergeant Hutchings that “they” had acquired the nylon stockings from Mrs. Mayes but Lewis did not know whether defendant came into the house or remained in the ear while the stockings were being obtained. Lewis’ description to Hutchings of Rielly was 25 or 26 years old, 5 feet 10, reddish and blond hair, 140-150 pounds, light complexion.
The authorities have uniformly held that hearsay can be considered by the trial court on a motion for new trial of this type. (See
People
v.
Fluery
(1958)
Hutchings investigated the story about Rielly. Lewis told Hutchings that he met Rielly only about a week before the *628 robbery, and doubted if he could recognize him again. A check of the California Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation and the Federal Bureau of Identification showed that no Rielly had escaped from an Oklahoma institution.
There is no question that a motion for new trial is addressed to the sound legal discretion of the trial court and its action will not be disturbed on appeal except where an abuse of discretion is clearly shown.
(People
v.
Gilbert
(1944)
The weight and credibility to be attached to affidavits for new trial is for the trial judge.
(People
v.
Jefferson
(1956)
In
People
v.
Byrne
(1911)
The discretion committed to a trial court on a motion of this kind is referred to in
People
v.
Fluery, supra,
The facts in the cases upon which defendant relies are in nowise comparable to those in our case. In
People
v.
Williams, supra,
Concerning
Shepherd,
the court in
People
v.
Monroe
(1958)
The third case,
People
v.
Gilbert, supra,
The order is affirmed.
Sullivan, J., and Conley, J., * concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 8, 1962.
Notes
Assigned by Charman of Judicial Council.
