281 P. 660 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1929
The district attorney filed an information against the defendants charging them with robbery. The defendants appeared and each pleaded not guilty. They were tried together before the trial court sitting with a jury. It returned separate verdicts finding each defendant guilty of robbery in the first degree. The defendants made a motion for a new trial. The motion was denied. From a judgment entered on the verdicts and from the order denying a new trial the defendants have appealed.
The defendants contend that the evidence does not justify a judgment greater than that of second degree robbery. They call to our attention that the defendant John Nissrod was the active operator. That on the ninth day of March, 1929, he entered Compton's restaurant at No. 8 Kearny Street, San Francisco, and went to the mezzanine floor where Edward Lessner was making up the cash. Nissrod entered the room where Lessner was and, holding a pistol in one hand, he pointed it at Lessner and called upon him to throw up his hands, which Lessner did. Nissrod then approached Lessner, still holding the pistol pointed at him, and took out of Lessner's pocket Lessner's key. Lessner testified that he threw up his hands out of fear and that the money, which approximated one thousand dollars, was taken against his will and without his consent. A pistol was produced which Nissrod admitted was the weapon which he had used. When the pistol was produced in the courtroom *304 it was unloaded, and Nissrod testified that it was not loaded when he committed the robbery. There was no evidence Nissrod shot the pistol and there was no evidence that he used it as a club with which to hammer or beat Lessner.
Under this condition of the record the defendants contend that the pistol was neither a "deadly weapon" nor a "dangerous weapon." They cite and rely on People v. Sylva,
[6] Still presenting the same theory the defendants complain because the trial court refused to give an instruction worded as follows: "In this connection the court instructs you that if you have any reasonable doubt as to the degree of the crime then it is your duty to find that the robbery was robbery in the second degree." The court did not err. Speaking of the case generally, the court had fully instructed on reasonable doubt. It was not called upon to repeat itself nor to address a specific instruction to the specific item of evidence "was the pistol loaded or unloaded." Moreover, as the defendant Nissrod had taken the stand and had admitted having committed robbery in the manner hereinabove delineated, there was no reasonable ground of doubt that the offense was perpetrated ". . . with a dangerous or deadly weapon."
[7] From People v. Seawright,
We find no error in the record. The judgment and order are affirmed.
Koford, P.J., and Nourse, J., concurred.
A petition by appellants for a rehearing of this cause was ordered stricken from the files by the District Court of Appeal on November 2, 1929, and the following opinion then rendered thereon:
THE COURT.
[8] This court having heretofore filed its opinion in the above-entitled matter on the eighteenth day of October, 1929, and the appellants' petition for a rehearing not having been filed until November 1, 1929, the latter comes too late and should be stricken from the file. It is so ordered.