70 Cal. App. 2d 439 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1945
On September 28, 1944, the District Attorney of Los Angeles County, filed a second amended information containing six counts, the first three counts of which charged defendant with the commission on April 11, 1944, of the offenses of kidnapping, rape, and assault by means of force likely to produce great bodily injury upon Mrs. Marion Davis. Counts 4 and 5 charged kidnapping and assault by means of force likely to produce great bodily injury committed by defendant on May 15, 1944, against Helen Rogers. Count 6 charged a violation on April 22, 1944, of the Deadly Weapon Act, and in addition, defendant was charged with two prior convictions of felonies, i.e., burglary and perjury. He admitted the prior conviction of the crime of perjury, and the jury found him guilty on all six counts of the said information; that he was armed at the time he committed the offenses charged in counts 1, 2 and 3, and that he had suffered the prior conviction for the crime of burglary and had served a term of imprisonment therefor. This appeal is prosecuted from the judgment of conviction and also from the order denying the motion for a new trial.
Appellant appears in this court in propria persona, and makes many specifications of error which, he urges, entitle him to a reversal of the judgment and the order appealed from.
With respect to the offenses with which appellant was charged in the first three counts of the said information, Mrs. Davis testified that she was employed as a mail clerk at the Terminal Annex, United States Postoffiee at Los Angeles, and left there at 2:30 a.m. on April 11, 1944; that she boarded a streetcar at Alameda and Maey Streets and went to Fifth and Spring Streets, where she transferred to a “U” ear, from which she alighted at Washington Street and Central Avenue ; that she proceeded to walk a block and a half to her home
Willie Jones, who occupied an apartment in the same building in which Mrs. Davis lived, testified that around 3:20 in the morning of April 11, 1944, he was awakened by the voices of a man and a woman “talking awfully loud,” and immediately thereafter he heard an automobile drive off; that he did not recognize the voices and did not hear what was said; that about an hour later, Mrs. Davis knocked on the door of his apartment; that she was crying and her knees were bruised, and at that time she related to him what had happened to her.
With respect to counts 4 and 5 of the said information, Mrs. Helen E. Rogers testified that in May of 1944, she was working at the Margold Cafe, 5259 South Central Avenue, and on May 14th she left there at 11:30 in the evening, walked to 51st and Central where she boarded a streetcar, later transferring to a bus in which she rode to Jefferson and San Pedro Streets. Within a block of this intersection, San Pedro curves into Avalon, and as the witness proceeded along Avalon toward 35th Street, a man “walked up toward me and stopped just before I reached the corner (of Avalon and 35th Streets) and asked me could I direct him to a person by the name of George Wright. ... I told him no. ... I continued to walk, and as I turned the corner, the gentleman stepped a little behind me and grabbed me. ’ ’ It was then about 12:05 a.m. of May 15th. Continuing, Mrs. Rogers testified that “When he grabbed me I screamed, and as I started screaming he grabbed me around my neck and started choking me and dragging me at the same time toward the car which was parked on 35th Street facing Avalon. . . . He was pushing and pulling me toward this car. ... He had both hands around my neck . . . choking me, and I was screaming all at the same time.
The prosecutrix Davis testified upon cross-examination, that the next time she saw appellant after April 11, 1944, was around 5:15 p.m. of May 15th; that she was sitting at Central Avenue and Washington Street waiting for a streetcar when she saw him pass in an automobile; that she was between 15 and 18 feet from him, got a good look at him and immediately recognized him as the man who had forced her into his car on April 11th; that she took the license number of his car and called the police. She further testified that the car which appellant was driving on May 15th stopped for the signal and drove on after the light changed, and that appellant did not see her; that when she identified appellant at the police station, four or five prisoners, all colored men, were lined up and she was brought into the room in which they were standing and made her identification of appellant to the police officers, McGruder and Broady.
The violation of the Deadly Weapon Act, charged in Count 6, was established by admissions of appellant and the testimony of the witness Chester Spencer to the effect that appellant on April 22, 1944, pawned a Colt’s .38 caliber revolver, number 44325, at the pawn shop where the witness worked at 4368 South Central Avenue, and the original pawn ticket and the revolver were admitted in evidence as People’s Exhibits 1 and 2. Appellant admitted that the signature on the pawn ticket was in his own handwriting and that he wrote it on April 22, 1944, and that he personally took the gun to the pawn shop; that he brought the gun from Texas on March 20, 1944, and kept it in his trunk in Los Angeles from that date until April 22,1944, when he carried it to the pawn shop. He also admitted having been convicted of the crime of perjury in the State of Texas in December of 1938.
There is no merit in appellant’s first specification of error, that the offenses charged against him should have been by indictment instead of information. (Const., art. I, §8; People v. Flannelly, 128 Cal. 83, 86 [60 P. 670].)
It is claimed that the corpus delicti was not established as to the charge of rape, in that the prosecution “did not make a showing to prove the substance of the crimes.” The corpus delicti of the crime of rape consists of “an act of sexual intercourse accomplished with a female not the wife of the perpetrator,” where the victim “is prevented from resisting by threats of great and immediate bodily harm, accompanied by apparent power of execution. ...” (Pen. Code, § 261, subd. 4.) These elements were established by
the testimony of the prosecutrix Davis, it being settled law that the uncorroborated testimony of a prosecutrix is sufficient to sustain a conviction of rape. (22 Cal.Jur. 399 and cases there cited; People v. Gidney, 10 Cal.2d 138, 143 [73 P.2d 1186]; People v. Akey, 163 Cal. 54, 56 [124 P. 718].) In People v. Gallagher, 108 Cal.App. 128, 129 [291 P. 626], the court stated as follows: ‘‘ The first point made for reversal is that there was no testimony proving the corpus delicti of the offense alleged. A review of the testimony of the complaining witness reveals that she testified that she had sexual intercourse with the defendant at the time and place set forth in the information. This testimony completely answers the appellant’s contention. The argument of appellant likewise, that he was convicted upon the uncorroborated testimony of the complaining witness furnishes no ground for a reversal of the judgment. A review of the cases cited in 22 California Jurisprudence, page 399, shows clearly that if the jury accepts the testimony of the complaining witness as true, nothing further is required to sustain a conviction. The cases cited are all one way and it is unnecessary to refer to any authorities other than those cited in California Jurisprudence to which we have referred.' ’
In the instant case, however, there was corroboration of
The claim that penetration was not proved and that no male spermatozoa was produced ignores the testimony of the prosecutrix Davis and the corroborating testimony of the doctor and chemist hereinbefore mentioned.
Appellant urges that the prosecution violated section 1025 of the Penal Code when they branded him an ‘‘ ex-convict during the trial procedure of the gun act, before prosecuting the First, Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth Counts of said Information.” Sections 969 and 969a of the Penal Code require that all known previous convictions of felonies must be charged in the indictment or information and the defendant required to plead thereto. In the instant cause, the information charged appellant with two prior convictions. He admitted one, that of perjury, but he denied that he had previously been convicted of the crime of burglary. It is only when an information charges a defendant with the commission of a felony and also charges a previous conviction which is confessed by the defendant, that the charge of such previous conviction cannot be read to the jury nor alluded to at the trial. (Pen. Code, §§ 1025 and 1093.) Hence, in the procedure followed at the trial in the instant case, there was no violation of section 1025, because appellant having denied the prior conviction of the crime of burglary, it became necessary to establish such prior conviction in connection with Count 6 of the information which charged a violation of section 2 of the so-called Deadly Weapon Act to wit: “. . . no person . . . who has been convicted of a felony under the laws of the United States, of the state of California, or any other state . . . shall own or have in his possession or under his custody or control any pistol, revolver or other firearm capable of being concealed upon the person.” (Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 1970.)
With respect to the claim that the evidence was highly improbable, it was held in People v. Asavis, 27 Cal.App.2d 685, 688 [81 P.2d 595], that “We are not directed to, nor do we find in this record, anything that would justify this court in stamping the story of the prosecutrix as inherently unbelievable or even improbable. As was said in People v. Haydon, 18 Cal.App. 543 [123 P. 1102], ‘A statement, to bear upon its
The claim by appellant that he was not sufficiently identified does not find support in the record. As to the commission of the offenses against Mrs. Davis on April 11th, she had ample opportunity to scrutinize her assailant, both when he was standing over her threatening her with his gun, and later in the automobile, when, in addition to his other features, she noted his gold tooth. She had no difficulty in picking him out of a group of colored men in a line-up at the police station. As the perpetrator of the offenses committed against Mrs. Rogers on May 15th, he was positively identified not only by Mrs. Rogers, whom he approached under the street light on Avalon near 35th Street, but also by Mr. Mack, who rescued her.
Appellant also argues that there was lack of resistance on the part of prosecutrix Davis as to the offenses committed against her on April 11th. The testimony of Mrs. Davis is replete with evidence of her attempt to flee from appellant in order to reach her home, also of her pleas to be released when caught and her extreme fear of the revolver used by appellant in the accomplishment of his purpose.
As a final point urged as a ground for reversal of the judgment herein, appellant asserts he established alibis in that he proved “by witnesses where he was at the time and during the alleged attacks. ’ ’ With respect to the offenses committed after three o’clock on the morning of April 11, which included the offense of rape, his testimony, which is uncorroborated by any of the three persons in whose company he claims to have been—was that he was at the Little Harlem Cafe until about 1:30 a.m., and that “at the early hours of the morning I was at home.” No corroboration of this testimony was offered, and no further attempt was made to establish an alibi for the offenses committed between the hours
One discrepancy in the testimony of Mrs. Davis is pointed out in respondent’s brief, to wit: This witness testified that she saw appellant at about 5 :15 p.m., of May 15th at Central and Washington, where she was sitting on a seat waiting for the streetcar and saw him pass; that he was in the same car that she saw and rode in on April 11th and she took thel license number of it; that she was 15 to 18 feet from him and recognized him, and also saw a bottle of lotion in the car which she had noticed when she was in the car on April 11th; that she was sure of the lotion and sure of the identity of the man and that she put the license number down and called the police. Thereafter, the timekeeper of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company testified from his records that appellant reported for work at 10 a.m. of May 15th and went to San Francisco on a train that day, returning to Los Angeles on May 16th at 1 p.m. From this it would appear that Mrs. Davis was
An examination of the record herein discloses that appellant was accorded a fair and impartial trial, remarkably free from error, and that the evidence presented was sufficient to support the verdicts of the jury finding appellant guilty, as charged.
For the reasons stated, the judgment and the order appealed from are, and each of them is, affirmed.
Doran, J., and White, J., concurred.