People v. Fleig
People v. Fleig
Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 636
Defendant was tried before a jury and found guilty of a violation of section
After returning to his patrol car to radio for a picture-taking unit, Officer Hansen went back to the discovery scene and talked with defendant, who was still lying against the tree. In his hand defendant had a jar of peanut butter. In the jar was a knife.
Officer Hansen asked defendant "for identification" and inquired "what he was doing in the general area." (The trial record does not reflect defendant's response.) Then the police officer asked defendant to remain in the area, telling him he would be right back. Officer Hansen then returned to his patrol car a second time and made a radio call to determine if there were any outstanding warrants for defendant's arrest.
About five or ten minutes after Officer Hansen had gone back to his car a second time, defendant came up to that vehicle. The knife was not in defendant's hand at that time. Officer Hansen "did not know the knife was missing then." At the car, he told defendant he "thought it was an illegal knife" (meaning the blade was too long). Approximately five or ten minutes after defendant had approached the police car, a radio call informed Officer Hansen there was a traffic warrant outstanding for defendant. For that reason, the officer then took defendant into custody.
Two days later a knife was found by Detective Clark on the golf course near where defendant had been first observed. At the trial Mrs. Holloway, when shown the knife, described it as being "very similar" to the one held by the male intruder at the motel. The arresting officer testified the knife was "very similar" to the one which defendant had in the peanut butter jar at the golf course. Miss Linda Lee, who had been awakened *Page 638 in her Sacramento apartment at 5:45 a.m. on the day of the Holloway and Silva crimes by a naked male who was pointing a knife at her throat, positively identified defendant as her intruder and the knife as the same one defendant had shown her after holding it at her throat.
The record is devoid of any evidence that defendant led Detective Clark to the knife, nor when questioned on voir dire
did Detective Clark mention either the knife or any visit to the golf course with defendant. The record fails to show the finding of the knife to be the result either of any inadmissible statement of defendant1 (People v. Buchanan,
[2] We examine now defendant's contention that there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction under count 3 — the alleged first degree burglary of the Silva home.
On this appeal the evidence and the inferences which the jury could reasonably deduce therefrom must be viewed in the light most favorable to respondent. (People v. O'Neal,
[3] Mrs. Silva had retired between 12:30 a.m. and 1 a.m. *Page 639
on July 14th. Her parents-in-law were talking in the same room at and after 6:30 a.m. that date. Consequently, the Silva home was burglarized sometime during a period of at least five and one-half hours between 1 a.m. and 6:30 a.m. This evidence was adequate to establish that the burglary of the Silva home was "committed in the nighttime," i.e., was first degree burglary, especially when considered in conjunction with the testimony that on July 14th "it was dark" outside at 5 a.m., that "it was just light" at 5:45 a.m. "before the sun came up," and that it was "between light and dark" at 6:30 a.m. (See Pen. Code, §§
[4] Mrs. Holloway had gone to sleep in her motel room with her two children at 1 a.m. on July 14th and defendant was shown to have been there later that night for an unknown length of time terminating between 4:30 a.m. and 5 a.m. There was also evidence from which the jury could infer that defendant had at least attempted to break into five other rooms at the same motel during some unestablished interval. Even if the jurors had also inferred those five attempted entries were all made after 1 a.m. that night, they were justified in concluding from the nature of the offenses that — both in attempting entry to the other rooms and in burglarizing the Holloway room — defendant had exposed himself to apprehension at the Sacramento Inn only a small portion of the four hours between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m. Apart from Miss Lee's testimony establishing that between 45 minutes and one and one-quarter hours were available to defendant from the time he fled the Holloway room until he entered the Lee apartment, the jury could reasonably infer that defendant had ample time between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m. to accomplish the Silva burglary before shifting his activities to the inn.
[5a] There was, however, no evidence of any similarity in the methods used to enter the Holloway motel room, the Lee apartment, and the Silva residence. The screen door to the Holloway patio had "a cut approximately three inches long just opposite the lock of the screen door. The bottom of the cut appeared to be in a tear-drop design or a small hole." There were "no pry marks" on the sliding glass door to the Holloway patio; police tests demonstrated it could be opened, though locked, by lifting up on the handle and vibrating the *Page 640 door. In contrast, to gain access to the Lee apartment, defendant "had taken the screen off and pried open the window." The record contains no hint of the technique used to accomplish this, nor was there any evidence concerning marks which might have been left on the Lee screen and window. Finally, as to the Silva home, "the screens were gone" on two windows. The missing screens were later found outside; they had not been cut in any way. There was no evidence concerning the method used to remove them, except for whatever speculative interpretation can be given to Mrs. Silva's testimony that "the wall" was "chipped . . . on the side of the screen on the outside."
The mere fact that the Silva and Lee screens were removed was not sufficient to establish a modus operandi. When respondent refers to "the common means of entry used . . . in entering Miss Lee's apartment and the Silva residence," respondent can be referring to nothing more "inculpatory" than the fact that, in each burglary, one or more screens (of unknown similarity) were taken off and access was made through a window.
[6] Nevertheless, defendant's guilt of the Silva burglary was established in other ways. First of all, there was circumstantial evidence of his having been in possession of Mrs. Silva's brassiere and purse on at least the day after the Silva offense. This circumstantial evidence consisted of the following: (1) defendant had taken a purse and female clothing — brassieres, a half-slip, bathing suits, and nylon stockings — from Mrs. Holloway's motel room on July 14th; (2) Mrs. Silva's brassiere and purse were found with Mrs. Holloway's purse and most of the Holloway clothing on July 15th in the shrubbery near where defendant was first seen that day at the golf course; and (3) items belonging both to the Holloway family and to Mrs. Silva were intermixed in the two purses. (See People v. Citrino,
Defendant's possession of Mrs. Silva's brassiere and purse was an inculpatory circumstance which the jury could consider on the issue of guilt — though insufficient in and of itself to support a conviction under count 3. Defendant himself offered no evidence.
"While the mere possession of stolen property unexplained by the defendant is not of itself, and standing alone, sufficient to justify a conviction of burglary, even if it be shown to a *Page 641
moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt that by someone the alleged burglary was committed, yet such possession of stolen property is a circumstance which, taken in connection with otherincriminating evidence in the case, may be considered by the court or jury in determining the question of the guilt or innocence of a defendant so charged." (Italics added.) (People
v. Golembiewski,
Nothing in the foregoing rule is inconsistent with People v.McFarland,
[5b] In the case at bench, there was evidence of one other incriminating circumstance which, in conjunction with defendant's possession of Mrs. Silva's brassiere and purse, was sufficient to establish his guilt of burglarizing the home of her parents-in-law. That additional circumstance consisted of the fact that, in the Holloway burglary as well as in the Silva burglary, the undergarments of females were stolen. (See People
v. Sanchez, supra, 35 Cal.App.2d at pp. 235-236.) Since defendant was shown beyond peradventure to have committed the Holloway offense, the successive thefts of women's undergarments was a peculiar behavior pattern which tended to identify him as being also the perpetrator of the Silva crime. (See People v.Cavanaugh,
[7] Defendant's final contention, applicable to count 1, is *Page 642
that the trial court improperly instructed the jury on the law applicable to his case, the claimed error being that there was a failure to instruct on simple assault. The trial court did instruct on the definition and elements of assault with a deadly weapon. The defendant did not request an instruction on simple assault. Furthermore, there was no evidence to justify a simple assault verdict. If the defendant was guilty at all, he was guilty of the more serious offense. The contention is without merit. (See Witkin, Cal. Criminal Procedure (1963) Trial, § 480, p. 487; People v. Morrison,
[8] On our own motion we now examine the sentences imposed on defendant to ascertain if the court's action in imposing concurrent sentences on counts 1 and 2 (assault on Mrs. Holloway with a deadly weapon and first degree burglary of her room) constituted double punishment prohibited by Penal Code section
The factual issue as to defendant's intent and objective in entering Mrs. Holloway's room was one for the trial court to determine before imposing sentence, subject to appellate review of the sufficiency of the evidence to support that conclusion. (See People v. Scott,
Since first degree burglary carries a more severe maximum penalty than assault with a deadly weapon, as between counts 1 and 2 defendant can only be punished under count 2, the burglary charge. (See Pen. Code, §§
Neither the concurrency of the sentences imposed under *Page 643
counts 1 and 2, nor defendant's failure to urge this double punishment point on appeal, precludes this court from modifying the judgment on the first count by setting aside the sentence imposed under it. (See People v. Moore,
The judgment is modified by striking therefrom the sentence for assault with a deadly weapon (count 1). As modified, the judgment is affirmed.
Pierce, P.J., and Friedman, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The People, and v. Arthur John Fleig, Jr., And
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published