DocketNumber: Crim. No. 2737
Judges: Shinn
Filed Date: 10/15/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
This is an appeal by defendant Clifford Hipp, also known as Donald Wright, from judgments of conviction after jury trial, of robbing Wayne Nickell of the sum of $48 on or about December 29, 1934, and of robbing Everett Teal of the sum of $28.01 on or about January 2, 1935. He was charged jointly with Emmett Beeson and Walter Young with the commission of said offenses, and with
Wayne Nickell was robbed at about 3:30 A. M., while working in a restaurant, by two boys, one of whom carried a gun and was identified as the defendant Young. The prosecuting witness, Nickell, testified that the other boy, claimed by the People to be defendant Hipp, had a hat pulled down over his face during the robbery, which prevented a clear view of his features. His identification of this defendant, if it stood alone, would raise a serious question as to its sufficiency to connect the defendant with this robbery. However, it was supported by the admission of the defendant Hipp, to be discussed later.
The witness Everett Teal, testifying to the facts charged in the second count of the information, related a robbery by two boys about 5:00 A. M. on January 5, 1935, in a restaurant where Teal was employed. He identified Walter Young as one of the robbers and appellant Hipp as the other. He testified that Hipp took the money from the cash register while Young pointed a gun at him, and that he also handed Hipp some more money, making $28.01 in all, of which he was robbed. He identified both defendants from photographs shown him by the police and again when he saw them in jail, although they were differently dressed; and he testified that he had had a good look at them during the robbery.
Appellant was arrested on the morning of January 10, 1935, while in bed in a rooming house in Los Angeles. In the afternoon of that day he signed a statement confessing the crimes with which he was charged. When objection was made to the statement, a voir dire examination was conducted by defendant’s counsel, from which it appeared that the statement was made voluntarily, and after a full hearing the statement was admitted. The ruling was one within the broad discretion of the trial judge. It may not be disturbed on appeal where no abuse of discretion is shown, and none is shown here. (People v. Madsen, 93 Cal. App. 711 [270 Pac. 237]; People v. Dye, 119 Cal. App. 262 [6 Pac. (2d) 313].) Defendant testified that he made the statement only after
The confession, taken with the identifications of appellant by the witnesses who were robbed, is sufficient to support the verdicts of guilty. The court did not commit error in admitting the confession, and the ease, in other respects as well, was fully and fairly tried.
The judgments are affirmed.
Houser, P. J., and York, J., concurred.