DocketNumber: Crim. No. 7874
Judges: Ford
Filed Date: 5/31/1962
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
By separate informations Cecil Thomas and Trilbey Dan Hopkins were accused of the crime of robbery. The cases were consolidated for trial because they related to the same occurrence. Both defendants were found to be guilty of robbery in the second degree in a trial by jury. Thomas has appealed from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.
Because of the nature of the appellant’s claim of error hereinafter discussed, it is necessary to set forth at some length the testimony given at the trial. The offense occurred at a café on South Main street in Los Angeles. Ralph Paytiamo, who was in the Navy, entered the café at about 9:30 p.m. on the evening of February 4, 1961. He sat in a booth for a period of time and then went into the restroom. After he was in that room about a minute, he heard the word “hey” and turned around. Someone hit him on his left eye. He went against the wall and fell to the floor. He was hit again and became unconscious. Thereafter he got to his feet. No one else was then present. His wallet containing $20 was missing. He could not identify the person who hit him. Later, when he went to the bus depot, police officers took him to the hospital. Part of his testimony on cross-examination was as follows: “Q. Now, you noticed some other person or persons there after you went down, is that right? A. Yes, sir. Q. In other words, when you were first hit, all you
Alyce Leon, a waitress at the café, testified that she saw Ralph Paytiamo go into the restroom shortly after he came into the café. Before that, she saw both Thomas and Hopkins on the premises. After Paytiamo went into the restroom, Hopkins also went into that room. Shortly thereafter Thomas followed. She heard a noise as though someone had fallen in the restroom or in the hallway. Thereafter she heard a second noise. When she changed her position to be able to observe the hallway leading to the restroom, she met Thomas as he was coming out of the hall way. She asked him, “What happened? Was there a fight back there?” He replied, ‘ ‘ There is nothing to worry about. ’ ’ Thomas went over to the booth where he had been earlier and stood there. Several minutes later Hopkins came out. He looked toward Thomas and, with his head, “made a come-on signal . . . like he had told him to come on.” Then Thomas and Hopkins walked toward the front of the building, but the witness did not actually see them go out the door since her view was obstructed by a large juke box. Thereafter Paytiamo came out of the
Jean Le Plore was called as a witness for the appellant Thomas. On the evening of the occurrence in question she was in the café. She saw Hopkins and Thomas talk together. Thereafter, about 9:30 or 10 p. m. that night she saw Hopkins and the appellant Thomas at another bar on Pico Boulevard. With respect to the extent of their association there, she testified as follows: “Q. Did you see them together at all that evening down in the other place ? A. I think they were talking together, yes, but I didn’t see them together, you know, during the whole evening.”
The appellant Thomas testified in his own behalf. He saw Hopkins, whom he had known for three or four years, at the café that evening. He had not seen him, prior to that time, for about six or seven months. Hopkins came up and talked to him. About 9 or 9 -.30 p. m. he went to the rear of the café to go out the back entrance for the purpose of seeing if Jean Le Plore and several other persons were going elsewhere with him. As to what then occurred, he testified as follows: “Q. All right. Did you go all the way or did you come back? A. I went about middleways, right here. Q. Then what did you do? A. I heard a little racket going on in my left side. Q. Was that from the direction of the rest room? A. Yes. Q. Then where did you go? A. I turned around there and walked right here (indicating). I met one gentlemen coming out here (indicating). I don’t know him, but he was coming out of the rest room right here (indicating). Q. Did you look to see where he went? A. He was going—I asked—I don’t know whether he went this way or that way or that way. Q. Now, did you look into the rest room? A. Yes, I did. Q. When you looked in did you see this Paytiamo there? A. Yes. Q. Where was he? A. Laying on the floor. Q. Did you see somebody else there? A. Yes. Q. Who was that? A. A friend over there, Hopkins. Q. What, if anything, did
The defendant Hopkins testified in his own behalf. He denied that he was in the restroom when Paytiamo was there. He did not strike him or take his wallet.
Although James Timmins Dresser, M. D., was called as a witness on behalf of the appellant Thomas prior to the time that Thomas took the witness stand, the résumé of his testimony is given at this place in this opinion because the appellant bases a claim of prejudicial error on the admission in evidence of a portion thereof. Dr. Dresser testified that he saw Thomas on January 20 for an injury to his right hand which was received in the course of his work. The witness’ partner saw Thomas on February 3. A portion of the subsequent cross-examination was as follows: “Q. Was there any objective finding in your examination that would indicate that there was a limited use of the hand? A. No significant limitation, no. Q. And then this-A. Except that his grip was weak in the right hand. Q. In the right hand? Now, when you say his grip was weak, testing the grip depends in some measure on the cooperativeness of the subject, does it not? A. Eather entirely so, yes. Q. So if he does not wish to indicate the full strength of his grip he doesn’t necessarily have to do so ? A. That would be true. Q. Did you in taking the history and in talking with this man find any indications that there might be a possibility of malingering ? A. Not that I recall. Q. May I see the report. A. Yes, you may. Q.Well, in your history you stated- Mb. Piero vich [counsel for
In calling Dr. Dresser as Ms witness it was obviously the purpose of the appellant Thomas to show that he had sustained an injury to his right hand several weeks prior to February 4 and thereby to give support to the inference that because of the existence of such handicap it was unlikely that he had participated in the aggressive acts to which Paytiamo had testified. It was, of course, proper on the cross-examination of Dr. Dresser to ascertain his opinion as to whether the appellant was feigning or malingering with respect to the effect of that injury. (See People v. Gorgol, 122 Cal.App.2d 281, 302 [265 P.2d 69].) But the inquiry in the present ease was not limited to the witness ’ opinion as to such matter based on his examination and the history given by the patient as to that injury. The inquiry embraced the subject of asthma—an ailment entirely foreign to the hand injury— and its relationship to the appellant’s short military service some eight years before. Moreover, over and above the witness’ testimony founded on the contents of the notes made by him as to that subject, in response to questioning by the deputy district attorney the witness said in substance that it was unusual for a person to suffer from asthma only as long as he was in military service. It is reasonable to conclude that thereby there was implanted in the minds of the jurors an impression that the appellant had used a subterfuge to avoid his obligations as to military service.
But aside from the manner, as just noted, in which the prosecution utilized the history of the patient’s military service as related by him to the physician, the witness should not have been permitted to use that history as a basis for the expression of an opinion that the appellant was feigning the nature of the recent injury to his hand. The process of reasoning of the physician as exhibited at the trial was not one of arguing directly from act to act but was rather that of inferring from an act of malingering in 1952 that the appellant had a disposition to feign injury to avoid endeavor and, therefore, that he must have been malingering with respect to his hand injury in 1961. (Cf. 1 Wigmore on Evidence (3d ed.) § 192, p. 642.) But the opinion of an expert must have a more reasonable foundation than that evident in the present case if it is not to be a mere arbitrary opinion without substantial value as evidence. (See Guardianship of Waite, 14 Cal.2d 727, 731 [97 P.2d 238] ; Thompson v. City
In stating his objections with respect to the evidence heretofore discussed, counsel for the appellant might have expressed the basis of inadmissibility more artfully and concisely. However, his objections were sufficient to preserve the rulings of the trial court for review since the evidence as to the appellant’s military service and discharge therefrom in 1952 was inadmissible for any purpose whatsoever. (See People v. Denne, 141 Cal.App.2d 499, 512 [297 P.2d 451] ; People v. Porter, 82 Cal.App.2d 585, 588 [186 P.2d 704]; cf. People v. Bob, 29 Cal.2d 321, 325-327 [175 P.2d 12].) Any amplification of the appellant’s objection to such evidence would have served no useful end. Apropos is the following statement found in People v. Cotton, 117 Cal.App. 469 [4 P.2d 247], at page 472: “But it is obvious that, with whatever particularity or definiteness any objection might have been made to the admission of evidence of the character of that here under consideration, the defect in its foundation could not have been either readily or at all cured. No amplification of the objection made by defendant to the offered evidence either could or would have aided the prosecution to the extent that either by reframing the question, or by laying a broader or a different foundation therefor, the ultimate fact would have been admissible against defendant.”
There remains for consideration the problem of
While other claims of error are made by the appellant, it is not necessary to consider them in view of the determination hereinabove set forth and since they relate to problems not likely to recur upon a retrial.
. The judgment and the order denying the motion for a new trial are reversed.
Shinn, P. J., and Files, J., concurred.