People v. Glick

Decision Date24 October 1951
Docket NumberCr. 4669
Citation236 P.2d 586,107 Cal.App.2d 78
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeals Court of Appeals
PartiesPEOPLE v. GLICK.

Edmund G. Brown, Atty.Gen., Stanford D. Herlick, Deputy Atty.Gen., for respondent.

Morris Lavine, Los Angeles, for appellant.

McCOMB, Justice.

After trial before the court without a jury defendant was found guilty of two counts of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder. From the judgment defendant appeals.

The evidence being viewed in the light most favorable to the People (respondent) discloses:

On December 2, 1950, defendant fired a pistol at his wife and her daughter by a previous marriage, intending to kill them.

Questions: First: Is the evidence sufficient to sustain the findings that defendant (1) perpetrated an assault, (2) used a deadly weapon, (3) had malice aforethought, and (4) an intent to kill?

Yes. Mrs. Glick and her daughter testified that as they were approaching their home at about 11:30 p.m. on the night of December 2, 1950, they saw defendant in a taxicab, and as they started to cross the street the cab drove up in back of them and they saw defendant point a gun at them. As they started to run for safety Mrs. Glick looking over her shoulder saw the flash of gun fire. She hid behind a brick wall and her daughter behind a lamp post. When the shooting stopped the cab drove away. Thereafter defendant was apprehended and he had in his possession a revolver which had been recently discharged. Upon being questioned by the arresting officers defendant denied that he fired the gun or had been near the site of the shooting.

In addition, Mrs. Glick testified that she was separated from her husband and that on prior occasions he had threatened to kill both her and her daughter, and on one occasion he took a butcher knife and said, "I am going to kill you all."

Clearly the foregoing evidence sustained the trial court's implied finding of each of the questioned elements set forth above.

(1) and (2). The witnesses testified that defendant fired a revolver at them. Clearly this sustains the finding that defendant perpetrated an assault with a deadly weapon.

People v. Sylva, 143 Cal. 62, 76 P. 814, and People v. Raner, 86 Cal.App.2d 107, 194 P.2d 37, are not here in point for in such cases the trier of fact found that the guns were unloaded.

(3) and (4). The statements made by defendant to his wife and her daughter that he would kill them, plus his act in going to their home and shooting at them, distinctly supported the findings of malice aforethought and an intent to kill them. (See People v. Bradley, 71 Cal.App.2d 114, 120 , 162 P.2d 38.)

Second: Was there sufficient preliminary showing that the requirements of section 686(3) of the Penal Code had been complied with to permit the reception in evidence of the testimony at the preliminary hearing of the driver of the cab from which defendant fired the shots?

Yes. The record discloses that on January 4, 1951, a process server from the district attorney's office received a subpoena for Robert George Allen, the driver of the cab in which defendant was riding at the time of the incident above related. On January 20, 1951, the process server went to the offices of the Yellow Cab Company, who had been Mr. Allen's employer, and was informed that he had left their employ on January 17, 1951; on the same day he went to Mr. Allen's place of residence and was informed that he had moved. The landlady told the process server that Mr. Allen had left about two weeks before, that several people had been looking for him but that she did not...

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2 cases
  • People v. Staples
    • United States
    • California Court of Appeals Court of Appeals
    • March 27, 1970
    ...illustrate the first category. Some turn on situations wherein the actor fires a weapon at a person but misses (People v. Glick, 1107 Cal.App.2d 78, 79, 236 P.2d 586); takes aim at an intended victim and pulls the trigger, but the firing mechanism malfunctions (People v. Van Buskirk, 113 Ca......
  • People v. Gardner
    • United States
    • California Court of Appeals Court of Appeals
    • May 22, 1961
    ...25 Cal.2d 198, 200-201, 153 P.2d 177, 178; People v. Thomas, 164 Cal.App.2d 571, 576, 331 P.2d 82. The search in People v. Glick, 107 Cal.App.2d 78, 236 P.2d 586 was similar to the search in the present case, and it was held in the cited case that due diligence had been shown. In the Glick ......

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