Search

» » Perry Mason The Case of the Golden Oranges (1957–1966)

Short summary

Sandra Keller has given permission to a development firm to take possession of her grandfather's orange orchard but her grandfather, Amos Kenesaw Mountain Keller, changes his mind at the last minute and refuses to give them possession. Several people have considerable sums invested in the project and they stand to lose everything if it doesn't go forward. Keller's land is required for sufficient parking. It all ends up in court with Perry Mason suggested by architect James Wheeler to represent her and her grandfather. The first case involves Keller's dog Hardtack who Thorton claims attacked and bit him. Perry defends the dog and Keller against criminal charges successfully. It all takes on a far more serious tone when the developer, Gerald Thornton, is found dead from a shotgun blast. When the police find the shotgun on her property and with her fingerprints, she is charged with Thornton's murder and Perry defends her.

The dog's name is Hardtack.

One of the fascinating legal cases referenced by Mason: 1508: The Trial of the Autun Rats.

This case had the usual climatic confession by the real killer but the resolution of this case would have presented a kind of a legal conundrum. The judge would have likely ruled the confession as inadmissible, as it could have been construed as given under duress because of the presence of the dog. Even if the charges against Perry's client were dropped, it would be hard to prosecute the real killer, since everything came from his confession, and with all of that excluded, it would have been difficult to later convict him.

Amos Keller (Arthur Hunnicutt) is a veteran of the Rough Riders "Battle of San Juan Hill". The actual battle took place in July of 1898, almost 10 years before Hunnicutt was born.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Dalallador
    Arthur Hunnicutt who made a career in playing rustic characters plays yet another one in this Perry Mason episode. Ostensibly he's a Spanish American war veteran and that would in 1963 put him in his eighties. Although his hair is grayed up a bit and he does a good job, I couldn't quite believe he was in his eighties.

    Arch Johnson is a developer who originally thought that Hunnicutt was going to sell him his orange grove for part of Johnson's project. But Hunnicutt under the influence of granddaughter Natalie Trundy balks at the sale and Johnson's development is in the toilet unless he changes his mind. And Johnson is pretty ruthless in his methods of persuasion.

    Which also gives us a host of red herrings in this show. But it's Trundy charged with the crime of murder of Johnson. I will say that I didn't pick out the perpetrator in this episode, always the rule for me whether a Mason episode is good.

    In fact the presence of one member of the cast who made a career of playing a lot of nasty villains might lead one to conclude this is the murderer. I'm here to say, it ain't so.
  • comment
    • Author: Kendis
    **SPOILERS** "Hardtack", the large mutt belonging to Amos, was good looking, gentle and ill-accused in this tale of orange groves, parking lots, and murder. Throw in an unbelievably sexy secretary, Janice Carr (beautifully played by Erin O'Brien), and it looked like Perry's back in business, and ain't we all glad.

    Amos was sufficiently grizzled and cantankerous enough to sidebar the main plot about his property being sold for parking lot space for an early shopping mall. Frankly, he had to share credit with the sweet mutt that was inclined to not like rats; the human kind, of course. I'm gonna exclude Janice from this category for obvious reasons. Doyle, well played by Lee Van Cleef, was also not a bad guy. His wife, though was neck deep in an affair, and shady money transfers, with enough dirt on this snake pile to give Mr. Doyle more than adequate grounds for divorce. Community property? You bet she'll pay up.

    The killer will no doubt lose a bundle in his investment. You can't profit from a murder. It WAS FIRST degree murder, though, wasn't it? YUP. He stole the dog to set up the scene, took the shotgun to frame Amos, did the actual deed, and stood to make a substantial profit from it. So long respectable life, hello San Quentin (probably not for long, though).

    Amos's granddaughter (and Perry's second client, after Hardtack), was a very good looking lady, and I suppose, given the normal desire to slant the conclusions of this show toward "happy endings", she'll wind up with Wheeler (another guy who was getting axed by the dirtbag dead guy). She STILL has charges of evidence tampering, though. As long as Paul turns on the charm and zeros in on the lovely Janice, all will be interesting, don't you think?

    One other thing is the C.M.H. that Amos finally was recognized for; Doyle's wife was right about one thing, most guys that brag about medals never earned them, or have the right to wear them. Until recently, these guys would downplay anything they did; typically saying that they wear them only on special occasions, and only for the men who payed with their lives in service to our country. Here, it was a plot device, so it can be excused. More believably, Amos would have never mentioned it.
  • comment
    • Author: Zulkishicage
    After being absent for the last few episodes, Raymond Burr is back full speed for this interesting mystery. We also get to see Perry in two different courtroom setting as he defends two different people on charges related to this story.

    The episode begins as a land developing company needs a minor price of land owned by Spainish-American War veteran and Medal-of-Honor recipient Amos Kenesaw Mountain Keller. Amos's daughter, Sandra Keller, thought she had permission to sell the land to the company's manager Gerald Thornton but Amos changes his mind at the last minute and wants to keep his property where he grows oranges. But without the land Mr Thornton will fault on all his investments since the bank will not lend him any more money.

    After Mr Thronton puts pressure on Amos to sell the land, he gets information about Amos's war record. With this information he puts pressure on his daughter, Sandra Keller, which ends in a dispute at the job site late at night.

    When Mr Thornton is found dead it is believed that Amos was the murderer. But when Lt Andy Anderson find other evidence it is not long before Sandra Keller is picked up for murder and will be defended by Perry in court.

    The writers do a good job of finishing up this story so that Amos is justified by his peer in the end. And with a supporting cast that includes a dog named 'Heart-attack' the mystery ends with utmost satisfaction.
  • comment
    • Author: Tegore
    ***SPOILERS*** Wild and crazy Perry Mason, Raymond Burr, episode with Perry defending both man , or woman, and beast and getting both of them off before it finally ended. The beast or dog part was a piece of cake for Perry in getting old man Amos Keller's,Arthur Hunnicutt, beloved mutt Hartack off on an attack charge on unscrupulous land developer Gerald Thornton,Arch Johnson, that if convicted could have had him put to sleep by the local ASPCA.The second case was a bit harder for Perry. Here he was to defend old man Keller's grand daughter Sandra, Natalie Trundy, in the murder of Thornton himself.It's there that Sandra was caught with the smoking gun or shotgun that she had hid in a pile of oranges with her fingerprints on it.

    It was Amos who in an attempt to get Sandra off admitted that he himself blew Thornton away which got more laugh by those in the courtroom, including Perry Mason, then a Jackie Mason stand up comedy routine. What wasn't so funny was the exposure of Amos as a fraud in his getting a medal, the Congressional Medal of Honor, at the battle of San Juan Hill in the Spanish American War. What in fact did happen was so off the wall in Amos' heroics that you had to rewind the video tape of the Perry Mason episode to really understand what he did.Something so unbelievable and in a way stupid that it even made Perry Mason, who's seen everything, almost chock on his ham & cheese sandwich.

    ****SPOILERS**** The ending had one of the most bizarre confessions in all, real or fictional, US court room history. It was then that Thornton's killer completely broke down and confessed not during Perry Mason's cross examination but when Amos mutt Hartack growled and showed his teeth at him. Sacred to death that he may well be Hartack's next meal the killer willingly confessed feeling a life behind bars, or even the San Queinton gas chamber, was far better then what he was facing!
  • Episode cast overview, first billed only:
    Raymond Burr Raymond Burr - Perry Mason
    Barbara Hale Barbara Hale - Della Street
    William Hopper William Hopper - Paul Drake
    William Talman William Talman - Hamilton Burger
    Ray Collins Ray Collins - Police Lt. Arthur Tragg (credit only)
    Wesley Lau Wesley Lau - Police Lt. Andy Anderson
    Arthur Hunnicutt Arthur Hunnicutt - Amos Kenesaw Mountain Keller
    Natalie Trundy Natalie Trundy - Sandra Keller
    Erin O'Brien Erin O'Brien - Janis Carr
    Allen Case Allen Case - James Wheeler
    Arch Johnson Arch Johnson - Gerald Thornton
    Mary Munday Mary Munday - Grace Doyle
    Hugh Sanders Hugh Sanders - John Grimsby
    Henry Norell Henry Norell - Courtney Osgood
    Lee Van Cleef Lee Van Cleef - Edward Doyle
    All rights reserved © 2017-2024 hd.thomson-multimedia.com