54 Colo. 102 | Colo. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Deceased was a large, robust woman weighing about 160 pounds. The defendant was a small Japanese, about 120 pounds in weight, but physically strong and active, except that his left arm had been injured ten years before. 'He worked for a Broadway cleaning establishment, operated by a Japanese, who took orders, and filled them by sending others to do the work, collecting a percentage on what they received, as commission.
On this Saturday morning, defendant was sent to clean carpets on York street, and while there, was. directed by phone from the establishment, to. go to 1054 Clayton, to work in the afternoon, which he did, arriving there about 1:3o, and going to. work at once. He left about 5 :3o, before finishing, going to the cleaning- house, where he ate his supper, changed his clothes, went down town, returned, and erased his name from a book which gave the information that he had been sent to 1054 Clayton. That night he went to- McCook, Nebraska, changed his name, and in a couple of days, went to work as a section hand. Dater he was arrested there, brought to Denver, and placed in jail. While confined, he made two separate statements to the authorities regarding the transaction, which were reduced to writing, and on the trial, were read to the jury as part of the people’s case in chief. In the first statement, he said he had not worked at all, at 1054 Clayton, that he went there; but that the lady who came to the door, told him she wanted a Jap to come in the morning, and not in the afternoon, so he returned to. the cleaning establishment. In the second statement, he said he worked at 1054 Clayton, cleaning the windows in the afternoon, and assisted a man in putting the dead body of Mrs. Wilson in the box. In the first statement, he said he went on the train with 12 Jap boys to McCook. In the second, he said he did not know whether they were on the train; that he met them after he arrived there. In the first statement, he said he borrowed the money
The defense is,- that the murder was committed by the stranger who compelled defendant to assist him in putting the: body in the box, and wipe up the blood stains; and an attempt . ■ is made to- cast suspicion upon Mr. Wilson. There is no evidence in the whole record even suggesting the husband had
These questions did not tend to affect the credibility, or test the recollection of the witness upon any material evidence fie had given, and if he had answered in the negative, defendant would not, on that account, have been allowed to prove the ■contrary.
Affirmed.