192 P. 521 | Cal. | 1920
This is an appeal by the defendant, James C. Clark, from a judgment of conviction of murder of the first degree, calling for the death penalty, and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.
The defendant was accused of having, on June 11, 1919, in the town of Esparto, county of Yolo, killed and murdered one Richard Raevell.
It is shown by the record that the defendant made certain antecedent threats against the deceased. Carl Richardson, a butcher, testified that in a conversation with the defendant on the morning of June 10th, the latter told him he had "lost his money," and asked the witness whether he thought various persons, naming them, had taken it, but that he did not in any way accuse the deceased. Grady Morgan testified that he, the defendant, and the deceased had been drinking together the night before the killing; that the deceased had just returned from Sacramento; that defendant asked him how much money he had spent there, and the deceased laughingly replied, "I spent your seventy-five *679 dollars and sixty more"; that later the same evening the three men came into Raevell's room, where defendant said to the deceased, " 'Dick, I believe you took my money,' or something like that, and Dick, he puffed up right away, and he says, 'Where in hell do you get that . . . old stuff' "; that subsequently defendant and he (the witness) repaired to the latter's room; that just before they parted for the night "He asked me . . . if I would wake him up in the morning. . . . I says, 'Where you going to work?' 'Oh,' he says, 'no place; I just got something I want to attend to' "; that between 5:30 and 6:00 the next morning, while the witness was still in bed, defendant came into his room and told him, "I heard Dick talking all night. . . . I never slept at all. . . . I'm satisfied Dick took my money"; that about an hour later defendant again entered his room, showed him a 32-caliber revolver, and said, "Grady, I've made up my mind to kill Dick"; that the witness attempted to dissuade him from his purpose, but defendant replied, " 'I want you to get up and dress and go down to the breakfast table and watch it. I'm going to kill him right in the dining-room.' The last thing he said when he went out of the door was, 'Well, I've made up my mind, Grady.' "
W.C. Chilson and Charles Bloom testified that they were in the former's room about 7 o'clock on the morning of the murder, when defendant came in and said he "had a line on the fellow that got my money," and showed them a 32-caliber revolver; that both of then told him to "throw that d____d thing away; and that he went out, saying that he would. John Lewis stated that "a little before eight o'clock" on the same morning he met the defendant on the street in Esparto; "He walked up there and he sat down for a minute, I suppose, — not more, and he says, 'Well, Lewis, I got a trace of my money.' And I says, 'Is that so?' He says, 'Yes, . . . Dick Raevell. I'm going to walk up and shoot him.' And just about that time Dick came walking across from the hotel [where he, the defendant, Morgan, Chilson and Bloom were staying]. . . . Clark got up and went over where he was and I got up and went down the street."
It appears from the testimony of Lewis, Chilson, Bloom and Charles Mack, who were eye-witnesses to the murder, that about five minutes before 8 o'clock they were sitting in *680 front of a butcher-shop on the east side of the main street of Esparto. Just north of the butcher-shop, on the same side of the street, was a garage. Shortly after the talk between defendant and Lewis, as already detailed, the former was seen walking north on the west side of the street in company with the deceased. When about opposite the garage they crossed the street, and just before they reached the sidewalk the defendant turned aside as if to join the other men in front of the butcher-shop. The deceased continued on to the sidewalk, where he stopped and stood looking into the garage with his back to the defendant. The defendant, after taking a few steps toward the witnesses, suddenly wheeled around, pulling a revolver from his pocket, walked up behind Raevell, and fired one shot which struck him just back of his left ear. Raevell sank to the ground, rolling over on his back. His face was thus exposed to the defendant, who then stepped to the feet of the wounded man and fired a second shot into the outer corner of his left eye. The death of Raevell from these wounds followed in the course of a few hours. When the defendant was arrested by the sheriff about 9 o'clock while on his way to Woodland he handed over a revolver to the officer, with the remark, "This is what I shot Dick with."
The evidence above outlined is substantially uncontroverted. It was testified by several of the witnesses for the prosecution on cross-examination that the defendant was addicted to the use of intoxicants and that on the day preceding the homicide he had been drinking heavily. This was relied on in part to establish insanity as a defense to the crime charged, and the record shows that the jury was elaborately instructed on that subject, as well as partial insanity and irresistible impulse, and the meaning of section 22, and subdivisions 2 and 3 of section 26, of the Penal Code. In view of the adverse verdict, and the absence of any suggestion in the case that the deceased had said, or done anything to provoke, or to cause him to apprehend, an attack, we must assume that the jury found that the defendant was guilty of an unprovoked, deliberate, and premeditated murder, without any extenuating circumstances.
1. Appellant's first contention is that "the trial court erred in refusing defendant's motion for a new trial. At the hearing of this motion defendant introduced an affidavit, made *681
by J.E. Strong, one of defendant's attorneys, in which affidavit it was alleged that one of the jurors . . . admitted to the said J.E. Strong that he had read certain articles appearing in certain newspapers," referring to publications touching the trial, including an asserted attempt by the defendant to simulate insanity. No other showing of misconduct was made. [1] The contention cannot be sustained. As was said in People v. Findley,
The rule is thus stated in People v. Kromphold,
The case of People v. McCoy,
2. Appellant next assigns error in the giving of that portion of the following instruction requested by the prosecution which we have italicized: "15. I instruct you gentlemen that you are to take into account in weighing the testimony of any witness, his interest or want or interest in the result of the case, his appearance upon the witness-stand, his manner of testifying, his apparent candor or want of candor, whether he is supported or contradicted by the facts and circumstances in the case as shown by the evidence.
"You have a right to believe all the testimony of a witness, or believe it in part, or you may reject it altogether, as you may find the evidence to be.
"You are to believe as jurors what you would believe as men,and there is no rule of law that requires you to believe asjurors what you would not believe as men."
Appellant claims that this language "is not a correct statement of the law." Instructions phrased in the same or substantially similar language have frequently been subjected to scrutiny by appellate courts in this and other jurisdictions. In Commonwealth v. Harman, 4 Pa. St. 269, the defendant had been charged with murder. Chief Justice Gibson, in instructing the jury, declared: "All evidence is more or less circumstantial, the difference being only in the degree; and it is sufficient for the purpose when it excludes disbelief; that is, actual, and not technical disbelief; for he who is to pass on the question is not at liberty to disbelieve *683 as a juror while he believes as a man. It is enough that his conscience is clear."
This language was incorporated in an instruction given inState v. Collins, 20 Iowa, 85, and it was held on appeal, reversing the judgment, that "the detached fragment embodied in the instruction above quoted we cannot but believe to be of dangerous tendency. . . . We all believe facts as men, when we would not believe them and act upon them as jurors. The idea sought to be conveyed is that a juror is not an artificial being whose judgment is to be governed by technical and artificial rules, but that he is a man, and should, while acting as a juror, act as a man, exercising his reason, his intelligence, his every day judgment and his common sense. In this sense the proposition that, if one believes as a man, he should also believe as a juror, is correct, providing that belief be founded upon and produced by the evidence in the case, and by nothing else, and is so strong, clear and satisfactory as to exclude all reasonable doubt. If the guilt of the defendant had been fully and undeniably established, if the verdict upon the evidence were satisfactory, we might not have interfered with the judgment in consequence of the giving of the instruction under consideration. The instruction, as given, was, without explanation, calculated to mislead the jury."
We quote from People v. Whitney,
And in People v. Worden,
The instruction complained of is in the identical language of one given in Dodge v. Reynolds,
Robinson v. State,
Appellant also cites on this point People v. Johnson,
In the first instruction requested by appellant and given, the jury were told that "every intendment of the law is in favor of innocence. The law presumes the defendant to be innocent of any degree of crime until his guilt is proven *686 beyond all reasonable doubt by competent evidence. This presumption of innocence rests with the defendant throughout all stages of the trial until the case is finally submitted to you for your deliberation, and during your deliberation and until a verdict is agreed upon. Each and every fact and circumstance relied upon by the prosecution to establish the guilt of the defendant must be proven by the evidence in the case beyond a reasonable doubt; but the defendant is only called upon to raise in your minds a reasonable doubt as to the truth of any fact relied upon by him to establish his innocence." In the third instruction requested by the defendant and given to the jury the term "reasonable doubt" was correctly defined.
[2] In the light of the foregoing authorities and the cognate portions of the charge which we have quoted, it cannot be said that the instruction in question was calculated to confuse the jury, or that it was erroneous. As in People v. Whitney,
3. Appellant's third assignment of error is to "all of the rulings of the court overruling the objections of his counsel, *687
or sustaining the objections of the district attorney, . . . together with the giving of the instructions as they appear in the record." No portions of the record are referred to or quoted, no authorities are cited or discussed, and, indeed, appellant does not specify wherein the court erred in the giving of the instructions or in the rulings on the evidence. [3] We do not feel called upon to consider points so presented. (See Gray v. Walker,
Judgment and order affirmed.
Wilbur, J., Lennon, J., Sloane, J., Shaw, J., Olney, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.