122 Cal. 171 | Cal. | 1898
Defendant, tried for the murder of S. J. Darrah, was convicted of manslaughter. He appeals from the judgment and from the order denying him a new trial.
Milner and Darrah were neighbors, living in Snow Creek canyon. Darrah’s was the lower ranch, and to reach his land Milner was obliged to pass through the land of Darrah. Milner had sold to Darrah this land, reserving in the deed a right of way across it, and reserving also from his water rights in Snow creek thirty inches for his own use. This water he was diverting, and had been for some years, by means of a flume and ditch, taking tEe water from Snow creek a short distance above his house. There is some slight evidence, but evidence of little consequence, of preexisting trouble between the two men. A witness testifies that about two years before he had heard the defendant say “that he had beat Darrah out of ten thousand dollars, and that he would beat the damned son of a bitch out of ten thousand dollars more before he got through.” The use of this language, however, defendant denies. There is no evidence saving this of any. antecedent difficulty, and there is positive evidence that the business transaction between Darrah and Milner was the sale by Milner to Darrah of his ranch for the sum of eight hundred and thirty-nine dollars.
Some little time before the tragedy other parties, with whom Milner was in no way connected, took preliminary steps to appropriate water from Snow creek. After having done so, they secured a bond or option for the purchase of Milner’s land and water right. Darrah seems to have conceived the notion that an attempt was about to be made to deprive him of the water rights which he claimed, and that Milner was aiding in the effort. A surveying party attempted to cross the land of Darrah by Milner’s right of way and was stopped by Darrah, armed with a rifle, and turned back, Darrah threatening to kill any of them that came upon his land. Darrah then threatened Milner’s life, denied to Milner a right of way, and ordered him off of his land. Darrah’s violent language and threats against the life of Milner are abundantly proven. Milner by all of the evidence seems to have maintained a pacific demeanor, and according to the testimony of one witness said that he dreaded having trouble with Darrah, because it could end in only one way, Darrah being excitable, and he,
Upon the morning of the tragedy, which was the next day after this conversation, Duvoisney, Darrah’s hired man, passed beyond the house of Milner, and proceeded, as he testifies he was under instructions from his employer to do, to tear out the flume from which Milner diverted water, and which was upon Milner’s own land. This same witness testifies that his employer had said to him about two weeks previously that if he killed Milner and Barker he would die happy. Milner noticed the change in the condition of the water flowing past his house, and walking up the canyon unarmed found Duvoisney engaged in the work. He protested against it, and Duvoisney ceased and went away, saying he would have nothing further to do with it. Hot long after Milner again noticed that the flow of water past his house was decreasing considerably, and concluded that Darrah was removing his flume. In view of Darrah’s threats, and of the fact that Darrah carried a rifle, Milner, when he went up to investigate, took with him his shotgun, both barrels of which were loaded with buckshot. He had three other cartridges similarly loaded in his pocket. Beaching the point of diversion of the water he mounted a small rock and there saw Darrah engaged in tearing out his flume. This was the tragic meeting, and, as there was no eye-witness to it, the account is Milner’s alone. Darrah was about thirty yards distant from Milner. Milner called to him in a loud voice to desist, holding his shotgun, both barrels cocked, in the hollow of his left arm, but not pointing toward the deceased. Darrah raised up, and, seeing Milner, answered: Shoot, you God damned, cowardly son of a bitch.” Milner-answered: "I won’t do it, only I want you to get off my property. I don’t intend to shoot if I can avoid it. I want you to get off my property.” On the bank was lying a wet piece of board, which, glistening in the
Respondent further answers in his brief: “The record discloses a number of hostile and threatening remarks made by defendant with reference to deceased, all tending to prove malice on defendant’s part, and other remarks by defendant showing that defendant had no real fear of deceased. Shortly after the killing defendant said he was not afraid of Darrah’s killing him.” The hostile remarks to which reference is here made, and which defendant admits that he uttered, were to the effect that “the son
These are the only considerations presented by respondent as
The only fair conclusion to be drawn from all this is, that the defendant’s evidence is not contradicted upon any essential matter by any other direct and positive evidence in the case. If this consideration could properly end here, there can be no doubt but that a new trial should be ordered for the reason urged that the verdict is contrary to the evidence, but a trial for murder differs in some respects from the trial of any other criminal offense. “Upon a trial for murder, the commission of the homicide by the defendant being proved, the burden of proving circumstances of mitigation or that justify or excuse it devolves upon him, unless the proof on the part of the prosecution tends to show that the crime committed only amounts to manslaughter, or that the defendant was justifiable or excusable.” (Pen. Code, sec. 1105.) In this case the killing by the defendant was clearly established by the people’s proof. Ho circumstances of mitigation or justification to bring the case within the exception contemplated by the section were shown in the prosecution’s evidence. The burden of proof,
In Blankman v. Vallejo, 15 Cal. 639, it is said: “We do not understand that the credulity of a court must necessarily correspond with the vigor and positiveness with which a witness swears. A court may reject the most positive testimony, though the witness be not discredited by direct testimony impeaching him, or contradicting his statements.”
In People v. Lewis, 36 Cal. 531, a verdict of murder was set aside, by this court as being contrary to the evidence. In that case the fact of the killing by the defendant was not proved, and it is said that the defendant was convicted chiefly on the vague “impressions of a drunken witness,” and that the testimony of the drunken witnesses “leaves it entirely in doubt whether the deceased may not himself, either by design or accident, have fired the shot which caused his death.” But the distinction between the case of People v. Lewis, supra, and others like it, and the * present one is both radical and important. In those cases the people failed to prove the defendants’ commission of the homicide. It is easily possible for this court to say, when the identity of the slayer is in doubt, whether the evidence adduced is legally sufficient for the conviction of the defendant, and, if it be not, then clearly it is the duty of the court to set the verdict aside. Hnder such a state of facts no burden is cast upon a defendant to prove anything. In the case at bar, however, the killing by defendant is both proved and admitted. The burden then is by law east upon him to exculpate himself, or mitigate the
In such a case as this, therefore, the verdict of the jury may not be set aside for the lack of legally sufficient evidence to support it.
But other considerations demand that the defendant should be awarded a new trial. Dr. King, testifying to the wounds found upon the body of Darrah, said: “The wounds had a range slightly upward, except where the bullets struck bones, and were deflected thereby.”
“Q. Does that indicate whether the person firing the shot, and from whom the shot was received, was either above or below the person receiving the shot?” The objection of defendant to this question was overruled, and the witness answered: “It would indicate that the muzzle of the gun was below the party receiving the shot, or rather it would indicate that the muzzle of the gun was below the point of entrance of the bullets.” The admission of this evidence was incontestably error. (People v. Westlake, 62 Cal. 303; People v. Smith, 93 Cal. 445.) The very slightest consideration is enough to show that such a matter is not the subject of expert evidence, and that in fact neither a physician nor anybody else could tell the positions of the man who shot and the man who received the shot, merely from the course of the bullet. If a man were supine, and a pistol were discharged directly at him, or if the pistol were discharged at him when he was standing upright, or if it were discharged at him when he was in any one of a multitude of other positions, the result still might
The coroner’s jury inspected the scene of the tragedy. One Carpenter was with them. The defendant accompanied the jury, and gave his story of the homicide as he gave it upon the trial. He pointed out, however, upon the spot certain physical features of interest and importance, the flume, the rock upon which he stood, the bunch of grass behind which deceased picked up his gun and fired upon him, and the spot where he the [defendant] stood when he fired the fatal shot. To these declarations of the defendant the witness Carpenter testified. He further testified that at that time he discovered marks upon the brush caused by shot, and lead marks upon the rocks caused by shot, from one of which he actually picked a buckshot. The court deemed it advisable that the jury should view the premises, and gave its order accordingly. It made provision for the presence of the parties and their counsel, the officers of the court, and the stenographer, and directed that the places designated in the order should be shown to the jury by the witness Carpenter appointed for that purpose.
The places were: “1. The place where the dead body of S. J. Darrah was found by the coroner’s jury; 2. To show to the jury the place where Milner said to the coroner’s jury that S. J. Darrah stood when he called to him from the top of the rock; 3. The place where the defendant said to the coroner’s jury that he stood upon a rock or boulder with a shotgun in his hands; 4. The place where defendant said to the coroner’s jury that he reloaded his shotgun; 5. The place where defendant said before the coroner’s jury that he stood when he fired the shot that killed S. J. Darrah; 6. The place where marks of buckshot on the rocks were found east of the place where the dead body of Darrah was found; 7. The tuft of grass from behind which the defendant
The order was carried out, counsel for defendant neither objecting nor consenting to the order, but reserving as appears any legal objection which they might have to make to it. Arrived upon the ground, the terms of the order seem to have been obeyed with scrupulous exactness. Carpenter addressed the jury in the very terms of the order, saying: “This is the place where defendant said to the coroner’s jury that he stood upon a rock or boulder with a shotgun in his hands.” “This is the place where defendant before the coroner’s jury said he stood when he fired the shot which killed S. J. Darrah,” et cetera. Objection is now made, and was urged upon the motion for a new trial, that in this the jury received evidence out of court, other than that which came from an inspection of the premises. (Pen. Code, sec. 1181, subd. 2.)
The power of the court in regard to the matter under consideration is derived from and regulated by section-1119 of the Penal Code: “When, in the opinion of the court, it is proper that the jury should view the place in which the offense is charged to have been committed, or in which any other material fact occurred, it may order the jury to be taken in a body, in the custody of the sheriff, to the place, which must be shown to them by a person appointed by the court for that purpose, and the sheriff must be sworn to suffer no person to speak or to communicate with the jury, nor to do so himself, on any subject connected with the trial, and to return them into court without unnecessary delay, or at a specified time.” Wright v. Carpenter, 49 Cal. 607, was a civil case. The jury were permitted to view the premises, and instructed that they might use the evidence of the witnesses before them and their examination of the lands from such
We perceive no error, therefore, either in the order or in its execution.
The matter of the citizenship of the juror Dole, and of the right of the defendant to raise the question, either in an attack upon the judgment, or upon a motion for a new trial, has not been overlooked, but as a new trial must be ordered, and as the juror could not again act in the case, it becomes unessential to this consideration.
¡No other of appellant’s points seems to require particular consideration; but for the reasons given the judgment and order are reversed, and the cause remanded.
Temple, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.