THE PEOPLE, Respondent, v. CHARLES P. STEVENS, Appellant
Crim. No. 3914
In Bank
December 31, 1935
The judgment is affirmed.
Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Conrey, J., and Langdon, J., concurred.
WASTE, C. J., Concurring.--I concur in the judgment because the court found that the insurer was prejudiced by the delay in receiving notice from the insured of the happening of the accident.
U. S. Webb, Attorney-General, Frank Richards, Deputy Attorney-General, Buron Fitts, District Attorney, and Jere J. Sullivan, Deputy District Attorney, for Respondent.
On the morning of August 7, 1921, the lifeless body of Mike Mucich was found lying on the south side of the road on the west approach of East Ninth Street to the Ninth-Street bridge in Los Angeles. He had come to his death by reason of one of two bullet wounds in his head, either of which would have been fatal. One of the bullets had entered the left cheek four inches in front of the external opening of the ear and had penetrated the base and other lower portions of the brain, pursuing an upward course of about forty-five degrees. There were powder marks about the entrance wound. The other bullet entered just back of the middle part of the left ear, passed slightly upward toward the left side and also penetrated the brain. One bullet was recovered and was shown to have been shot from a .38-caliber revolver. The body was found on its back with the head toward the west and downhill. Blood marked the face and the shirt worn by the deceased, and blood had run from the head on the ground for a distance of two or three feet.
During the night of August 6, 1921, about midnight, a switch-tender of the Santa Fe Railroad Company heard a model T Ford going east on Ninth Street. It passed within twenty-five or thirty feet of his shanty. The car stopped, he heard two shots fired, and the automobile was then started up and driven away. On the following morning about 6 o‘clock the same witness discovered the body lying about fifty yards distant from the switch shanty. Officers of the Los Angeles police department shortly thereafter arrived to make their investigation.
The defendant at that time was a member of the police department of the city of Los Angeles. At the time of the trial in June, 1935, he was forty-six years of age. He entered the police force in 1910, resigned in 1917 upon request, joined the army in 1918, was reinstated in the police department in 1919. He was discharged from the department for cause in December, 1921.
In December, 1921, the defendant was discharged from the police department upon proved charges that he was intoxicated while on duty and for assault upon one Cates. A short time thereafter he moved to the rooming house conducted by Mrs. Minser. The defendant testified that they became intimate, bought a car together and that Mrs. Minser wanted to marry him. The defendant moved from Mrs. Minser‘s residence about a year later, following a noisy affray between them when the defendant was arrested. The defendant remained in Los Angeles County until 1927. On December 31, 1925, Mrs. Minser married Mr. Minser. Shortly after this marriage Mrs. Minser told her husband the story of the killing of Mike Mucich on the night of August 6, 1921, and in which the defendant and Phil Stickel were implicated. The Minsers separated in the latter part of 1929 and thereafter Minser reported the story to the police department. Mrs. Minser was arrested in March, 1930, and held as a material witness to testify before the grand jury, which returned an indictment charging the defendant and Phil Stickel with the murder of Mike Mucich. Stickel was arrested, tried and acquitted. The defendant Stevens was arraigned on the charge and pleaded not guilty. His trial commenced in June, 1935.
The defendant testified that he had a short visit with Mucich about half-past eight on the night of August 6, 1921, at the latter‘s home, and then drove him at his request to a christening on Pleasant Avenue, but did not go into the house with him although Mucich wanted him to accompany him because someone had threatened him; that he left him about half-past ten and went to Mrs. Minser‘s house; that there were people there playing cards and otherwise engaged; that he called Phil Stickel, whom he had known for about two weeks, to the head of the stairs and asked him if he would go with him to buy more wine for the party but Stickel said he didn‘t want to go; then Mrs. Minser came up and he gave her the key to his car for the purpose of having someone else go for wine and that he then went into one of the bedrooms and slept for an hour or more; that about half-past twelve, Mrs. Minser came in and awakened him; that he put Mrs. Minser, who was intoxicated, in the rear seat of his car and went out and found Stickel; that the three drove out to Chatsworth Park, that he left the following morning about half-past seven with Mrs. Minser and Stickel and reported for duty; that they did not stop and clean blood from the running board; that there was no such trip to the Ninth-Street bridge as that
Phil Stickel testified to much the same effect as Stevens, except that when Stevens proposed that they go for wine somewhere on his beat, and Stickel declined, Mrs. Minser offered to go with Stevens; that he, Stickel, left to attend to his lunch stand business in the neighborhood and that he closed his business and returned about half-past twelve and neither Stevens nor Mrs. Minser were there; that he met Stevens on the street about an hour later and that Stevens reported that he had been out getting some wine; that the three of them then went to the barbecue. He substantiates Mrs. Minser‘s account of the drive back to the barbecue on Sunday in a hired car.
It is unnecessary to add further to the statement of the facts. Sufficient has been stated to indicate that the question of the defendant‘s guilt was one to be resolved by the jury. The testimony of Mrs. Minser, corroborated to some extent by the testimony of the switch-tender and other evidence, supports the conclusion that Stevens was responsible for the taking of Mucich‘s life. If that testimony was believed, and it unquestionably was, there was but one inference to be drawn, namely, that the killing was premeditated and with malice. The question whether the crime could have been committed as related by Mrs. Minser, and the questions of the weight to be accorded the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses, were for the jury to determine. (People v. Tedesco, 1 Cal. (2d) 211, 219 [34 Pac. (2d) 467]; People v. Bolton, 215 Cal. 12 [8 Pac. (2d) 116]; People v. Sieber, 201 Cal. 341 [257 Pac. 64]; People v. Buchanan, 119 Cal. App. 523, 528 [6 Pac. (2d) 538].)
The defendant was represented at the trial by counsel other than those who represent him on this appeal. The first assignment of error is that the court should have declared a mistrial on the ground of the alleged gross and culpable incompetence of the attorney representing the defendant on the
The appellant contends that there was a misstatement of the indictment to the jury, in that it omitted the name of Phil Stickel as a codefendant with Stevens. If there was such misstatement it was cured by a stipulation that the jury was amply informed of the nature of the charge and the defendant‘s plea.
Prejudicial error is assigned by reason of the submission to the jury of a ballot covering the crime of manslaughter. If that was error, it was far from being prejudicial to the defendant. If the jury had returned such a verdict, the court would have been compelled to discharge the defendant because the prosecution for such crime, if committed by the defendant on the night in question, would have been barred by the statute of limitations. (People v. Meyers, 39 Cal. App. 244 [178 Pac. 965]; People v. Miller, 12 Cal. 291.)
On the trial, before the defendant took the stand, his counsel called witnesses to prove the defendant‘s reputation for peacefulness and for truth and veracity. On cross-examination these witnesses were questioned as to their knowledge of certain reported conduct of the defendant, for instance, whether they knew that the report was that he had been discharged from the police department for committing acts of unnecessary violence upon others; that he shot two or more bullets into the body of a colored woman after she had fallen; that it had been reported that he was intoxicated while on duty and had committed assaults on some twenty Mexicans, taking knives and other things of value from them; and that a newspaper had printed a report that C. P. Stevens, a former policeman, had run amuck and fired a dozen shots in a house on Olive Street and had driven men and women roomers into muddy streets in their night clothes. Objection to the cross-examination was overruled, and the rulings thereon are assigned as error. In the absence of a showing of bad faith on the part of the counsel for the prosecution, such cross-examination of witnesses testifying to the good reputation of the defendant for peacefulness, or truth and honesty, is permissible where such examination tends to
The defendant predicates error upon the refusal of the court to permit the witness Stickel to explain his affirmative answer to the question whether he had ever been convicted of a felony. Reliance is placed on People v. Hardwick, 204 Cal. 582 [269 Pac. 427, 59 A. L. R. 1480]. The errors complained of in that case were not committed here and nothing occurred in the court‘s refusal to allow the explanation by the witness Stickel which was prejudicial to the defendant‘s rights.
An examination of the record discloses that the defendant was fairly tried and that no prejudicial error was committed by the trial court.
The judgment and the order denying the defendant‘s motion for a new trial are, and each is, affirmed.
Thompson, J., Curtis, J., Seawell, J., and Conrey, J., concurred.
LANGDON, J., Dissenting.--I dissent.
Although there is evidence in the record, as stated in the majority opinion, sufficient to sustain the conviction, that evi-
The only witness who testified to facts connecting appellant with the crime was Addie Minser. By her own testimony, she admits that she was very intoxicated at the time she was supposed to have observed the facts to which she testified. She is supposed to have first told the story about the killing to her then husband some five years after the occurrence of the events. Neither she nor Mr. Minser repeated the story until 1930. At that time, Minser had a fight with his wife, separated from her, and carried the tale to the police. Mrs. Minser was arrested and, after a few days in jail, recounted the tale implicating appellant and one Stickel. These two men were jointly indicted. Stickel was tried first and acquitted. It is quite significant that even if Mrs. Minser‘s story of the automobile ride be believed, that story makes Stickel the killer, not appellant. Although Mrs. Minser testified that she was sitting in the automobile directly behind appellant, who was driving, she testified that she did not see Stevens fire the shot, nor did she see a gun in his possession. She saw no flash, nor did she smell powder. If her story is true, Stickel must have been the murderer, not Stevens, but Stickel has been acquitted. If her story is true, the back seat and running board of the automobile must have been so saturated with blood that the cursory cleaning testified to by her could not possibly have removed the traces of the murder, yet the police examined the car the very next morning and found nothing suspicious. It is solely upon the testimony of this woman, who was admittedly “very drunk” at the time; who subsequently became very angry at Stevens because he would not marry her; and who did not tell the story to any one for five years, that this conviction is based. There is no other substantial evidence, direct or circumstantial, implicating appellant. No motive
Under such circumstances, any errors in the course of the trial warrant a reversal. The record in this case indicates that appellant was represented at the trial by an attorney (not appellant‘s present counsel), whose presentation of appellant‘s defense was wholly inadequate. After Mrs. Minser had been called by the People as the prosecution‘s chief witness and had been cross-examined by appellant‘s attorney, and after the prosecution had closed its case, appellant‘s then attorney called Mrs. Minser as his own witness, thus vouching for her, and had her repeat the entire story of that fatal ride. Counsel offered evidence of appellant‘s reputation for peace and quiet and for veracity. The prosecuting attorney did not object to any of this evidence and, although the trial judge, on the motion for a new trial, conceded that much of this testimony was inadmissible, he permitted it to come in because no objection was made. The prosecuting attorney was then permitted to introduce considerable evidence to rebut this inadmissible evidence. Over objection, newspaper articles concerning appellant, and highly damaging to him, were read to the jury, and the prosecuting officer was permitted to produce and read an affidavit filed with the police concerning appellant and charging him with brutality, robbery and other offenses, without any proof of the truth of such charges. On the motion for a new trial, new counsel having been substituted, the trial judge conceded that appellant was not properly represented and stated that he was not entirely satisfied with the case. He further stated that, in the event of an affirmance, “I will then immediately go to the Governor personally, and I will lay all these facts before the Governor, and ask him to commute it from death to life imprisonment.”
Under the circumstances of this case, it would seem that a new trial should have been granted, or the trial judge should
Waste, C. J., concurred.
Rehearing denied. Waste, C. J., and Langdon, J., voted for a rehearing.
