82 Cal. 36 | Cal. | 1889
Lead Opinion
The appellant was charged with the crime0 of murder, convicted of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to the state prison for ten years.
The main contention on this appeal is that the evidence was insufficient to warrant a conviction for any offense. We have examined the evidence carefully, and find the facts as shown by the undisputed evidence for both the people and the defendant to be that the defendant was in the possession, and had been for a number of years, of a certain tract of land, and claimed to own it; that the wife of the deceased also claimed a part of it as government land on which her grantor had filed and received a certificate of purchase, it being a part of a larger tract, the balance of which was in the pre-emptor's possession under his claim; that shortly before the killing of the deceased the party under ivhom she claimed had run a wire fence across the land without the knowledge of the defendant, thereby cutting off the part of the land claimed by the deceased from the balance of the land in possession of the defendant; that this piece of land so cut off had been sown to grain by the defendant, which was about ready to harvest; that the defendant and the deceased had each made threats against the life of the other, if he attempted to enter upon the land and cut the grain; that on the day of the shooting the defendant was about to enter upon the land through said wire fence, and had cut the same for the purpose of passing through with his header-wagon; that the deceased met him at the gap, and forbade him passing through, and told him if he did it w-as at his peril, and defendant
We have been unable to discover any evidence in the record which would warrant a conviction of murder in the second degree, or any other offense. The defendant was in the actual and peaceable possession of the land, and had a crop growing on it that he was about to bar-, vest. This the deceased attempted by force to prevent.
There are other questions presented, but they are of minor importance, and need not be considered.
Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded.
Thornton, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment. The evidence clearly shows that the fifteen or sixteen acres which the wife of deceased claimed as being a part of her pre-emption was within the inclosure of defendant; that defendant had been in the actual possession of it, in a common field with other lands held by him, for eighteen years; that he had sown it and the whole field with grain, which was nearly ready to harvest, when some one ran a fence, consisting of two wires, stretched upon pickets, set fifteen or eighteen feet apart—a mere sham of a fence—'through his field, cutting off from the rest the sixteen acres claimed by the wife of deceased. It further shows that when defendant had finished heading the balance of his grain he undertook to go through this wire fence with his headers to harvest that sixteen acres. He was as fully in possession as he had ever been, and had a right to harvest that crop. When he had reached the fence, and his header was about to pass
Not being the aggressor, the defendant was not bound to retreat or decline further struggle. He was an old man, seventy years of age, at first acting in defense only of his own property, without the use of deadly weapons, and when attacked, acting in defense of his own life and of that of his son. In my judgment, it is clearly a case of justifiable homicide, under section 197 of the Penal Code.
Dissenting Opinion
I cannot concur in the view that the verdict of the jury in this case is wholly unwarranted by the evidence.
It is not clear that the defendant, at the time of the homicide, was in the peaceable and exclusive possession of the disputed premises. Deceased, or those he represented, had at least a scrambling possession; not? such a possession, certainly, as would have justified him in resorting to extreme measures in the attempt to defend it, but certainly a show of possession backed by a claim of right. He was standing on the land, at a gap in the fence, where he had gone armed with a deadly weapon, determined to prevent the defendant from entering. The defendant, equally armed and equally determined,
Immediately ensuing these mutual threats, pistols were drawn on both sides, and the firing commenced. The preponderance of the evidence certainly is that deceased drew first,—though this is not perfectly clear,-—and all the evidence is that he fired first, though not until defendant’s son was in the act of seizing him.
After the struggle commenced, neither party had an opportunity to withdraw, or to notify his adversary that he declined further contest, and probably neither party desired to do so. The natural md inevitable result was the death of one of the comba. ,nts.
Under these circumstances, it seems to me that the jury may well have found that the case was one of mutual combat, voluntarily entered upon under circumstances insufficient to justify either party, and therefore that the defendant’s plea of self-defense, or defense of his son, could not avail him, he and his son having entirely failed to manifest the slightest wish to withdraw from the combat before its fatal termination.