63 Cal. App. 2d 768 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1944
In an information filed by the district attorney of Nevada County, defendant was charged with the murder of one Harvey McVean on. July 15, 1943. He. entered pleas of not guilty and not guilty by reason of in-' sanity. A jury found him guilty of murder of the second degree, and also found that he was sane at the time of the commission of the offense. A motion for a new trial was denied. Defendant now appeals from the judgment of imprisonment for the term provided by law, and from - the order denying a new trial, contending that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict of murder of the second degree, and that if defendant was guilty of any offense it was,- at most, manslaughter.
These contentions are without merit. Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, as we must -do on this appeal, it is ample to sustain the verdict.
There were no actual witnesses to the shooting. Mrs. McVean testified that she heard the gunshot, ran toward Mrs. Field’s house and saw her husband coming down the path; that he was “sort of falling” and when she reached him was lying in the grass; that she saw that he had been shot, and
Dr. Jones, who was called to attend decedent, testified that he had been shot at close range—within a foot or thereabouts—with a shotgun, the charge entering the left side just over the heart. This witness, who was the. county health officer, also testified that defendant Totten had called upon him several times within a few weeks prior to the date of the homicide, and complained that Mrs. Field was living in miserable conditions and that he thought she ought to be declared incompetent and removed from the property.
Carl T. Larsen, a deputy sheriff, testified that Totten came to the sheriff’s office the evening of July 15, 1943, with a gun in his hand, and stated that he was in trouble and that he had shot McVean; that Totten gave him the gun and a shotgun shell and that an empty shell was found near the body of McVean. Larsen also said that Totten told him that McVean was trying to get his aunt’s property and that he tried to stop him from doing so; also that he said something about McVean's trying to take the gun away from him.
William D. Woods, an undersheriff, testified that he had seen Totten about noon of July 15th, at the sheriff’s office, at which time Totten wanted him to go down to Hill’s Flat and make McVean stay away from his aunt; that he said McVean was trying to get her property away from her; and that he also said, “Well, I don’t want to have to shoot him.” Mrs. McVean, who was called for the defense, stated that Totten had been at their home the morning of the 15th, at which time he had asked McVean how Mrs. Field’s property was arranged; that Mr. McVean had answered that it was none of their business and he would rather not talk -about it, and that Totten had said, “I just can’t do anything with that old bat.”
Totten himself testified that after he had been at the Mc-Vean home the morning of the 15th he had gone to the sheriff’s office and asked the sheriff to ask McVean to stop bothering him; also that he had gone to the district attorney and told him his story. His account of the events leading up to the shooting differs in some respects from that of Mrs. Field, but the jury apparently believed her testimony. Defendant admitted the shooting, but stated that McVean was
In rebuttal the prosecution introduced in evidence a statement made by defendant to the district attorney the day after the homicide. Therein defendant stated that McVean had passed him on his way to Mrs. Field’s house the evening of the shooting, and that he had followed him into the house; that he went in to put him out; that he “wasn’t going to have him in there, pumping her against me so I couldn’t get in to feed her”; that when he shot, McVean was “trying to push me back and I wouldn’t go back.” When asked why he had taken the gun with him when he went into the house he said, “I expected trouble with him.”
While at tne trial defendant stated that he was carrying the gun for the purpose of shooting cats that had been killing his chickens, and that before the shooting McVean threatened to do him bodily harm, the jury evidently did not accept this testimony as true.
There is no evidence that McVean had ever been other than a good friend to Mrs. Field, or that he had ever attempted to influence her against defendant, or as to the disposition of her property. Defendant’s testimony created only a conflict in the evidence. Its verity was for the jury, and in such case an appellate court will not interfere with its verdict or the order of the trial court denying a new trial. See People v. Frank, 60 Cal.App.2d 802, 805 [141 P.2d 780], and cases there cited.
We find no merit in appellant’s contention that if he is guilty of any offense it .would at most be manslaughter. The latter defense is defined as the unlawful killing of a human being, without malice, and is of two kinds: voluntary—upon a sudden quarrel or heat of passion; and involuntary—in the commission of an unlawful act, not amounting to felony, or in the commission of a lawful act which might produce death, in an unlawful manner, or without due caution and circumspection. (Pen. Code,: § 192.) The jury in this case
The judgment and the order denying a new trial are affirmed.
Peek, J., and Thompson, J., concurred.