In Re Lindley

177 P.2d 918, 29 Cal. 2d 709, 1947 Cal. LEXIS 260
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1947
DocketCrim. 4709
StatusPublished
Cited by157 cases

This text of 177 P.2d 918 (In Re Lindley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Lindley, 177 P.2d 918, 29 Cal. 2d 709, 1947 Cal. LEXIS 260 (Cal. 1947).

Opinions

EDMONDS, J.

William Marvin [Marven] Lindley was found guilty of the murder of Jackie Hamilton, a 13-year-old girl. The verdict included no recommendation for life imprisonment and a sentence of death followed. Upon appeal, the judgment and the order denying a new trial were affirmed. (People v. Lindley, 26 Cal.2d 780 [161 P.2d 227].) Thereafter the superior court denied a writ of error coram nobis. In the present proceeding, the petition for a writ of habeas corpus includes an application “by way of appeal” from that order and also asks that this court grant a writ of error coram vobis.

The petition asserts generally that the judgment of conviction is “illegal” because of certain false testimony given by several witnesses at the trial. This evidence, the petition alleges, was offered by the State with knowledge of its falsity. More specifically, it is charged that a representative of the State suppressed, or prevented the introduction of, evidence which would have been favorable to Lindley’s defense.

In the petition, extrajudicial statements said to have been made by Louis Onie Hamilton, father of the victim, are compared with his testimony at the trial, and it is alleged that the witness, because of deliberate “fraud, or perjury, . . . or because of persuasive influence, amounting to duress, of Sheriff A. W. Kimmerer ... or because of faulty memory and plain mistake . . . ,” changed his testimony to such an extent [712]*712that the jury, courts, and Lindley’s attorney “were misled into believing that Lindley was the only person in the vicinity of the crime at the time it took place who could have been ‘the man in the willows.’ ” The testimony of Willa Mae Hamilton, Jackie's sister, is attacked upon the ground that, as a result of her false testimony, the jury and court and Lindley’s attorney “were misled into believing that she had never met Lindley and for that reason did not recognize him as the man she had seen in the willows.” In support of this allegation, an affidavit of Nathan W. Owen is attached to the petition.

A further charge is that Jackie described her assailant as “an old red-headed man,” and although she knew Lindley and called him “Red” she did not use that name in any statement in regard to her injury. The evidence upon which the conviction rests is also criticized in other particulars.

Sheriff Kimmerer, according to the petition, in a published statement asserted that Luther B. Owen, the 11-year son of Nathan W. Owen, was not near the scene of the crime, but as a matter of fact, he was in the immediate vicinity when it was committed. In an affidavit made by Ferrel Fry and attached to the petition, she declares that the boy told her he was present at the boat house about the time of the crime and saw a red-headed fisherman in the willows “waving a fishing pole at the girls in swimming.' ’ Also, the affidavit continues, “the Owens boy definitely stated that he saw . . . Jackie grabbed by a man who had been standing in the willows and that it was a man other than Marvin Lindley, that he thinks it was the other red-headed man who had been fishing.”

Another affidavit, included in the petition, was made by Betty Biggs Sehrick, a newspaper writer. She states that in an interview with Guiño Filipelli, a shepherd boy who testified as an eyewitness to the tragedy, he told her “that the two boys on horseback went to the boat house before he saw the man grab Jackie” and after the attack “he saw the man walk toward the boat house but he did not see the man enter the boat house.”

A report made by the acting governor in connection with a reprieve granted Lindley is made a part of the petition. This report includes the statement that, since the trial, new and additional evidence has been discovered by reporters who interviewed the father and sisters of the victim. As summarized in the report; this evidence relates to the presence of a [713]*713red-headed fisherman who followed Jackie toward the camp and was “ogling the [Hamilton] girls who were in swimming. ’ ’

The remaining allegations of the petition relate to the asserted knowledge of the prosecuting officials in regard to the false testimony, their neglect in failing to conduct a full investigation, and the mental condition of Lindley. In this connection it is alleged that the prosecuting officials “deliberately suppressed information they had obtained from Willa Mae Hamilton” concerning' the description of a red-haired fisherman who was watching the girls in swimming, “for the reason that such information would have been fatal to their theory of Lindley’s guilt, and would have raised a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jurors.” Other charges are that “the misinformation given the investigators from the Department of Justice from the State of California by Sheriff Kim-merer led them to neglect to interview any of the Hamilton family and the two fishermen Logan and Davis,” who, according to their own admission, were not over two hundred feet from the place of the attack. Also, the petitioner declares, no effort was made to communicate with Luther B. Owen or Henry (Shorty) Sternat, who were present at the boat house at the time the crime was discovered. The pleading concludes with a statement of asserted facts tending to prove Lindley’s insanity at the time the crime was committed, during the trial and at the present time.

Upon this petition, a writ of habeas corpus issued, and Honorable Donald Geary, Judge of the Superior Court, in and for the County of Sonoma, was appointed referee to hear the evidence responsive to the following questions:

“1. Did any witness who testified against William Marven Lindley in the trial which resulted in the judgment of conviction, affirmed by this Court in People v. Lindley, 26 A.C. 714, [26 Cal.2d 780 (161 P.2d 227)], commit perjury as defined in the Penal Code of the State of California; that is, did any witness testify to any material matter which he knew to be false ?
“2. In the event that any witness did commit perjury, did any representative of the State of California cause or suffer such testimony to be introduced, knowing such testimony as given was perjured ?
[714]*714“3. Did any representative of the State of California suppress or prevent the introduction of any evidence which, had it been given, would have been favorable to the defense of William Marven Lindley 1 ’ ’

The referee visited the scene of the crime and held hearings in five cities of the state. More than 40 witnesses appeared and testified. The identification of Lindley and his conviction, the referee reported, “rested primarily upon the testimony of four witnesses: Louis Onie Hamilton, father of Jackie Marie, the victim; Barbara and Willa Mae Hamilton, her sisters, and Guiño Filipelli, herding his sheep across the river some six hundred to seven hundred feet away. Two of these witnesses, Mr. Hamilton and his daughter Barbara, testified that Jackie Marie Hamilton had directly accused . . . [Lindley] in the words ‘the old red-headed man at the boat house did it.’ Three of them, Mr. Hamilton and his daughters Barbara and Willa Mae, also testified to conduct of . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 P.2d 918, 29 Cal. 2d 709, 1947 Cal. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lindley-cal-1947.