In Re Mooney

73 P.2d 554, 10 Cal. 2d 1, 10 Cal. 1, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 459
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1937
DocketCrim. 3898
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 73 P.2d 554 (In Re Mooney) 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 Mooney, 73 P.2d 554, 10 Cal. 2d 1, 10 Cal. 1, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 459 (Cal. 1937).

Opinions

THE COURT.

By this proceeding in habeas corpus, the petitioner, Thomas J. Mooney, seeks his release from the custody of the warden of the state prison at San Quentin, where he is confined pursuant to a judgment on a verdict finding him guilty of murder of the first degree.

At 2:06 P. M., on July 22, 1916, a devastating crime was committed in the city of San Francisco. At that moment a dynamite homb, concealed in a suitcase and detonated by means of a clockwork device, was exploded at Steuart and Market Streets, in the midst of numerous persons who either were watching or about to participate in a planned and publicized preparedness day parade. As a result of the explosion, [9]*9ten persons were killed and forty or fifty other persons received serious bodily injuries.

Several days later, Thomas J. Mooney, the petitioner herein, Rena Mooney, his wife, Warren K. Billings, Edward Nolan and Israel Weinberg were arrested and, on August 2, 1916, jointly indicted for the murder of Hetta Knapp, one of the victims of the explosion. Seven other joint indictments, one for the death of each of the other victims who had then died, were also returned against the group. Billings was tried first, on the Knapp indictment, was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. His conviction was affirmed on appeal. (People v. Billings, 34 Cal. App. 549 [168 Pac. 396].) According to the testimony herein of the deputy district attorney who prosecuted Billings, the death penalty was not asked by the prosecution in his case, for it was determined by the prosecuting officials that Billings was a mere tool who did the bidding of Mooney, the petitioner in this proceeding.

Mooney was the second of the group to be tried. He likewise went to trial on the Knapp indictment. At the conclusion of thirteen trial days, during which one hundred and fifty-four witnesses were examined, the jury returned a verdict finding petitioner guilty of" murder of the first degree, without recommendation. A motion for new trial was thereafter denied. Petitioner was accordingly sentenced to be hanged. Subsequently, and on November 29, 1918, and following intervention by President Wilson, his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. From that sentence he seeks his discharge in this proceeding.

Merely to complete the record as to the disposition of the other charges filed against the group, it should be pointed out that the later and separate trials of Rena Mooney and Weinberg resulted in their acquittal. The charge against Nolan was ultimately dismissed. The additional charges against petitioner growing out of the other deaths caused by the bomb explosion were all dismissed, except one. Said remaining indictment was permitted to remain dormant on the files until the year 1933, at which time petitioner demanded to be tried thereon. The then district attorney refused and failed to produce any evidence in support of said indictment and the trial court directed a verdict of not guilty thereon.

As will presently appear from the chronological court history of the Mooney ease, certain of the foundational matters [10]*10upon which the present application is grounded arc not of recent discovery or proclamation. The. charge, of “frame-up”, now so vigorously urged by petitioner, even antedated petitioner’s trial and the production in court of any evidence against him. Subsequent to his arrest and prior to his trial, this charge was voiced through the publication and circulation of a pamphlet entitled “The Frameup System”. One needs only to examine the voluminous record in this proceeding to conclude that underlying the Mooney defense from its inception, has been a determined and vigorous campaign of propaganda and vilification directed with all its force against the state and its witnesses in an effort to accomplish the release of petitioner. The purpose of such a prolonged and determined campaign finds eloquent expression in many letters and documents written and received by petitioner and his associates over the years, and which have been placed in the record in this proceeding. The purpose is concededly “public agitation'to change the psychology of the people”, regardless of the guilt or innocence of the petitioner.

We now briefly narrate the court history of the Mooney ease. Following Mooney’s conviction and pending the determination of his appeal from the judgment imposing the extreme penalty, which sentence had not then been commuted to life imprisonment, the attorney-general, on July 30, 1917, filed in this court, a stipulation consenting to a reversal of the judgment of conviction. He was motivated to pursue this course by reason of the publication of certain letters written by one Frank C. Oxman, who subsequent to the writing of the letters, had appeared as a prosecution witness upon the petitioner’s trial. At a later point in this opinion we shall have more to say about the witness Oxman. In disposing of the point raised by the attorney-general’s consent to a reversal, we pointed out {People v. Mooney, 175 Cal. 666 [166 Pac. 999]) that the action of that officer was not based upon any claim or assumption that the record on appeal disclosed cause for a reversal, but was ‘ prompted by matters outside the record, disclosed after the proceedings were terminated in the trial court, which led him to believe that justice would be subserved by a retrial of the cause”. This court thereupon declared that “in view of the novelty of the suggestion of the attorney-general, and the serious question as to the right of this court under the provisions of our [11]*11Constitution to grant a new trial except for error in the proceedings in the trial court, we will not consider the question of the advisability of the action suggested by the attorney general’s consent, except on formal application or motion by one of the parties addressed to the court, on notice to the other parties interested, including the district attorney of the City and County of San Francisco”.

Thereafter, the petitioner, while his appeal from the judgment was still pending, addressed a motion to this court requesting that the judgment and order be reversed “solely on the ground that the attorney general of the state has filed ... a stipulation and consent that, for reasons stated therein, such action should be had by this court, and that defendant joins in said stipulation”. The motion was opposed by the district attorney and denied by this court. In the opinion filed September 11, 1917 (People v. Mooney, 176 Cal. 105 [167 Pac. 696]), it was declared, in substance, that the only jurisdiction then possessed by the court under the Constitution was to determine whether there had been any error of law in the proceedings in the trial court, the determination of which, it was pointed out, had to be based solely upon a consideration of the transcript of the record in that court.

Subsequently, and on March 1, 1918, and after a consideration of said transcript, a decision was rendered on the merits which affirmed the judgment of conviction and the order denying petitioner a new trial. (People v. Mooney, 177 Cal. 642 [171 Pac. 690].)

Orderly consideration of the issues in this proceeding suggests that we presently defer any discussion of the evidence upon which the jury found its verdict of guilty and which upon appeal was held to be sufficient to support the same.

In the month following this court’s affirmance of the judgment of conviction, i.

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Bluebook (online)
73 P.2d 554, 10 Cal. 2d 1, 10 Cal. 1, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mooney-cal-1937.