People v. Bailey

176 P. 880, 38 Cal. App. 521, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 170
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1918
DocketCrim. No. 611.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 176 P. 880 (People v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Bailey, 176 P. 880, 38 Cal. App. 521, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 170 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Appeal from a judgment directing the imprisonment of the defendant in the state penitentiary.

Appellant was charged by an information of the district attorney with the crime of murder, alleged to have been committed on or about the fifteenth day of December, 1917, in the county of Imperial. There were two trials, the jury having disagreed at the first and upon the second returned a verdict of manslaughter, carrying the recommendation that there be imposed “the minimum sentence.” In view of the point made by appellant that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the conviction, we will relate the story of the crime, as the evidence shows it, with considerable detail, giving particular emphasis to all of the testimony introduced on behalf of *522 the prosecution which, it is claimed, tends to show the defendant’s guilt: On December 15, 1917, appellant was the owner of a small store at a little place called Rockwood, in Imperial County. The deceased was a friend of the defendant and resided alone in a small house or cabin a short distance away from the store—just how far does not appear. The deceased took his meals with appellant at the store. Another man, named Curran, was at the time residing with the defendant at the store. No other persons lived at that place. There was an apartment in the rear of the storeroom where there was a bed in which the men slept, and it was also in the real part of the building that they prepared and ate their meals. At about 12 o’clock on the night preceding the alleged murder, a trapper, named Moore, knocked at the door of the store and awakened appellant. At the request of the trapper, Bailey went out and assisted him in finding a sack which he had brought on the stage with him and which he had mislaid in the darkness. This sack contained some vegetables and two quart bottles of intoxicating liquor, one being com whisky and the other pure alcohol. The trapper remained through the night and at least through the larger portion of the next day. All of the three men, Curran, Moore, and appellant, were in the habit of using intoxicants to excess, as was also deceased. The. three men first mentioned, after the arrival of the trapper, had some drinks, and on the following morning they again partook of the liquor, at least appellant and Curran did. At that time they used the pure alcohol, diluted with water, into which was mixed sugar. At the time for the morning meal on the 15th appellant went to the house of deceased and brought him over to the store to have breakfast. Later on, in the morning, at perhaps about 10 o’clock, deceased and Curran went to a ranch owned by the deceased, which was located some distance out of the town of Rockwood. They returned from there between 12 and 1 o’clock, deceased going to his cabin and Curran returning to the store of appellant. No witness saw Curran or the deceased at the time the latter reached his cabin, and from this point on, up to the time of the discovery of the dead body of deceased in his cabin, between 3 and 4 o ’clock of the same afternoon, the story as to the movements of Curran and appellant is somewhat in dispute. It was several weeks after the alleged murder that appellant was arrested and charged with the crime, and up to the time of *523 the first trial Curran was held as a witness in the custody of the sheriff in default of bond. After the first trial he was released, and it appears that he promptly disappeared, and the sheriff was unable to find and subpoena him when the second trial came on. His testimony, as given at the first trial, was read in evidence from the reporter’s transcript, and it was this testimony that the prosecution mainly relied upon in the effort to fix the crime upon appellant. We will proceed to the narrative of this testimony so given by Curran. The witness stated that upon returning from the ranch with deceased he left deceased at the latter’s cabin and went on to the Bailey store; that he found Bailey seated at a table in the rear of the store, with the trapper, Moore, with a bottle of whisky before them, a portion of which had been consumed; that he found the empty bottle which he presumed had contained the alcohol lying on the floor, and this he threw away. Curran stated that he was pretty well intoxicated at the time; he felt badly; that he proceeded to the rear of the store, where the bed was, and lay down; that appellant came back where he was and remarked aloud that Curran had gone to bed, and then took a cover of some sort and laid it over him; that Bailey then went toward the front of the store and out; that in front of the store was a chair and a bench; that he (Curran) did not know where appellant went when he disappeared through the front of the store, and did not know whether he left the premises or not; that the witness went to sleep and remained asleep until about 3 P. M., when he awoke and found appellant seated in a chair in front of the store, asleep. Further, that a revolver was habitually kept about the store; that it was sometimes kept under the store counter, sometimes in a rice barrel, and sometimes under the pillow of the bed; that when he arrived from the ranch at 1 o’clock he noticed that appellant had the revolver stuffed down into his trousers, as he sat at the table with the trapper; that when he awoke in the afternoon he was still feeling badly; that he took a package of cigarettes over to a man working at a milling establishment near by, came back, and talked with appellant; that something was said about the deceased and also about preparing a meal; that he (the witness) went to the cabin of deceased to call him; that he found the deceased lying in a pool of blood dead, upon the floor of one of the rooms; that he immediately returned to the store, informed appellant of what he had. *524 found, and was instructed by appellant to call some of the men and notify the officials; that when these arrived, the party, including the witness and appellant, went over to the cabin and viewed the dead body, and then returned to the store; that appellant himself phoned to the sheriff; that the witness noticed.some red marks or spots upon the trousers and shoes of appellant and called appellant’s attention thereto, whereupon appellant informed him that he had spilled some catsup over them; that the witness told appellant that the spots “looked bad,” whereupon appellant took off the trousers and washed his shoes. Other details given by the witness we do not regard as in any way presenting incrimi-, uating matter. An officer who visited the store asked whether any weapons were kept about there and was told by Curran that there were weapons, including a revolver; he asked that the revolver be given him, and Curran went to the bed and took the revolver from under the pillow; it was a 38-caliber revolver, fully loaded, except that one chamber had been discharged; there was about the weapon an appearance and smell as though the revolver had been discharged, as the witness said, within a few hours previous. No attempt was made by appellant to destroy or conceal the trousers, and portions of them were later taken for the purpose of having the spots analyzed. One witness, who was engaged in a laboratory in Los Angeles, testified that he had analyzed the coloring matter obtained from some of the spots and that he had determined that it was human blood., At no time did appellant make any statements which tended of themselves to incriminate him.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Mahach
224 P. 130 (California Court of Appeal, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P. 880, 38 Cal. App. 521, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bailey-calctapp-1918.