People v. Bollinger

237 P. 25, 196 Cal. 191, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 305
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1925
DocketDocket No. Crim. 2727.
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 237 P. 25 (People v. Bollinger) 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
People v. Bollinger, 237 P. 25, 196 Cal. 191, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 305 (Cal. 1925).

Opinion

LAWLOR, J.

The defendant was charged by indictment with the crime of murder. He pleaded not guilty to the indictment, was tried on the charge, and found guilty of murder in the first degree, the verdict carrying the death penalty. In due course a motion for a new trial was interposed by defendant and denied, whereupon judgment of death was pronounced upon him. The appeal is from said judgment sentencing him to death and from the order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The evidence introduced at the trial tends to show that on May 27, 1924, C. J. McCoy, sheriff of Tuba County, was informed, by an itinerant laborer, named Dan McVey, that a dead man was lying in a body of water called Nigger Jack or Simmerley Slough situated near the cemetery north of Marysville; that said sheriff notified the county coroner; that the coroner repaired to said slough and found the dead body lying face downward, partly submerged; that a superficial examination at the time showed the deceased had been subjected to great violence—the skull was crushed in and several ribs broken; that decomposition had set in; that in the month of April, 1924, appellant and his wife, were camping or stopping at an auto camp in Yolo County, across the river from Sacramento; that a man well along in years and known thereabouts only as “Alex” was also stopping at said auto camp at the same time; that appellant and his wife struck up an acquaintance with “Alex”; that when “Alex'” first came to the auto camp he had with him a horse and rig together with a supply of camping utensils; that while there he purchased or acquired another horse and rig; that subsequently, and about April 15, 1924, appellant, his wife, and “Alex” left the auto camp together-appellant, accompanied by his wife, driving one horse and rig and “Alex” the other; that upon their departure from said auto camp they proceeded along the road leading from Sacramento to Marysville; that twenty-five or thirty days later appellant and his wife were seen by C. Z. Berry driving along the Twelfth Street road toward Sacramento; that *195 on this occasion appellant and his wife were each driving a horse and rig; that about June 15, 1924, appellant and his wife were at the city of Napa; that during their stay there appellant sold to Joseph A. Marshall a sorrel horse, a spring wagon, and harness; to C. D. Butler, a brown mare, harness, and wagon—the latter containing wearing apparel, a yellow cat, and three pigeons; and to Louis Pasquini, the camping utensils, tents, tables, and everything of that sort. These purchasers testified at the trial and described the property as above set forth.

Subsequent to the coroner’s discovery of the body in the slough appellant was arrested and made a confession in which he told of the killing of “Alex” with an ax, stating therein that deceased had previously threatened his life. The confession assumed to set forth the movements of the trio following their departure from the camp grounds.

2 and 3. We will consider first appellant’s second and third claims of reversible error, for if those contentions have merit it would not be necessary to consider the other points made on appeal. The second and third claims of reversible error are thus stated:

“2. The ruling of the trial court holding that the prosecution had sufficiently proven the corpus delicti to admit proof of the so-called confession, statement, or admission of the defendant is reversible error.”
“3. The denial of defendant’s motion for an instructed verdict is reversible error . . . what we have said under previous headings of this brief and the eases cited under citation of error Number 2 apply here. ...”

We will now set forth the substance of the evidence which had been received before the asserted confession was admitted.

Prank Bevan, coroner of Tuba County, testified that on the evening of May 27, 1924, he found the body of a dead man in the waters of Nigger Jack, or Simmerley Slough; that the face was in the water as was the front part of the body; that the body was in a nude condition with the exception that it had on a part of an undershirt and a torn and tattered blue denim working shirt; that he removed the body from the water, made a casual examination, and placed it in the receiving vault; that such casual examination as was made at that time revealed .that the body had *196 been immersed in water, “that the skull evidently was entirely caved in on the top ’ ’; that on the morning of June 4th a more thorough examination was made and an autopsy performed by Dr. Allen Gray—the witness and his assistant, Mr. Buchanan, being present; that this examination showed the body to be in the condition revealed by the prior examination except that it was in an advanced stage of decomposition and the odor had become more pronounced; that it also showed the left eye and nose to be broken and decomposed, as were the lips; that the height of the deceased was estimated at about five feet, six inches, and his age between fifty and sixty years; that the bones of the upper and lower jaw revealed no signs of teeth; that the sheriff, the district attorney and himself visited the slough on the morning of the 26th of June, 1924, and the sheriff then recovered from the bushes or trees certain bedding and a pillow which the witness identified on the stand as the bedding then found by the sheriff.

Doctor Allen E. Gray testified that on the morning of June 4, 1924, he was called to the Marysville cemetery to and that he did perform an autopsy; that there were present at that time the coroner and his assistant; that the autopsy disclosed the body of a man about five feet, six inches in height and apparently past fifty years of age; that the body was badly decomposed and parts of the skin and flesh were missing; that the top of the scalp, a part of the skull itself and the brain were missing; that the top of the skull was badly fractured and the fracture ran down toward the left orbit and the nose; that the eyes were missing and the flesh decomposed; the same being true of the skin and flesh of the nose; that there were no teeth and no signs of their recent removal; that there was a fracture of the third, fourth, and fifth rib on the left side and that there was a bandage on one finger; that there were no other bones broken or other marks of violence; that, in his opinion, “death came from a blow on the man’s head”; that the man evidently had been dead three or four weeks or longer. On cross-examination he stated he could not say positively that these injuries were received before death; on redirect examination he declared that deceased did not have the appearance of a man that had been drowned.

*197 C. C.

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Bluebook (online)
237 P. 25, 196 Cal. 191, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bollinger-cal-1925.