People v. Bonilla

299 P. 784, 114 Cal. App. 219, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 693
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 1931
DocketDocket No. 44.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 299 P. 784 (People v. Bonilla) 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. Bonilla, 299 P. 784, 114 Cal. App. 219, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 693 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

The defendant was charged with having murdered his wife. He was tried before a jury and found guilty of murder in the second degree. This appeal is from the judgment and an order denying a motion for a new trial.

It is contended that the evidence is not sufficient to support the verdict. Appellant, however, mainly relies upon the contention that the court committed prejudicial error in admitting certain extrajudicial statements made by the defendant, for the reason that the corpus deliciti was never proved.

The following facts appear from the evidence: The defendant lived with his wife, Josephine Bonilla, and her four children by a former marriage. On the morning of November 22, 1930, he left the home, taking with him the two small sons of the deceased. He returned about 4 o’clock in the afternoon, at which time he had the appearance of having been drinking. A little later he stated that he wanted to go away again and take the two little boys with him. His wife refused to let them go, saying it was too cold. The *221 defendant became angry and an argument ensued between the defendant and his wife, during which he called her vile names. During this argument he said in reference to his wife: “What in the cabrón did he want her for; what did he want her for; and he used that vile word.” He then stated that he was going away, that he did not need her any more, and he demanded that she unpack his suitcase so that he could take it. He then went into the next room and emptied some of his wife’s things out of his suitcase and packed his own clothes therein, although he left the suitcase in the same room. A little later he started to go away in his Dodge touring car, and his wife opened the gate for him. He then told his wife to get in the machine and go with him. She remonstrated, saying her clothing was very thin and it was a very cold day. As one witness testified: “He used some bad words and said she would have to go.” She went away with him at 5 o’clock, which was the last time she was seen alive. The defendant returned to his home alone between 9 and 9:30 o ’clock that evening, at which time he informed the children of deceased that they could “say goodbye to mother because he had taken her to the undertaker ’ ’.

The first time defendant was seen after leaving his residence about 5 o’clock was shortly before 6:30 o’clock the same evening, when he appeared at the home of one Lopez and asked if he could use a telephone, stating he wanted to get a doctor because his wife was in a faint. He was taken across the street to the home of one Hernandez, where he stated he had been in an accident and wanted to call the police. He said he believed his wife was probably dead. Hernandez asked him why he did not take her to a hospital or to a doctor, but the defendant insisted- on calling for the police, which Hernandez did. Hernandez testified that while they were waiting for the police to arrive the defendant stated the following: “He said up along some Muscoy station, that he was coming and some Ford truck, I believe he said, was about to pass his car and it cut in a little too short and hit him and his wife fell out at that time, and he took after the truck trying to stop it, which he did not succeed in doing. He turned back to where his wife had fallen out, and he was about to pick her up and he asked her if she was hurt, and he said she did not answer. He *222 put her iu the car and he thought she was dead.” A little later, the defendant told this witness’s brother, according to his testimony, that as he was proceeding along the road to Verdemont, the door of his car suddenly flew open and his wife fell out. Ten or fifteen minutes after Hernandez had phoned for the police but before they arrived, at the suggestion of Hernandez, the defendant started to take his wife to the county hospital, Hernandez agreeing to tell the police where he had gone. The defendant was next seen at the county hospital at 6:55. He told the attendant there that he had been in an automobile accident. The attendant went out to his automobile, where he found the body of Josephine Bonilla sitting slouched down in the front seat of the automobile. After a short examination, he told the defendant that she was dead. In regard to the defendant’s attitute at the time, this attendant testified as follows: “His emotional status or attitude was that of—well, some excitement but not that of remorse; he did not seem remorseful over the fact that the woman in the car was dead. ’ ’ The coroner was called, and to him the defendant stated that he almost had a wreck at the corner of Fifth and Mt. Vernon, which frightened his wife, and as they proceeded, a little this side of Muscoy, his wife fell out of the car and he stopped, put her in the car and took her to the hospital. When asked by the coroner at what time this accident occurred, he said it was around 5 o’clock. He also stated that he first took her to a friend in San Bernardino and that this friend told him to take her to the county hospital, which he did. Later that evening, a police officer named Hyatt had a conversation with the defendant, in reference to which Hyatt testified as follows: “Well we were called on a wreck, and we asked where the wreck' was, and he said on Fifth and Mt. Vernon. He said the car hit his wife there and knocked his wife out of the car, and I said, ‘Did you get the license number of the car,’ and he said, ‘No, it was too dark,’ and I said, ‘ Could you recognize the car, Ford, or roadster, or touring ear?’ and he said it was a roadster, touring car, sedan or Ford truck. I asked him if he got the license number and he said it was too dark, he could not get it. I asked him if the fellow stopped and he said ‘No, he didn’t hit my car,’ and he says ‘We were walking across the street and a car hit my wife and knocked her down. ’ I said to *223 him, ‘Where is your ear now?’ And he said it was on Sixth and Mt. Vernon, ‘We had a wreck on Sixth and Mt. Vernon,’ and I said, ‘Come and show us the car’ and he did, and his car was parked on the west side of Mt. Vernon and north side of the street, and we got up there and he said, ‘This is my car,’ and we looked over the car and the car wasn’t torn up. I said, ‘Where did you have your wreck?’ And he said, ‘I had a wreck at Museoy and Highland avenue.’ He said, ‘My wife fell out of the ear and I took her to the hospital and she is dead.’ He said, ‘That is all right, that is my wife’.”

Another officer testified as follows: “Well I asked him what had happened, and he said that Josefina Flores, his wife, was killed, and I asked him how this happened and he said she was in a wreck, that is she was crossing the street and a car hit her, and I asked him what kind of a car hit her and he said a Ford. I said, ‘a Ford sedan, or a coupe, or a touring car’, and he said ‘a little truck’, and Officer Hyatt said, ‘Did you get the number?’ He said ‘no, it was a truck’, and I said, ‘What time was this when this happened ? ’ And he said, ‘About 5:30.’ I said, ‘ Where did it happen?’ He said, ‘At Fifth and Mt. Vernon.’ Then he said that his wife was dead, Josefina Flores; that it was all right, because it was his wife.”

Another officer testified that the defendant told him the following: “that when they reached the intersection of Fifth street and Mt. Vernon they almost collided with another machine which was driving in the opposite direction; it frightened his wife very much and she hollered and screamed, and they drove on up Mt.

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Bluebook (online)
299 P. 784, 114 Cal. App. 219, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bonilla-calctapp-1931.