People v. Bostic

141 P. 380, 167 Cal. 754, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 528
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1914
DocketCrim. No. 1850.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 141 P. 380 (People v. Bostic) 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. Bostic, 141 P. 380, 167 Cal. 754, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 528 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

The defendant was charged with the murder of one Horace E. Montague, the date of the commission of the crime being December 1, 1913, and the place the county of Los Angeles. He was captured in San Francisco about three weeks after the commission of the homicide and was taken to Los Angeles. On the trip southward he freely confessed his guilt to Mr. W. A. Hammel, sheriff of Los Angeles County, and to Captain T. H. Broadhead, an employee of the Southern Pacific Company. Subsequently he was preliminarily examined before a magistrate, was held to answer, and an information duly charging him with the crime of murder was filed by the district attorney of Los Angeles County. He was arraigned upon this information, declined the offer of the court to appoint counsel in his behalf, and entered a plea .of “guilty.” The court sentenced him to death. Subsequently his parents having learned of his arrest and having employed counsel to represent him, a motion was made to set aside the judgment on the grounds that the court had taken no testimony and had not fixed the degree of the crime. This motion was granted and evidence was offered for the avowed purpose of aiding the court in determining the degree of the crime and its punishment. Another declared reason for offering this evidence was to enable the court, if the crime should be found to be murder of the first degree, to determine whether justice demanded the execution of the defendant or his imprisonment for life. While the court was busily engaged upon that inquiry defendant's counsel made a motion that defendant be permitted to withdraw his plea of “guilty” and enter a plea of “not guilty.” It was also suggested that the court should consider the testimony -for the purpose of aiding in the determination of the question whether or not the defendant’s then present condition demanded the submission to a jury of the question of his sanity at that time. *756 After considering the evidence offered, which included a transcript of the testimony given at the preliminary examination and some additional testimony, the court denied defendant’s motion; found the murder to be of the first degree; and pronounced upon defendant the judgment of death. Defendant appeals from the judgment and from the order denying his motion to be permitted to withdraw the plea of “guilty” and to substitute therefor a plea of “not guilty.” The defendant boarded a southbound passenger train of the Southern Pacific Company near El Monte in Los Angeles County on the evening of December 1, 1913, about 8:30 o’clock, and proceeded to rob eight people who were in the rear Pullman coach at the time he entered it. He was armed with a revolver which he used to emphasize and enforce his demands for valuables. He wore no mask or other disguise. J. W. Compton, the Pullman conductor, testified that the defendant stood near the middle of the rear Pullman coach. As he started to pass defendant, whom he regarded as a passenger, the latter seized him; presented a pistol at his breast; ordered him to throw up his hands; and when he had complied with the command, proceeded to rifle his pockets. The defendant next turned his attention to the passengers, taking valuables from three women and one man. The defendant then asked Robbins, a brakeman, where the train was and the latter, besides giving the desired information, said that unless he should give a signal the train would stop there. Defendant ordered him to give the signal to go ahead’ and Robbins went out on to the platform where he signaled the engineer to stop. Thereupon the defendant went after the brakeman, called him a vile name and said he had a good notion to blow Robbins’s brains out. Robbins was compelled at the point of the revolver to give the signal for the train to proceed. Then defendant forced Robbins to re-enter the car and take a seat. He then said to Robbins “I will take your watch just to learn you a lesson.” This he proceeded to do, remarking “I don’t often do this” and reiterating the statement that his act was just to “learn” Robbins a lesson. At this moment Montague entered the ear and walked down the aisle toward the place where defendant was standing. The defendant seized Mr. Montague with his left hand pointed the revolver at the breast of that gentleman with *757 Ms right hand, and said ‘‘ Throw up your hands! ’ ’ Montague replied, “What?” The command was repeated, but Montague caught at defendant’s left wrist with his left hand, whereupon defendant drew his victim toward him and fired, mortally wounding Montague, who dropped his valise, turned and ran up the aisle from a point near the end to about the center of the car when a second shot was fired by the defendant in the direction of the fleeing man, but it did not strike him. He fell near the door of the car. The defendant remarked “I guess one of them got him,” and told the others in the car that what they had seen was only a “lesson” of what they would get if they made any move. He then forced Bobbins to give the signal for the train to slow down, and when it was progressing at the rate of about fifteen miles an hour, defendant jumped off and escaped.. Montague died before the train reached Los Angeles, wMch was about thirty minutes after the shooting. The other witnesses corroborated Compton in all essential particulars. Bobbins, the trainman, told of defendant’s entering the wash room at the end of the car where the witness and a Mr. Colen were relieved of their valuables by the robber. He then drove Bobbins and Colen in front of him into the main body of the car. He next took some of Mrs. Colen’s property, including a diamond ring, threatening to shoot her if she would not readily yield up hbr money and jewelry. But it is unnecessary to go into the details of Bobbins’s testimony as it did not differ in any essential point from that of Compton. His description of the actual encounter and the shooting of Montague was as follows: “He took my watch. Just a few seconds after Mr. Montague come in the front end of the car and walked through quickly, walked right up to the defendant. The defendant stopped him and grabbed him by the lapel of the vest or coat and demanded him to throw up his hands. Mr. Montague says, ‘What?’ He says, ‘Throw up your hands.’ Mr. Montague says, ‘Not by a damn sight,’ and dropped his grip he had in his right hand and made some move, I could not see, as Mr. Montague was standing between me and the defendant, back to me, but at the same time this move was made a shot was fired. Mr. Montague turned, run down the aisle, and when about half way down the defendant fired another shot.

*758 “Q. In what direction? A. Toward Mr. Montague.
“Q. What did the defendant say, if anything?
“A. I heard him make a remark that one of them got him anyway. That is all the remark I heard him make. He stood there probably two minutes or a little more, did not say anything till he demanded me to go and stop the train till he got off. I went out and gave a stop signal. He stood on the platform and demanded me to stand on the other side from where he was. I stood over as far as I could. The gun was still pointed at me and I asked him for my watch. The train then slowed down to about 15 miles an hour. The defendant jumped off.”

The first contention of defendant’s counsel is that the court abused its discretion in not granting the motion that defendant be permitted to withdraw his plea of guilty.

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Bluebook (online)
141 P. 380, 167 Cal. 754, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bostic-cal-1914.