People v. Brannon

233 P. 88, 70 Cal. App. 225, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 44
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 13, 1924
DocketDocket No. 1121.
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 233 P. 88 (People v. Brannon) 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. Brannon, 233 P. 88, 70 Cal. App. 225, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 44 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

*227 FINLAYSON, P. J.

Defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree and was sentenced to imprisonment for the term of his natural life. From the judgment and an order refusing him a new trial he appeals. His principal point is that he was formerly acquitted of the same offense but that he was denied an opportunity to plead such former acquittal.

The facts necessary to an understanding of appellant’s chief contention are these: By an indictment containing two counts defendant was charged, in count one, with an assault with a deadly weapon upon his wife, Helen Brannon, with intent to commit murder, and in count two- with the murder of one Margaret Cronin. To both counts defendant interposed the plea of “not guilty.” He thereupon moved for a separate trial upon each count. His motion was granted, and the district attorney elected to try him first upon count one. That trial resulted in a verdict of acquittal. On the day set for his trial on the second count defendant moved the court for permission to withdraw his plea of “not guilty” to that count and to enter a plea of once in jeopardy and former acquittal. The motion was made with reasonable diligence after the verdict of acquittal on the first count. The court denied the motion, and thereupon defendant offered as an additional plea that of former acquittal. This offer the court refused to accept. The court thereupon proceeded with the trial of the murder charge set forth in the second count, with the result that defendant was convicted of the murder of Mrs. Cronin.

Margaret Cronin was killed by a bullet discharged from defendant’s pistol. But one shot was fired. The scene of the homicide was a room in the city of Los Angeles. The only persons present at the time of the shooting were the defendant, his wife, and the deceased. According to defendant’s version of the-circumstances attending the killing, the pistol was accidentally discharged during a friendly scuffle and while Mrs. Cronin, with her hand in defendant’s pocket, had hold of the weapon. The prosecution introduced evidence which tended to support the theory that defendant went to the room intending to kill his wife, and that unlawfully, with malice aforethought and with intent to slay Mrs." Brannon, he deliberately fired the shot at his wife, but that the bullet struck Mrs. Cronin instead, killing her. This theory is borne out by a letter, intro *228 duced by the prosecution, which was written by defendant and addressed to his wife shortly before he went to the scene of the homicide. Indeed, the jury, at the People’s request, was specifically instructed that where a person deliberately, and with premeditated malice, attempts to kill one person but by mistake or inadvertence kills another instead, the law transfers the intent from the object of his assault and the homicide so committed is murder. This instruction unquestionably embodies the theory upon which the case was presented to the jury by the district attorney.

Prom the foregoing it will be seen that, although defendant originally pleaded “not guilty,” he moved for permission to interpose the plea of former acquittal as soon as practicable after the advent of those facts which he claims constituted a former acquittal on the murder charge; also that, according to the prosecution’s theory of the homicide, there was but one act, i. e., one shot, and there likewise was but one intent and one volition. Thus there is squarely presented to us the question whether, if the killing occurred according to the People’s theory of the case, defendant’s acquittal on the first count was or was not an acquittal of the “same offense” for which he was subsequently tried and convicted.

The prohibition of the constitution is against putting a person twice in jeopardy for the “same offense.” (Art. I, see. 13. See, also, Pen. Code, sec. 1017, subd. 3.) It is the identity of the offense, and not of the act, which is referred to in the constitutional guarantee against putting a person twice in jeopardy. The supreme court of Ohio, in an opinion of exceptional vigor and rugged forcefulness, repudiates the tendency of some courts to construe the words “same offense” as meaning the same act or transaction. “The constitutional provision,” says that court in State v. Rose, 89 Ohio St. 383 [L. R. A. 1915A, 256, 106 N. E. 50], “uses the word ‘offense.’ Layman and lawyer alike understand the word ‘offense’ to here mean simply a ‘crime.’ . . . The words ‘same offense’ mean same offense, not the same transaction, not the same acts, not the same circumstances or same situation. ... It is not enough that some single element of the offense charged may have a single element of some other offense as to which the defendant had theretofore been in jeopardy, but the constitutional provision requires that it shall be the ‘same offense. ’ . . . Numerous decisions can be *229 cited to sustain the contention of the defendant as to his former jeopardy. Some of these decisions may be accounted for by a difference in the constitutional provisions, but more of them are accounted for by the fact that the courts have usurped the power of the lawmaker and the constitution maker and have added something to or subtracted something from the plain provisions of the laws and Constitution. . . . Courts too frequently fall into the very common error of assuming to interpret everything in the line of legal language. The utter folly and wholesale abuse of construing words that need no construction and of interpreting language that needs no interpretation has led to much of the judicial confusion and most of the irreconcilable diversity of court decisions. There can be no stability about law until there be certainty about law;. and when the constitution maker or statute maker uses a plain phrase, a simple sentence, and a workaday word, with a clear, simple and unmistakable meaning, it is almost criminal in a court to scramble what is simple and confuse what is clear, under the mask of its right to construe.”

No question has given rise to more difficulty or conflict than that which presents itself when two or more persons are injured in person or in property by a single act. Upon this question there are two divergent lines of authority. According to one line of eases, if one act injures two or more persons there is but one offense. This doctrine has been espoused by the courts of Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Missouri, New York, Texas, Vermont and England. In the other line of cases the contrary view is adopted, and in them it is held that if, for example, an assault be committed upon two or more persons by the one discharge of a firearm, the assault, although committed by but one single act, is in law a separate crime as to each of the persons assaulted, and a prosecution for the crime committed as to one of the persons so assaulted is no bar to a subsequent prosecution for the assault upon the others. The states in which the latter view has been adopted include California and also Arkansas, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia. The jurisdictions which respectively fall within these two divergent lines of authority are given by the learned author of Van Fleet’s Former Adjudication, who, in volume 2, section 622, of that work, says: “If several persons are injured in person or property by the same *230 act,

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Bluebook (online)
233 P. 88, 70 Cal. App. 225, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brannon-calctapp-1924.