People v. Chapman

173 P.2d 860, 76 Cal. App. 2d 651, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 762
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1946
DocketCrim. No. 3990
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 P.2d 860 (People v. Chapman) 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. Chapman, 173 P.2d 860, 76 Cal. App. 2d 651, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 762 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

Defendant was charged in an information filed by the District Attorney of Los Angeles County with the crime of murder. She entered a plea of not guilty and the jury found her “guilty of manslaughter, a felony, a lesser offense necessarily included in the charge set forth in the information. ’ ’ This appeal is prosecuted from the judgment of conviction and “from the order denying the motion for a new trial.” Since no motion for a new trial was made, the ap.peal from the order denying a new trial must be dismissed.

[653]*653Appellant here urges (1) that the evidence is insufficient to support the judgment of conviction; and (2) that the trial court committed prejudicial error in the giving and the refusal of instructions.

In connection with her first point, appellant points out that having admitted the shooting, “the question of guilt depended upon the claim of justification or self-defense. There was nothing inherently improbable in defendant’s account of the shooting and it cannot be said from a reading of the record that the jury could not have reconciled all of the established circumstances with the theory of defendant’s innocence.”

From the record herein it appears that appellant and David Austin Tipton, the decedent, met and lived together illicitly in Texas; that in 1937 appellant moved to California, ostensibly to get away from deceased, but he followed her in a couple of months and they continued to live together. On the afternoon of July 27, 1945, deceased, who had been drinking, quarreled with appellant at her home because she would not give him some liquor, and he started fighting her and cursing her. Appellant operated a hot dog stand at night at 41st and Central Avenue, and on the evening of July 27, between 10 and 10:30, a Mr. McClain and a Mr. Garcia stopped at the stand for something to eat and drink, at which time they saw appellant and deceased at the stand, the latter apparently intoxicated; that appellant was inside the stand, deceased standing on the outside saying “Serve the whiskey over the bar”; and at the same time cursing and gesturing at appellant, who told him to leave and stop running her customers away. Deceased tried to enter the stand but without success. No weapons were observed in the hand of either appellant or deceased at this time, and because of the quarreling, Messrs. McClain and Garcia left.

At approximately 11 that same evening, Special Police Officer Burvender was walking near appellant’s stand when he heard a sound like the discharge of a firearm, saw a crowd of people gathering near the hot dog stand and proceeded in that direction when he heard a second shot, saw the flash of a gun near the stand, went around in back thereof with another officer and found the deceased in a half reclining position on the ground. About 10:50 p. m. on the night in question, one Gaski, a Los Angeles police officer, was cruising in a police car near the intersection of 41st and Central when he heard a report that sounded like the discharge of a firearm. He glanced [654]*654toward the hot dog stand and saw appellant and deceased. He testified that he saw appellant leaning ont of the service window of the hot dog stand with her arm protruding and a gun in her hand; and “I saw a man later identified as the deceased Tipton, running away from the lunch stand. ... I saw fire emerging from the pistol held by the defendant and the report of a gunshot about the same time that the deceased, Tipton, spun around and changed his direction and ran west to the service station lot where this lunch room is situated, to the rear of the service station.” That the second shot was fired at deceased when he was less than 20 feet from the appellant; that the witness Gaski “immediately made a U turn and drove in the service station grounds, got out of the police car and went to the lunch stand and the door was open and I put my hand out and Mrs. Chapman handed me a pistol”; a Colt .32 automatic pistol, with five shells in the clip and one in the barrel. Said officer asked appellant “what had happened and who was she shooting at. . . . The defendant told me that it was her common law husband, that she had been having trouble with him for the past two years, he had been abusing her and had threatened to kill her and on this particular night he was bothering and molesting her again and she wasn’t feeling well, so she shot him.” Said witness then went to the rear of the service station to see deceased, who was kneeling and leaning against the building, with a wound in the left side of his neck.

The autopsy surgeon testified that death was due to internal hemorrhage due to gunshot wound of the neck and that the bullet which struck deceased was recovered in his body at the autopsy.

Mr. Dimon, a police officer of the city of Los Angeles, who took Mr. Tipton and appellant to the Georgia Street Receiving Hospital, and talked to both of them at that time, testified that before he died, Mr. Tipton, in answer to the officer’s questions, stated that appellant shot him; that he had no weapon in his possession at the time of the shooting and had not put appellant’s life in danger. When the officer suggested that Mr. Tipton be searched for weapons, appellant stated: “Oh, there is no use, he didn’t have anything anyway.” Search of decedent revealed that he had a pair of pliers in his hip pocket at which time appellant volunteered the information to the officers that deceased had the pliers to fix the wiring of the hot dog stand. Thereafter, on the way to the police [655]*655station, this witness had a conversation with appellant to the following effect: “I asked her where she had obtained the gun and she said that it was left at her place by some sailor who stayed there, who wasn’t able to pay her and I asked her how long she had had it, and I don’t recall now just how long she did say but-then I asked her if she had been in the habit of carrying it from the house down there to the place of business and she said, ‘.No’, she said that.she kept it locked up in her closet at home with some liquor and other stuff that she had and that was the first time that she had ever brought it to the place of business, that she had anticipated trouble with Tipton that night because he had stayed home from work and was drinking and when he started drinking that he got mean and she also stated that some time prior to this incident that he had threatened her life with a butcher knife.”

In a typewritten statement in the form of questions and answers made to Sergeant R H. Howsley of the Los Angeles Police Department, appellant stated that about 2 p. m. of July 27, 1945, she and deceased had an argument at her home at which time decedent “tussled and hit me beside the head with his fists. . . . I asked him why he didn’t go and leave me alone. He said if I gave him the stand and $1,00.00 he would go. . . . He said he didn’t want to stay there.” That around 7 she and deceased went to the hot dog stand together in another man’s car; that she opened the stand and deceased left for a haircut returning about 9 p. m. when he started arguing with her and calling her names; that he pulled a pair of pliers out of his pocket and cut off the lights to the stand; that he made grabs at her and cursed her and then went across the street; that a boy named Arthur Davis, came to the stand and fixed the lights, whereupon deceased returned and cut them off again; that she then told Davis to go across the street and telephone “for this man to come and pick me up, that we wasn’t going to stay open any more. That’s when he (deceased) started arguing again and cursing. That’s the time he grabbed me and I jumped back.

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Related

People v. Hagemann
203 P.2d 830 (California Court of Appeal, 1949)
People v. Sanchez
184 P.2d 673 (California Supreme Court, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
173 P.2d 860, 76 Cal. App. 2d 651, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-chapman-calctapp-1946.