People v. Correa

186 P. 1055, 44 Cal. App. 634, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 573
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 5, 1919
DocketCrim. No. 474.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 186 P. 1055 (People v. Correa) 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. Correa, 186 P. 1055, 44 Cal. App. 634, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 573 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

Defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree, with punishment fixed toy the jury at imprisonment for life, and he has appealed from the judgment and the order denying his motion for a new trial. At the outset we may say that there appears to be nothing inherently improbable in the testimony of any of the witnesses, and, therefore, under the familiar rule, we must accept as true the statements that correspond with and support the theory of the prosecution. Hence, it may be understood that in stating the facts, we have taken from the record the version of the affair which is disclosed by the evidence that tends to support such theory. It appears that, during the year 1917 and until August 26, 1918, Anton Sequeira, the deceased, with his family, consisting of a wife and four small children, lived on the Peter Stewart ranch, consisting of about 160 acres, and which was conducted as a dairy farm. This ranch fronted on the highway leading from Crow’s Landing to Newman, in Stanislaus County, and the deceased and defendant conducted the same as partners. The defendant was unmarried and lived in the home of the deceased, sleeping in the ibunkhouse which was attached to the residence. He had lived in this house continuously for eighteen months previous to the murder. No help was employed in conducting this dairy and the two divided the work between them. They were milking about sixty cows and each milked about thirty head; the defendant then attended to feeding the calves and some of the other stock, while deceased separated the milk and carried the skimmed milk to the pigs and then washed the separator. On the evening of August 26, 1918, the deceased and defendant were seen aibout 6 P. M., engaged in milking at the corral, which was at a distance of 520 feet from the residence. They usually finished their work about 9 P. M., and then went to the house for supper, but on this evening defendant did not appear at the house until about 10 P. M., and *636 then came in alone. Supper was had without the presence of deceased, and then, following their usual custom, all the inmates of the house engaged in prayer, and, thereafter, defendant left, supposedly to go to bed in his bunkhouse. The next morning, about 6 A. M., the dead body of deceased was found in a spring-wagon with a horse attached, at the home of Peter Stewart, a distance of nearly two miles from the home of deceased. The wagon wheels had become fastened in a tree and the horse was standing there when found by Stewart and his employee. Deceased was dressed in the overalls in which he milked, being an extra pair which he slipped over his ordinary clothes when commencing that task. The head of deceased was frightfully mutilated, showing four distinct blows which fractured and crushed the skull. The face and clothes were covered with blood and dried manure, and blood had leaked through the body of the wagon, forming a pool on the ground where the wagon stood. Deceased was lying on his back with his head near the end-gate and his feet under the seat, and his hat was in the body of the wagon. This horse and wagon belonged to deceased and were kept on the ranch at the time of the murder, although the horse formerly belonged to Mr. Stewart. After said discovery, Mr. Stewart notified the authorities, and a few hours thereafter the defendant was arrested and charged with the crime. The trial of the case consumed about eleven days, the witnesses being subjected to a very rigid examination by counsel for both parties, and every point being hotly contested by counsel for defendant. The learned judge who presided at the trial, Honorable George H. Cabaniss, of San Francisco, seems to have had a clear conception of the legal principles involved in the charge, and to have conducted-the proceedings with striking regard for all the legal' rights of the defendant. The instructions to the jury were complete and accurate, and no exception could be taken thereto. The rulings upon the admissibility of evidence were unusually free from error. The evidence itself, though circumstantial in character, is entirely sufficient, in our judgment, to support the verdict of the jury. We have taken pains to read carefully the entire record, consisting of over nine hundred pages, and we are convinced, not only that the verdict of the jury is supported, but that any fair-minded jury could hardly reach *637 any other conclusion than that the defendant committed the shocking crime.

I. The sufficiency of said evidence, however, to support the conviction is strongly contested by appellant, and it may be well to call attention to some of the salient facts to show how insubstantial is such contention. In doing this we may follow the method of the attorney-general in dividing the inquiry into the following considerations: 1. Where was Sequeira murdered? 2. When did the murder take place? 3. By whom was the deed committed and what are the circumstances showing defendant to be the guilty party?

1. Undoubtedly deceased was killed on his own premises. Indeed, no other theory is advanced by appellant. There is support for the contention of the prosecution that Sequeira was murdered on the path leading from the separator-house to the pig-pen and near said corral. This path was taken by deceased in carrying the milk to the pigs, and he would undoubtedly pass near the defendant while the latter was feeding the stock in the corral. The sheriff, his deputies, the coroner, and the neighbors present were able to trace the tracks of the wagon and blood stains from the Stewart home out on to the highway and along the same to a panel-gate opening upon the road from the premises occupied by deceased and 'defendant, and on through a rough, uneven field, across a creek and up to the point near the corral, where the ground was covered with fine dried manure. At this point the tracks of the wagon ended and here was found evidence of blood, and the ground appeared to have been raked over. Two parallel lines in the dry manure indicated that the body had been dragged to a point where the wagon tracks commenced. It may be added that the manure on the face and clothing of the deceased corresponded in appearance with that found at this point. Other circumstances are disclosed, which, in connection with the foregoing, demonstrate to a moral certainty that Sequeira met his death on his own premises, and from which it is at least a reasonable inference that he was struck down at or near the point as claimed by the prosecution.

2. The last seen of Sequeira alive by any person appears by the testimony of the defendant, who says that he saw deceased going into the separator-house as he, Correa, was coming out. This was after the cows had been milked and *638 the defendant was then feeding the stock in the corral while deceased was carrying milk to the pigs, and it was about 8:30 P. M. As to when they finished milking, appellant testified: “I think it was after 8 o’clock.” It was probably a short time after this that Sequeira was killed. The work of separating the milk, feeding the pigs, and washing the separator occupied about thirty minutes, and it followed immediately after the cows were milked. This additional task was not entirely completed, as the separator was not washed and the cream was not placed in its usual position. One Mattos, who collected the cream, drove into the place a few minutes after 9 o’clock and found the can of cream was not in its accustomed place and the light out in the separator-house.

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Bluebook (online)
186 P. 1055, 44 Cal. App. 634, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-correa-calctapp-1919.