People v. Coston

185 P.2d 632, 82 Cal. App. 2d 23, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1168
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 23, 1947
DocketCrim. 2460
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 185 P.2d 632 (People v. Coston) 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. Coston, 185 P.2d 632, 82 Cal. App. 2d 23, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1168 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

Defendant was convicted by a jury of murder in the first degree with penalty of life imprisonment.

The facts in this case read like a story taken from the Arabian Nights. In May, 1943, defendant, who was then living in Norfolk, Virginia, with his wife, Goldie, to whom he had been married for about eight years, enlisted in the Navy. While he was away from home in the service, his wife became acquainted with the deceased, Lieutenant White, who was also in the Navy. Apparently, the gold braid of an officer was more appealing to Goldie than the blue jacket of an enlisted man, for in June, 1945, Goldie left defendant in Norfolk and went to Reno to get a divorce so that she could marry White. Defendant followed her to Reno, arriving there July 16th.

*26 There he learned for the first time that she was getting a divorce. Defendant testified that Goldie told him that the divorce was sort of a joke on their friends so that they could get remarried again. At any rate, defendant signed the documents which her Reno attorney desired signed, so that the divorce could go through expeditiously. Defendant spent approximately 12 days in Reno, during the six weeks’ period required for Goldie to get her divorce. Defendant contends that during his stay he and she lived together as husband and wife. Goldie denies this, but admits that the first night he was in Reno he stayed all night at her apartment, and that the next day “He checked in [at a hotel] as Mr. and Mrs. because they would not let him have a room by himself.” On April 12, 1946, practically nine months later, a child was born to Mrs. White. This child defendant claims was conceived during his stay in Reno, and also claims that Goldie told him on several occasions that the child she was going to have was his. She denies this, but it is significant that in her letters to defendant she called the unborn child “Spike,” a name given it by defendant. She received her divorce on August 27,1945, and married White in San Francisco on August 31, which is the date upon which she claims the child was conceived: Less than two months after her marriage, Goldie went to Norfolk, because of the illness of her mother. She was in Norfolk approximately from October 12 until October 25. Defendant claims, and is supported in this behalf by witnesses, that Goldie lived with him during her stay there. This she denied. On her return to her husband in San Francisco and about the first of November, Goldie talked over the phone to defendant, who was in Norfolk. Up to this time, in spite of her admission that she saw defendant daily during the time she was in Norfolk, she had not told defendant of her marriage to White. She did so in this phone conversation. A day or so later she wrote him indicating that, as he claimed, they had discussed remarriage (“How about the marriage? Do I have to wait two and a half years before I get married?”). On November 3, defendant wrote her a long, rambling letter in which he stated, among other things, “Goldie, let’s be friends. Now I don’t want to cause you any trouble with him, but any time he objects to me tell him to be man enough to take it out on me, not you, I’m his size, I don’t give a damn how big he is or how little—in other words if he treats you O. K. he is regarded by me as a friend, but on the other hand if he steals you away from me then craps on you, sister, he will pay the *27 price, ‘so help me God I just want to remind you Goldie I’m sober’ or I guess you say I’m crazy.” (Emphasis added.) A couple of days later, November 5th or 6th, defendant arrived in San Francisco by plane, and went up to the Whites’ apartment about 1:30 in the afternoon. He remained with Goldie all afternoon, even going with her to the grocery store while she did her shopping. White returned home about 5 o’clock and defendant, after congratulating him upon the marriage, stayed for dinner and spent the evening with the newly-married couple. Defendant then charged White with being the cause of some difficulty defendant had had in getting the Navy to transfer him from sea duty to shore duty at Norfolk, which White denied. Defendant returned to Norfolk and Goldie arrived there about a week later, on December 16th. The cause of her going to Norfolk is disputed. It seems that a few days before, defendant’s stepfather was shot in his Norfolk home. Goldie claims that defendant called her on the phone, told her that his mother had shot her husband, and asked Goldie to come to Norfolk to help in the defense of the mother as Goldie could testify that on a number of occasions the husband “had gotten fresh” with her. (Incidentally, both the mother and the stepfather testified at defendant’s trial, that the stepfather accidentally shot himself.) Defendant claims that Goldie, by telephone, made up this story about his mother doing the shooting and asked defendant to send her a telegram to come to Norfolk to testify, so that she would have an excuse to show to her husband. She went to Norfolk, defendant having wired her $150 for plane fare. Goldie remained in Norfolk for over a month, occupying, according to defendant and several witnesses, an apartment with him. This Goldie denies, although admitting she saw defendant every day and claiming that he was trying to get her to leave White and come back to him. During this time defendant took her to an attorney where the matter of getting a divorce from White was discussed. Goldie admits the discussion, but denies she ever intended to get such a divorce. She claims that defendant was threatening to have her husband kicked out of the Navy, and that she would have divorced White rather than have that happen. Defendant claims and she denies that she told the lawyer that her unborn child was defendant’s. In response to an invitation to visit his sister in Oakland defendant flew to San Francisco arriving the morning of February 25th. He immediately went to the White apartment. Defendant claims that Goldie had asked *28 Mm to come there to see her before she went to the hospital as she felt that she was not going to survive childbirth. This she denies, but language in one of her letters corroborates defendant on her fear of childbirth. At this time defendant stated that he was going to Los Angeles to get a job. Prom February 25th to March 12th, defendant and Goldie saw each other practically every day. Three or four days before March 12th, defendant met White and Goldie coming from the store and went to the apartment with them. He told them he was leaving the next day and had come to say goodbye. He claims that White refused to drink with Mm and he threatened to turn White into the Navy if he did not get his baby when born. (He admits that he had consulted naval legal authorities as to his rights against White for taking his wife.) He did not leave the next day, but continued to call at the apartment in White’s absence. On March 12th, the day of the shooting, according to Goldie, defendant for the first time in San Francisco asked her to leave her husband. Defendant brought with him from Norfolk his service revolver, .45 caliber, at the request, he contends, of his sister. A letter was received in evidence, wMch she testified she wrote to defendant on February 12, 1946. In it she requested defendant to bring his gun as someone had tried to break into her house. However, defendant did not give her the gun. On the morning of March 12th, he left the sister’s home in Alameda, carrying the unloaded gun and eight cartridges in a sack.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 P.2d 632, 82 Cal. App. 2d 23, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-coston-calctapp-1947.