People v. Cramley

138 P. 123, 23 Cal. App. 340, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 375
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 25, 1913
DocketCrim. No. 298.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 138 P. 123 (People v. Cramley) 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. Cramley, 138 P. 123, 23 Cal. App. 340, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 375 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Defendant was charged with having, on the twenty-third day of November, 1912, killed and murdered one Joseph W. Pear. Upon trial being had he was found guilty of the crime of manslaughter. Thereafter a motion for a new trial was made and denied, and judgment followed. This appeal was then taken from the order denying the motion for a new trial and from the judgment.

On the day of the alleged homicide deceased was visiting at the house of one Nellie Greaney at Pasadena. Mrs. Greaney occupied apartments consisting of three rooms. The wife of deceased, during the absence of her husband, had resided with Mrs. Greaney, but at the time Pear met his death his wife had gone to the county of San Bernardino. It may be gathered from the evidence that Pear had left Pasadena sometime before the twenty-third day of November, intending to go to Arizona, but had turned back after reaching Johannesburg. He did not find his wife at home when he returned, but called upon and conversed with Nellie Greaney, being well acquainted with that person. The defendant was also an acquaintance of both Nellie Greaney and Pear. On the evening of November 23d, the defendant and Nellie Greaney came to the apartments about 6 o’clock, and shortly thereafter Pear came in. Nellie Greaney testified that Pear had some whiskey and that *343 they all partook of it, and that Fear seated himself in a chair, while the defendant remained standing. She testified further that she retired into the bath room, which was immediately adjoining the room in which the two men were, in order to take some medicine, and that she remained there for perhaps fifteen minutes. She was very indefinite in her statement as to the approximate time that she remained in the bath room, and also uncertain as to whether she left the door which connected the two rooms open or not. When she did return to the room where she had left the men, defendant was not there, and she observed Fear in the act of falling from his chair and bleeding profusely. It developed that he had been cut in the neck, the instrument used leaving a knife-like wound. The jugular vein had been severed and Fear died within a few minutes without speaking. A brother of defendant, who was employed in a restaurant at Pasadena, testified that defendant on the evening in question entered the restaurant and asked whether the witness had any money. This brother replied that he had one dollar and fifty cents, when defendant said: ‘ ‘ Give it to me, I have cut Fear and am going to beat it.” On cross-examination counsel for defendant endeavored to secure from the witness a qualification of the statement as to what defendant had there said, and was successful to the extent that the witness admitted that defendant might have said that Fear had been cut, without stating that he (defendant) had done the cutting. Defendant did immediately leave Pasadena and went to the home of his father at Chino, where he was arrested on the day following. Nellie Greaney testified also that the men had not quarreled on the evening of the alleged homicide, and that she had heard no sound of struggle in the apartment while she was in the bath room. No knife of any kind was found upon or about the deceased’s body. Police officers who came to the scene immediately upon being notified of the tragedy, found no weapons about the place, although some search was made. At a subsequent time a large revolver was found under a settee, of a kind like one which Nellie Greaney testified the deceased had carried. A great many empty bottles were found standing about the place, indicating that the inmates were in the habit of partaking fréely of liquor. In one of the pockets of deceased’s clothing was found a bottle of whiskey and in another *344 pocket a bottle of wine. Nellie Greaney gave testimony to the effect that deceased was of a melancholy temperament and that he seemed despondent because his wife had gone away. Briefly, this statement embraces the material testimony as to the facts upon which the jury founded its verdict, and it must be said that the evidence was sufficient to sustain the conviction, both as showing that a crime had been committed and that defendant was the perpetrator thereof.

A great many alleged errors occurring during the course of the trial are assigned as grounds for a reversal of the order and judgment. Among other instructions the trial judge gave the following: “If, by the evidence adduced in a criminal action, there is raised in the minds of the jury, upon any hypothesis reasonably consistent with the evidence, a reasonable doubt as to any fact necessary to a conviction, that doubt must be resolved in. favor of the defendant.” It is complained that this instruction was incomplete in that it did not set out or specify what facts were necessary to warrant a conviction. The charge as contained in the information was read to the jury in other instructions given by the court, and the jury was told that every material allegation contained in the information was required to be established by the proof beyond a reasonable doubt, before a verdict of guilty could be rendered. Considering these instructions in connection with the instruction to which criticism is pointed, no error appears.

The alleged error arising upon the failure of the court to give the instruction offered by defendant to the effect that “the presumption of innocence is one to which the law is partial,” and “that where conflicting presumptions supervene, the presumption of innocence must be deemed superior,” must be construed in a similar light. The offered instructioh was taken from a standard text-book and no fault can be found with the statement of the law therein contained, but the instruction as offered was lengthy and considered in its entire substance was argumentative, and might well have been refused on that ground. But the court very fairly and fully covered the matters sought to be impressed upon the jury by instructing in positive terms that the presumption of innocence must be overcome by the prosecution to the extent that all material facts should be established to the satisfaction of the jury and beyond a reasonable doubt. Further, the evi *345 dence disclosed no situation where there would arise a conflict of presumptions, and hence it was not important to defendant’s rights to point out that the presumption of innocence would override those of lesser degree.

The proposition that the jury should he satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt and to a moral certainty that the death of Fear was not “occasioned by natural causes, by accident, nor by the act of deceased himself, ’ ’ as set forth in an instruction offered by defendant and refused, was fully and carefully covered by the instruction of the trial judge, No. XVII. Because the court may employ different language in its instructions from that which defendant may desire shall be used in presenting the same matter to the jury, is not good ground for objection, and the complaint here rests upon no other ground.

The court of its own motion read to the jury certain instructions defining the crime of manslaughter. This course appellant asserts constituted prejudicial error. The decision of the case of People v. Huntington, 138 Cal. 261, [70 Pac. 284], is cited in support of that contention. The facts of the case of People v. Huntington, were very different in character from those presented here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 P. 123, 23 Cal. App. 340, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cramley-calctapp-1913.