People v. Crimmin
This text of 206 P. 1013 (People v. Crimmin) 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.
Opinion
The defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction of the crime of manslaughter and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.
At about 11:30 A. M. March 18, 1921, the defendant was arrested for drunkenness at Stockton and placed in the “drunk cell” of the county jail with other intoxicated men. At 4:10 P. M. the jailer entered the cell to give the prisoners their meals and found them all asleep. He called them two or three times, but did not succeed in awakening them. At 10:15 that evening one of the prisoners was found dead upon the cell floor, the skull fractured in several places, some of the bones of the face broken, the neck bruised and dislocated, and with blood on the face and hair. The defendant at that time was lying in his bunk. His° shoes and pants were bloody. The officer said to him: “That man is dead. Did you do it?” The defendant replied: “I guess I will be tried for murder.” One of the witnesses testified that between 8 and 9 o’clock the next morning the defendant said: “I have been drinking very heavy. ... I have been drinking alcohol.” On being asked if he hit the deceased the defendant said: “Yes, I hit him; he annoyed me in my cell, pulling my clothes, and I think I knocked him down. ... I went back and went to bed, and he came after me again. ... I got up and hit him again.” When asked if he kicked the deceased and why, the defendant replied: “I think so. ... I think he called me a son-of-a-bitch. ” Another witness gave substantially the same testimony and stated that the defendant said: “Well, it seems like a dream. ... I guess I got the delirium tremens.”
At the trial the defendant testified that for ten days prior to the homicide he had been “drinking denatured alcohol, lemon extract, Jamaica ginger and wintergreen”; that the night of the homicide he heard voices calling bim vile names and threatening to kill him; that he saw a horse which was singing a song called “Casey Jones”; that he saw a cat dancing a jig; that he noticed hands and rats and swarms of red ants; and he related other things which *204 he imagined he saw and experienced. Basing their answers on defendant’s testimony, several physicians testified that in their opinion he was insane at the time of the homicide. Prom October, 1914, to May, 1915, the defendant was confined in the state hospital at Stockton for insanity produced by intoxication. In 1917 he was in the Merced County hospital a month for alcoholism.
The defendant proposed the following instruction and the court gave it as modified by striking out the part inclosed in parentheses:
“It is true that under the laws of this state no act committed by a person while in a state of voluntary intoxication is less criminal by reason of his having been in such condition, yet there is a distinction to be made between a state of intoxication and a condition of mind following *205 such state of intoxication. If at the time of the commission of the alleged homicide the defendant was actually intoxicated such state of intoxication would not justify or excuse him in the commission of the homicide. But if, on the other hand, the state of acute intoxication had ceased and another condition of mind had taken its place and such condition of mind rendered him insane and irresponsible for his acts and conduct then he cannot be held accountable for such acts and conduct. (The question to be determined is whether or not he was intoxicated or insane and if you find that he was insane it matters not how such insanity was produced. Insanity produced by intoxication is just as much insanity as insanity produced by any other cause.) ”
The modification was manifestly proper. The part stricken out is subject to the objection discussed in People v. Fellows, 122 Cal. 233, 239 [54 Pac. 830]. The part stricken out would naturally tend to confuse the jurors and lead them to believe that insanity, or mental derangement, immediately produced by voluntary intoxication and which disappears on the return to soberness, is a defense to a criminal charge. If by the part stricken out it was intended to refer to the insanity mentioned in the preceding sentence, then it states no principle of law not embraced within the instruction as given.
At the request of defendant the court gave an instruction on the subject of temporary insanity which appellant contends is in conflict with that first herein considered. Having held that the first instruction is applicable to the facts and appellant having conceded that it correctly states the law, he cannot complain of any inconsistency between it and an instruction which he himself proposed.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Burnett, J., and Hart, J., concurred.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
206 P. 1013, 57 Cal. App. 202, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-crimmin-calctapp-1922.