People v. Danielly

202 P.2d 18, 33 Cal. 2d 362, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 200
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1949
DocketCrim. 4812
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 202 P.2d 18 (People v. Danielly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Danielly, 202 P.2d 18, 33 Cal. 2d 362, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 200 (Cal. 1949).

Opinions

SCHAUER, J.

Defendant was charged with the murder of his wife and with assault upon his wife’s friend, Mrs. Elva Sam, with intent to commit murder. To each charge he pleaded not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. Upon trial of the general issue a jury found that he was guilty of each offense and that the murder was of the first degree. The. verdict upon the murder count was silent as to penalty. The issue raised by defendant’s plea of not guilty by reason of insanity was tried before the same jury which had tried the general issue; such jury disagreed and was discharged. Another jury was selected; the issue of defendant’s sanity was retried; and the jury found that defendant was sane at the time of the commission of the offenses. Defendant appeals from the ensuing judgments, which impose, respectively, sentences of the death penalty and imprisonment for the term prescribed by law, and from an order denying defendant a new trial. His principal contention is that the trial court erred to his prejudice in refusing to admit, on the trial of his plea of not guilty, evidence which, he asserts, would have tended to establish that he acted in a “heat of passion” and, hence, to show lack of deliberation and premeditation and malice aforethought, essential elements of the crimes of which he was convicted. As is hereinafter shown, the exclusion of such evidence as was offered and rejected was proper because, although the proof of malice aforethought and deliberation and premeditation was, of course, an essential part of the prosecution’s case, the rejected evidence was not materially relevant to any theory of defense raised upon the trial of the general issue. Its irrelevancy is made particularly apparent by defendant’s own testimony. No claim of prejudicial error is directed at the trial on the plea of not guilty by reason of insanity.

To answer satisfactorily the contentions which-,have been made in this court it is necessary to relate' some,; history of the persons involved and their relationship, and to quote, at a proper place, substantially in full the offers; bf proof which were rejected. Defendant and deceased- -intermarried in January, 1944, and separated in September, 1945. In .Feb[365]*365ruary, 1946, in San Francisco, Mrs. Danielly, who was possessed of substantial separate property, including the building in which she resided, obtained an interlocutory decree of divorce, together with a restraining order requiring Mr. Danielly to remain away from her home. Shortly thereafter, Mrs. Danielly went to New York. In May, 1946, while Mrs. Danielly was in New York, Danielly went to her San Francisco home and, according to the testimony of Miss Leola Palmer, who resided there, “Mr. Danielly asked me did I get any letters from Mrs. Danielly . . . And I said no I didn’t. So he said, ‘Somebody in the house is lying.’ So I say, ‘Why don’t you write to her yourself?’ So he said that he was going to get everybody who were in the divorce case and those that had something to do with taking care of the house, for her to go away.” Miss Palmer testified, further, that upon another occasion (the date does not appear) while she was living in Mrs. Danielly’s home, “Mrs. Danielly and Mr. Danielly were in a fight. So she went upstairs in her mother’s room. So he demanded that she open the door, and he told her that ‘Open the door, I will kill you at your dead mother’s door.’ So Mrs. Danielly say, ‘All right, Danielly.’ He demanded her to go downstairs. She said, ‘All right, Danielly, I will go. ’ Sol don’t know anything else. ’ ’

After the entry of the interlocutory decree and the restraining order, defendant and his wife from time to time discussed the possibility of a reconciliation. There is testimony that four or five days before the date of the crimes (October 13, 1946), they told a mutual friend that they had “made up with each other and [were] going back to live with each other as man and wife,” that they had “decided to try it over again.” According to another witness, however, “They talked about it, hut I don’t think anything was settled ... I know he talked to her about it ... Well, she never did said, ‘Yes,’ that I heard, and she didn’t said ‘ No. ’ ”

Shortly before 6 p. m. on October 12, 1946, defendant returned from his place of work (Letterman Hospital, where he was a dietetic cook) to the house where he roomed. He telephoned Mrs. Danielly and they had a conversation which he described as follows: “How you doing and so forth. I call her every day ... We talked in general as we usually do . . . The exact words I can’t recall.” Then, according to defendant’s testimony, he took a bath and soon after 6 p. m. went to bed and remained there until early (fixed by [366]*366other witnesses as about 1 or 1:30) on the morning of the 13th, when the police awakened him and accused him of the killing of his wife and the wounding of Mrs. Sam.

At about 11 p. m. on the night of the homicide two men, Earl and Harmon, called upon Mrs. Danielly at her home. Mrs. Sam and other guests were present. These men had known Mrs. Danielly in 1942, when the three worked in the same shop, and had not seen her after that time until the night she was killed. At about 12:30 a. m. on October 13, 1946, Mrs. Danielly, Mrs. Sam, Earl and Harmon left Mrs. Danielly’s home to go to a restaurant. As they reached the sidewalk defendant, with a pistol in his hand, came across the street from his parked car. Mrs. Danielly got into Earl’s automobile, which was parked before her home. Defendant pointed the gun at Earl, “shoved him,” and said, “You fellows have gone far enough.” Then, still displaying the gun, defendant walked to Harmon and said, “What are you going to do about it?” Harmon replied, “Nothing. I don’t know what you are talking about.” Earl and Harmon then “ran off to see if we could find police or something.” When Earl and Harmon had run about a block they heard several shots.

After Earl and Harmon “ran off,” defendant closely approached the car in which Mrs. Danielly sat and said, “I told you I was going to do this.” She replied, “Yes.” He shot her through the head; “her head dropped”; he fired three more shots at her. Then he went to the front of the automobile, where Mrs. Sam was standing, and said, “That goes for you too.” He shot Mrs. Sam once and she fell to the sidewalk. He fired two more shots at her. In the words of the witness Hamer, a taxi driver who saw the shooting from a distance of about 50 feet, “Well, this man [identified by other witnesses as defendant] fired the shots [at Mrs. Danielly], After I looked up I heard him say, ‘God damn woman,’ and something else I couldn’t catch, and then he walked around to the sidewalk side of the car and there was a woman [Mrs. Sam] standing there' right beside the car and I heard her say something, it sounded like, ‘Please don’t kill me, I don’t want to die,’ or something like that, and then he shot at her, and she fell down, and he shot twice more at her after she fell down . . . [Defendant then] walked back around the ear . . . He went diagonally across the street to the opposite corner from where I was . . . Then he stopped there . . . and with his gun in his hand he waved to a couple [367]*367of cars to go on . . . He told them to move on. They had stopped, they heard the shooting. Told them to move along . . . Then he turned and walked down Webster Street . . . Towards Bush ... It is over a hill there ... I got back into my cab then and started up and drove slowly down Webster, to see if I could see where he went. But he had already disappeared ... I would say it was about 30 seconds, just long enough for him to get out of sight over the hill.”

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Bluebook (online)
202 P.2d 18, 33 Cal. 2d 362, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-danielly-cal-1949.