People v. Darrow

298 P. 1, 212 Cal. 167, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 615
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1931
DocketDocket No. Crim. 3383.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 298 P. 1 (People v. Darrow) 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. Darrow, 298 P. 1, 212 Cal. 167, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 615 (Cal. 1931).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

Appellant was accused by an indictment returned against him by the grand jury of the county of Los Angeles of the crime of murder, alleged to have been committed on July 23, 1929. The person alleged to have been murdered was Jenny Rose Peterson, a married woman living separate from her husband, and of the age of twenty-three years, and the mother of two children, aged three and five, respectively. Death ensued as the result of an unlawful attempt to commit an abortion. The jury returned a verdict of murder of the second degree. The appeal was taken upon several grounds, to wit, errors in the rulings of the court on objections to the admission of evidence; errors in giving and refusing instructions to the jury; insufficiency of the evidence as to the cause of death; insufficient corroboration' of the testimony of the alleged accomplice; error in refusing to consider on its merits appellant’s application for probation.

The appeal was originally taken to the District Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division One, and an order of transfer of said case to this court was made upon the application of the attorney-general, after decision by said Court of Appeal, reversing the judgment of conviction. Said District Court of Appeal, in its review of the case, quite properly held that the testimony of the alleged accomplice, Henry Smith, aged twenty years, who assumed responsibility for the pregnancy of said Jenny Rose Peterson, was not only corroborated by other evidence and circumstances showing the commission of said offense, but, separate and apart from the testimony of said alleged accomplice, the evidence in its legal effect was sufficient to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense. We are also in accord with that portion of the decision of the District Court of Appeal which holds that the trial court properly refused to instruct the jury that Smith was an accomplice as a matter of law, but, instead, left the jury free to determine that question “as the evidence did not conclusively establish the relation of Smith to the defendant as that of an accomplice’’.

*170 The grounds upon which the reversal of the judgment were placed by the District Court of Appeal and which are defended by the appellant upon resisting the application for a transfer of the cause are, first, that prejudicial error as to the intoxicated condition of appellant was committed by the trial court in admitting the testimony of several witnesses who saw and conversed with the defendant at fixed periods, beginning with the time the deceased was found to be in a dying condition upon the operating chair and continuing several hours thereafter; second, by admitting testimony showing the amount of money appellant had upon his person after he had denied to the officers that he had any' other than some pocket change, and his subsequent attempt to account for the possession of $55 in currency, found upon his person, from sources other than moneys paid to him by Smith as a part of his fee for the services which he was to render; third, improper and prejudicial cross-examinatian of a practical nurse who at times was about the premises, but who seemed to take a small part in ministering to the deceased during the several days she was at appellant’s quarters and under his care. The specific questions asked and answered, among others on the same subject which appear to render the question and answer specially singled out as important, by reason of the uncertainty and ambiguity as to what thought the witness intended to impart, by her answers — if it may be correctly held to constitute error to test the credulity or good faith of a witness in the circumstances shown to exist, by the method here adopted— is best illustrated by reproducing (omitting the objections) the situation, as presented by the record:

"Q. During the time the defendant Darrow had this girl on the stand, as a nurse, did you form any conclusion as to what he was doing? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you at that time, form the opinion that he was about to commit an abortion upon that girl? A. No, sir; I knew" he was making a thorough examination of her. Q. You did not suspect the case was an abortion case? A. I might have suspected it, yes, sir. Q. As a matter of fact, you did suspect it, did you, not? A. Yes, sir. Q. You knew it was an abortion case?. A. No, I .did not know it to be positive, no. Q. But you suspected so? A. Yes. Q. You thought at that time that Dr. Darrow was about to perform an abortion upon that. *171 girl, did you not? A. No, I did not know that he was at all. He was making an examination. I might have suspected it in my own mind. Q. You did suspect it, did you not? A. Yes, I suspected that he was examining her for pregnancy. Q. I am asking you if you did not suspect at that time that Dr. Darrow was about to commit an abortion? A. No, I didn’t suspect that he was about to commit an abortion. I suspected she was pregnant. That is what I expected.”

The witness’ attention was called to her testimony, given at the coroner’s inquest, in which she again stated that she did not know that Smith and the deceased had come for the purpose of having an abortion performed, but that she may have suspicioned it.

With the foregoing statement of the main grounds of the reversal, we will briefly state the facts of the case and the result of the autopsy as related by the sole physician called in the ease (except the defendant) and whose testimony stands absolutely unimpeached. In fact, the testimony of Smith is corroborated in many important particulars by the defendant and much incriminating testimony against the defendant was received in the case. As to statements made by him to persons who early arrived at his office at Azusa, after the death of Jenny Bose Peterson, they were neither admitted nor denied by him, upon being called to his attention.

The deceased, whom all the evidence, including the autopsy examination, showed to be in good health, had been an employee, as a packer of soap, of the Los Angeles Soap Company, for a period of eight years. There she met Henry Smith, also an employee. Both were residents of the city of Los Angeles. Their association resulted in a visit to Dr. Darrow’s office at Azusa, on Thursday evening, July 18, 1929. Smith’s testimony- is to the effect that their visit was made upon the insistence of the deceased, who was much disturbed as to her prospective motherhood. It would seem that the defendant, according to his testimony, had some time prior theretofore met deceased and treated her for what he claimed to be an incipient lung trouble.. It was his claim that he was specializing in pulmonary tuberculosis. There is no dispute as to the number of times or the duration of the deceased’s visits to Dr. Darrow’s offices, which *172 were located in his residence at Azusa, in company with Smith. The first visit was made Thursday evening at about 8 o’clock, July 18, 1929. Smith testified that the deceased, had previously told him she was pregnant and said she was going to Azusa to have an operation performed. He said he tried to dissuade her from her purpose and made a proposition to take her to another state and eventually marry her, but she had decided to have the operation performed. It seems that in the latter part of June or the forepart of July, 1929, Smith, on one or two occasions, paid for drugs such as ergot and cottonwood bark, and for articles which were taken and used by the deceased without effect. At the first visit, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
298 P. 1, 212 Cal. 167, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-darrow-cal-1931.