People v. Davis

147 P. 1184, 26 Cal. App. 647, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 187
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 25, 1915
DocketCrim. No. 360.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 147 P. 1184 (People v. Davis) 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. Davis, 147 P. 1184, 26 Cal. App. 647, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 187 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Defendant was convicted of the crime of murder and sentenced to be imprisoned in the state prison for the remainder of Ms natural life. An appeal has been taken from the judgment and from an order denying a motion for *648 a new trial. The person alleged to have been the subject of the homicide was one William G-. Wheeler.

The proof against appellant was wholly that adduced from circumstantial evidence. Deceased was a man between the ages of forty-five and fifty years and was engaged with the appellant, who is an old man over the age of seventy-three years, in conducting, in a small way, a photograph business at the town of Sawtelle in Los Angeles County. It appeared in the evidence that appellant first met the deceased at Long Beach and there the two became very friendly, with the result that they arranged to go to Sawtelle and engage in the business mentioned together. They took up their residence at the latter place some time in November, 1913. So far as the evidence shows, the men continued together amicably up to the time of the death of Wheeler. On the morning of January 1, 1914, at about the hour of 5 o’clock, the small frame building in which the two men lived was discovered to be on fire. At the time the fire was first noticed it had made great progress and the interior of the building was already well burned. The fire was not checked and it shortly reduced the house to ashes, and in the embers thereof was found the charred and burned body of the deceased. The body was then badly mutilated by the fire, both arms and both legs having been burned away. Appellant was not in the building at the time of the fire, but was discovered at the scene about the hour of 10 o ’clock. His demeanor was described by some witnesses' as being “nervous,” and it was discovered that his mustache and eyebrows had been singed as though by fire. When accosted and when an inquiry was made of him as to how it happened that his mustache and eyebrows had been burned, he stated that on the day before, while he and the deceased were preparing their meal, a defective gasoline stove flared up and caused the singeing which had been noticed. He further stated, so the testimony runs, that he had been at Garvanza the night before and had not returned to Sawtelle until after the building had been burned. Testimony was introduced showing that in December, immediately preceding the death of Wheeler, appellant had appeared at the office of a life and accident insurance company and had there requested information as to different kinds of policies which might be issued, and had finally taken away with him an application blank which he later returned. He had stated to *649 the insurance agent that he wished to take out a policy on the life of Wheeler, and asked whether he could be made the beneficiary in the policy. The agent replied to him, so the former testified, stating that no one but close relatives were allowed to become beneficiaries in accident policies, but that it might be made in favor of the insured’s estate. Appellant, about the twenty-fifth day of December of the year mentioned, returned the application blank, a portion of which he had filled in—that portion furnishing details as to the name, age, weight, etc., of Wheeler. The agent completed the application and later issued a policy on the life of Wheeler for the amount of three thousand five hundred dollars, which was forwarded to appellant at Sawtelle. Appellant had stated to this agent that he desired to act as broker in the matter and to receive a commission, which privilege was accorded him. Early in the same month appellant took out a policy of fire insurance on the contents of the building occupied by himself and Wheeler. About ten days after the fire occurred, appellant appeared at the office of the accident insurance company with an attorney for the purpose of endeavoring to collect money on the policy which had been taken out on the life of Wheeler. The agent testified that appellant stated that he had come to collect on the policy; that Wheeler had been burned up in the house at Sawtelle, the policy burning with him. That Davis then said that Wheeler owed him two hundred dollars, but when it was called to his attention that he had stated when the application was made that Wheeler owed him about three thousand dollars, he changed his statement and said, “Yes, that’s right.’’ There was testimony furnished by the operatives of an electric car which left Los Angeles some time between four and five o ’clock on the morning of January 1st, to the effect that a man answering the description of appellant rode from Los Angeles to Sawtelle on that morning, and that the car arrived at the latter place at about ten minutes before five o ’clock. It was shown with reasonable certainty that the fire was in progress at five o’clock, and it was also shown that the operatives of the car were probably mistaken as to the time they arrived at Sawtelle that morning and that in fact the car referred to did not arrive at the place mentioned until a time considerably after the hour of five o ’clock. It was proved without contradiction that defendant had registered at a hotel in Los Angeles *650 on the night of December 31st at about seven or eight o ’clock. No person other than himself gave any testimony as to when appellant left that hotel. He himself testified that he remained there all night and that when he returned on the car to Sawtelle the next morning the house he had occupied had been entirely destroyed by the fire. He testified that a woman remained with him in the hotel that night, but he could neither give her name nor tell where she lived, and did not produce her to corroborate his statements. The jury evidently concluded either that the defendant had killed Wheeler before he left Sawtelle on the afternoon of December 31st, or that he had returned some time during the night and murdered the man and arranged for the fire to burn down the house. It was shown that appellant had purchased five gallons of coal oil shortly before the fire and a like quantity some days prior to that time. This circumstance was but a small one, as it was shown that the men had used both gasoline and oil stoves in their building. To give some point to one of the theories of the prosecution that Wheeler had been struck on the head, a physician who made an examination of the skull of the deceased about two weeks or more after the tragedy had occurred, testified that he found in the posterior portion of the skull about an ounce of colored liquid which he was of the opinion was blood and which he believed had been deposited there through a hemorrhage of one of the blood vessels of the brain. He said, however, that he could not say that the skull had been fractured, but testified that the skull had been so badly burned, especially in the frontal portion thereof, that it crumbled in his hands when he attempted to remove it in the usual way of surgeons. He was asked whether it were not possible that this blood had oozed from the brain during the time it had had an opportunity to decompose, and he stated that that condition was not indicated, because if such had been the ease the blood would not have appeared in one spot only. At the time of his arrest there was found in the possession of appellant two promissory notes; one payable to appellant and apparently signed by the deceased Wheeler for the sum of nine hundred and eighty-eight dollars, and another for the sum of two thousand dollars, to which no signature was attached.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. O'NEAL
38 P.2d 430 (California Court of Appeal, 1934)
People v. Pantages
297 P. 890 (California Supreme Court, 1931)
State v. McKee
128 So. 658 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1930)
State v. Olivieri
236 P. 1100 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 P. 1184, 26 Cal. App. 647, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-davis-calctapp-1915.