People v. Deatrick

159 P. 175, 30 Cal. App. 507, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 140
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 1916
DocketCrim. No. 470.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 159 P. 175 (People v. Deatrick) 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. Deatrick, 159 P. 175, 30 Cal. App. 507, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 140 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Defendant was convicted of the crime of rape, and sentenced by the trial court to serve a term of twenty-five years’ imprisonment at San Quentin. ' The appeal is from the judgment, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial.

The act which was denounced by the information as making out the crime charged was alleged to have been accomplished with one Amy Deatrick, the adopted daughter of the defendant. It is alleged in the information that the .child was of the age of fourteen years. It appears that the girl was brought into the family of the defendant by adoption when she was about the age of five years. The family lived at various places during the years succeeding the adoption of the child, and finally took up their residence at Belleflower in Los Angeles County, where the defendant engaged in the busi *509 ness of raising poultry. The house in which they lived was a small building divided into three rooms. The household then consisted of defendant, the adopted child, and the defendant’s wife. The child was sent to school, and was also provided with musical instruction by the defendant. The defendant hired a young man named Pay Detrick, who was not related to him in any way, although bearing a similar name. This young man occupied one of the rooms in the little house. In another of the rooms were two beds, in one of which defendant’s wife and the little girl habitually slept, and the other, which was a single bed, the defendant used. After Pay Detrick had been in the house for about a month, or a little over, a dispute arose between the husband and wife which finally resulted in the wife leaving and going to the city of Los Angeles. The adopted daughter accompanied her, and neither of them afterward returned to the defendant’s place. It was some time before the defendant learned the whereabouts of his wife and the girl, and before he had been able to see them he was arrested on the charge made by the information in this case. The theory upon which counsel for the defense presented their case was that this defendant was wholly innocent of the crime charged, and that his prosecution was brought about by his wife and the girl, through a spirit of revenge, and for the purpose of protecting Pay Detrick, with whom both Mrs. Deatrick and the girl Amy had sustained illicit relations. It was sufficiently shown by the admissions of Pay Detrick on the witness-stand that he had had sexual intercourse with Amy Deatrick, while he was working for the defendant at the Belle-flower place. It was also shown that after Mrs. Deatrick and the girl came to the city of Los Angeles, Pay Detrick had visited them at their apartments, and had upon three occasions stayed at the apartments all night. However, the young girl' gave testimony at the trial and directly charged that the defendant, not only on the day fixed in the information, but on a number of prior occasions, had sustained intimate relations with her. She said that she objected to these relations, but that they were insisted upon by the defendant. She did not deny having occupied the same bed with Pay Detrick while the latter was working for the defendant, but she claimed that this was with the permission and at the suggestion of the defendant himself. Mrs. Deatrick, who, after she left her husband, set up the claim that she had never been married to him, *510 was not called as a witness, and did not testify in the case. It was shown, in order to illustrate the erotic tendency of the defendant’s mind, that he had made an improper proposal on one occasion to a young school friend of his daughter, while she was visiting at his house. It was further' shown hy the father of Fay Detrick that after the wife and girl had left defendant’s house, defendant went to the home of Fay Detrick’s parents and a conversation was there had in the presence of Fay Detrick. The witness in detailing the conversation made the fóllowing statement: “ ‘Well,’ Fay says, that ‘Mr. Bush was to tell you where you could find your wife.’ ‘Well,’ he says, [meaning defendant], ‘I seen Mr. Bush and he won’t tell me.’ ‘Well,’ Fay says, ‘if he won’t tell you, I won’t tell you.’ And he said — now says Fay, he says, ‘If you will tell mé where my wife is and the little girl is,’ he says, ‘I will let bygones be bygones.’ He says, ‘There will never be anything said about this nor nothing doing, ’ and he says, ‘if you do not tell me there will be something done to-morrow.’ ‘Well,’ says Fay, ‘I will take my medicine.’ Mr. Deatriek says, ‘I will take mine,’ and he says, he knew Fay, he says, ‘you know that I had three witnesses outside watch you that night.’ He says, ‘I had three witnesses watching you that night, and I know just what you done,’ and Fay says, ‘I have never done anything worse than you have done.’ He says, ‘Amy has told me all about it.’ So I think that that was just about all that he said to Fay then, only determined to know where he could find his wife — he was going to know that night.” A physician who made a physical examination of the young girl after the charge had been preferred against the defendant, testified that he found her in much the condition of a married woman in his examination of her private organs. This, in brief, was the substance of the testimony introduced on behalf of the prosecution. It was shown in defense that the defendant was a man fifty-six years of age. Two physicians, who had made an examination of him, testified that his private organs were in such a state as to indicate to them that the defendant was impotent, and had no ability to perform an act of sexual intercourse. The defendant testified that he was unable to commit the crime charged, and testified that he did not have the intercourse with the girl as alleged; that he had discovered relations of intimacy between Fay Detrick and his wife, and also between Fay Detrick and Amy Deatriek; that upon mak *511 ing this discovery he upbraided his wife and made a partial threat to have Pay Detrick arrested; that the wife declared to him that if he did cause the arrest of Pay Detrick, the three of them, to wit, Mrs. Deatrick, Fay Detrick, and Amy Deatrick, would shift the charge to the defendant in order to save Pay Detrick from prosecution. There was testimony given by a number of witnesses, evidently reputable citizens of the neighborhood of Belleflower, to the effect that the defendant’s reputation for the trait involved in this charge, and also for honesty and integrity, was good. Under this state of the evidence the case went to the jury and the verdict of guilty was returned. This court on appeal cannot say that the evidence was insufficient to justify the conviction, for there was ample evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury. A number of errors are assigned, many of which go to the matter of the introduction of testimony, and the refusal of the court to allow certain matters to be shown on the part of the defendant.

It is first claimed that the restriction imposed upon counsel for the defendant in their cross-examination of the girl Amy Deatrick, was too close, as to questions asked her designed to extract admissions that there was a conspiracy on the part of Mrs. Deatrick, Pay Detrick, and the witness to send defendant to the penitentiary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 P. 175, 30 Cal. App. 507, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-deatrick-calctapp-1916.