People v. Donlan

67 P. 761, 135 Cal. 489, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 832
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1902
DocketCrim. No. 758.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 67 P. 761 (People v. Donlan) 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. Donlan, 67 P. 761, 135 Cal. 489, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 832 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, J.

Defendant was informed against by the district attorney of the county of Tulare for the crime of murder. He was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree. A motion for a new trial was made on the part of the defendant and denied by the court, and defendant was sentenced to be hanged. From-the judgment and order overruling said motion defendant prosecutes this appeal.

1. On behalf of appellant, errors are assigned in the admission of certain testimony by the trial court.

It appears from the evidence that the defendant, about the first of the year 1891, induced the deceased to leave her home in San Francisco and take up her abode with him in a house of prostitution in said city. In about four weeks, the mother of the deceased, having learned where her daughter was living, visited the place and demanded of the defendant that he marry the deceased. The defendant consented to this, and procured a marriage license, and subsequently the daughter told her mother that she had been married to the defendant. This statement, however, it appears was not true. During the time between the date when the deceased first went to live with the defendant and the day of the homicide, they lived together in houses of prostitution in various parts of the state, but the deceased at several different times returned and lived with her mother for considerable periods, at which times it appears that she lived respectably. Finally, in June, 1900, the defendant, the deceased, her mother and stepfather, and her half-brother, moved to the Kuhn ranch, in Tulare County, where they were all employed picking fruit, and where the defendant killed the deceased on the 18th of June, by shooting her. For several days prior to the homicide defendant had’ endeavored to induce the deceased to leave her family and go away with him again, which she had refused to do. The defense was based upon the alleged insanity of the defendant at the time of the homicide.

During the examination of Mrs. Obregon, the mother of *491 the deceased, and after stating in her testimony that Donlan had told her he was going to Sacramento, she was asked: “Q. What did he tell you about that?” And the witness answered, after the objection thereto had been overruled: “Why, he told me that he went to Sacramento, and went to Oroville, and that they were chased out of Oroville.—Q. Did he tell you why?” The objection to which question being also overruled, the witness answered: “Because they wouldn’t allow no man up there with a woman. Then he said they did n’t allow no man up there that was living with a woman that was taking care of a man, and that the people of Oroville would n’t allow it where a woman was taking care of a man.” Frank C. Shepherd, son of the preceding witness, and brother of the deceased, was asked to describe the kind of house in which the deceased and the defendant were living, and answered, after the objection to the question had been overruled: “Well, it was a house of prostitution.” He was told to state the conversation he overheard between the deceased and the defendant, and after objection thereto had been overruled answered: “Well, after supper Mr. Donlan gave me ten cents and told me to go to the theater that night, and if the show was out before half-past eleven, to stay out—to stay out until after that time, then I could come home.” Also, with reference to a certain conversation between defendant and deceased at the same time and in the same house, and after objection being overruled to a question to give the conversation, he stated: “She says to him—first he was mumbling to her about something I couldn’t understand. Then I heard her say: ‘Well, I have done as much as I could to-day; the cops are after us girls. ’ ”• And again he was asked what time of the day she would get up, objection to which question being overruled, he said: “At one or half-past one in the afternoon.” He likewise said: “Well, I have known her to be a prostitute.—Q. And Mr. Donlan was living with her at that time, was he not?—A. At different times—yes; not all the time he wasn’t.”

It is claimed on the part of appellant that this testimony was irrelevant and had a tendency to prejudice the minds of the jury. If the evidence tended to establish the facts constituting the offense charged in the information—that is, that the acts of the defendant were the acts of a debased *492 and murderously inclined person, instead of those of a madman or one insane—it was right and the duty of the people’s attorney to offer such evidence, and the court did not err in admitting it. The purpose was not to prejudice the minds of the jury, hut rather to convince them of the truth of the acts charged. The evidence tended to show a motive for the homicide, and that the acts of defendant were inspired by hatred and revenge, and were not those of an insane'person. The evidence, therefore, was relevant, and tended to show that defendant was sane at the time of the commission of the offense charged. As said in People v. Lee Fook, 85 Cal. 301, “It was proper for the court to allow such testimony to go to the jury on the trial, with a view to enable them to determine whether the defendant was insane at the time of the commission of the offense.”

2. Certain instructions were given to the jury by the court which are assigned as error. The portion of one of the instructions to which objection is taken reads as follows: ‘ ‘ The defense of insanity is one which may be, and sometimes is, resorted to in cases where the proof of the overt act is so full and complete that any other means of avoiding conviction and escaping punishment seems hopeless. While, therefore, this is a defense to be weighed fully and justly, and, when satisfactorily established, must recommend itself to the favorable consideration of the humanity and justice of the jury, they are to examine it with care, lest an ingenious counterfeit of such mental disorder should furnish protection to guilt.” This court has sustained instructions substantially the same as the foregoing. In People v. Larrabee, 115 Cal. 159, the instruction complained of read as follows: “The defense of insanity is one which may be, and sometimes is, resorted to in cases in which the proof of the overt act is so full and complete that any other means of avoiding conviction and escaping punishment seems hopeless. While, therefore, this is a defense to be weighed fully, fairly and justly, and, when satisfactorily established, must commend itself to the sense of humanity and justice of the jury, they must examine it with care, lest a mere counterfeit of this mental infirmity shall furnish immunity to guilt.”

In that case it is said by'the court: “This is in all essentials identical with the instruction approved in People v. *493 Pico, 62 Cal. 50. In People v. Dennis, 39 Cal. 625, and in People v. Bumberger, 45 Cal. 650, it was held to be proper for the trial court to instruct the jury to view the evidence upon the defense of insanity with care, lest feigned insanity might shield a defendant from the just consequences of his guilt.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 P. 761, 135 Cal. 489, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-donlan-cal-1902.