People v. Duenas

169 P.2d 987, 74 Cal. App. 2d 846, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1038
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 7, 1946
DocketCrim. 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 P.2d 987 (People v. Duenas) 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. Duenas, 169 P.2d 987, 74 Cal. App. 2d 846, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1038 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The defendants were jointly charged and tried by a jury for the crime of murder. They were represented by separate counsel. A verdict of manslaughter was rendered against each. The defendant, Carlos Topete *848 Dueñas, moved for a new trial, which was denied. The co-defendant, Cuevas, has not appealed. Prom the judgment and order denying a new trial this appeal was perfected by the defendant Carlos Topete Dueñas.

It is contended that the verdict and judgment are not supported by the evidence; that the prosecution failed to prove the corpus delicti, and that the court erred in refusing to give to the jury two instructions regarding the proof which is necessary to convict an accused person as an accessory to a crime.

The defendants were friends. They lived in Sacramento. The appellant was unmarried. The wife and family of the eodefendant, Cuevas, live in Mexico. At about 9 or 10 o’clock on the night of July 16, 1945, the defendants went together to the Nordeste Club on N Street in Sacramento, where they ate a meal. At 11:30 o’clock that night, Rosendo Meza and his wife, Irene, who live at Vina, eighteen miles from Chico, arrived at the club.

They went there with the deceased, Edwin Chabez, and a woman by the name of Jane, with whom he was living. They were seated at the bar. Mrs. Meza is a niece of Jane. The defendants were first seated at a table in the same room. They went to the bar and ordered beer to drink. There is a conflict of evidence regarding the identity of the defendant who offended Jane by pouring some beer upon her, but she testified that the appellant, Carlos Dueñas, whom she identified as “the man in the blue shirt,” offered her a drink, which she refused, and that he then poured the beer on her leg. That incident started a quarrel between the men of the respective parties. Mr. Nordeste, the proprietor of the club, stopped the argument by saying to the defendants, “You better leave, you have to go.” The defendants then left the club and crossed the street, remaining on the sidewalk on the opposite side of the street beyond a parked car, for several minutes, until Mr. Meza, Edwin Chabez, the deceased, and the women emerged from the building. Regarding the affray which then followed, there is a serious conflict of evidence, even between the defendants themselves.

Regarding the actual affray, Rosendo Meza testified to the spilling of beer on the person of Jane Chabez, the quarrel which resulted therefrom, and the departure of the defendants at the request of the proprietor. Mr. Meza then said “They [the defendants] went across the street and they waited there for us to come out”; that “we stayed there about a half an *849 hour more and it was 12:00 o’clock. We came out together, . . . Eduardo Chabez, Jane, Irene and myself.” The witness said they were walking on Third Street toward Capitol Avenue, when the defendants came toward them, cursing them and demanding that they “come out and fight.” He said that Chabez then “gathered a piece of stick that was near a fence and he went to the middle of the street”; that both of the defendants were then in the middle of the street, and that the “taller man had ... a piece of stick; a broom handle or something.” He then testified that the appellant, Dueñas, who was identified by the witness in the courtroom, struck Chabez [with] a knife, and that the deceased fell and was lying on the street, and that “He ran, that man.” On cross-examination the witness was asked “Did you or did you not see Dueñas have a knife in his hands that night?” to which he replied “Yes, I did see it.” The witness then picked up the wounded man and assisted him to walk toward the sidewalk. He said Chabez was unable to walk and that he “then sat down on the street.” The witness said “I saw his pants full of blood and he asked me to call a car because he was-already cut.” A cab was called and Chabez was taken to the hospital, and died the following day, as the result of that wound.

Doctor John Kassis testified that he performed an autopsy on the body of the deceased and that he died as the result of a wound near the left groin which severed the femoral artery. He said “it was about a half inch cut . . . three inches deep.” He said that the artery was cut and that the deceased bled to death from that wound.

Jane Chabez corroborated much of the material testimony of the witness, Rosendo Meza. Irene Meza testified that both defendants “were together” in the street at the time of the affray; that she saw “this man Dueñas . . . bending over Edward;’’ that “the short guy . . . had a knife in his hand. ’’ She admitted that she did not see the fatal blow struck but said, “when I followed him up ... he had a knife in his hand.” She said that both defendants came across the street toward them when they came out of the club; that she saw “both these men close to him [the deceased] . . . they were very close to him,” and that the shorter man (Dueñas) had a knife in his hand. She also testified that after Chabez fell down, both defendants “ran . . . around the corner toward Fourth on N. ”

*850 The codefendant, Cuevas, contradicted the appellant’s claim that he was not present during the affray but stood sixty paces or more away. Cuevas testified that after they left the club and crossed the street they remained on the sidewalk a few minutes and that Dueñas asked him to return with him to the building so that he could pay for the drink which he had ordered; that they then crossed the street together; that they did not then enter the building, but the deceased and his party soon came out, and Chabez armed himself with a club. The witness admitted that he also picked up a stick. The witness testified that when they saw the people coming out of the saloon, Carlos Dueñas “crossed the street first and followed them”; that the deceased had the stick in his hand, and when he stepped off the sidewalk he hit Dueñas, breaking the stick. He said that Chabez then “fell down and rolled over to the middle of the street.” The witness denied that either he or Dueñas had a knife or that they used one in that affray. He did testify that Chabez was armed with a knife. He said that after the incident “Dueñas told me, ‘Come on, let’s go, because I have stuclc him,/ and then we walked together on the street and turned the corner and went away.” The defendants then went to a restaurant and ate another meal together. They were subsequently arrested and jointly tried for the crime of murder. Bach was convicted of manslaughter.

The corpus delicti was sufficiently established. The elements necessary to be proved in a homicide case to establish the corpus delicti are merely to identify the body of the deceased, and to show that he was killed by means of an unlawful agency. (People v. Spencer, 58 Cal.App. 197, 221 [208 P. 380]; People v. Cornett, 61 Cal.App.2d 98, 105 [141 P.2d 916]; 13 Cal.Jur. § 68, p. 676.) In the present case, the physician who performed the autopsy testified that Chabez died as the result of bleeding to death from an artery which was cut by a sharp instrument; that the wound was near the groin and it was half an inch wide and three inches deep. That wound indicated that it was inflicted by a knife.

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268 P.2d 745 (California Court of Appeal, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
169 P.2d 987, 74 Cal. App. 2d 846, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-duenas-calctapp-1946.