People v. Dye

16 P. 537, 75 Cal. 108, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 487
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1888
DocketNo. 20352
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 16 P. 537 (People v. Dye) 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. Dye, 16 P. 537, 75 Cal. 108, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 487 (Cal. 1888).

Opinions

Hayne, C.

The defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree, for the killing of one Herman Haines, and was sentenced to sixteen years in the state prison.

The shooting occurred in the store of one Cohen, in the town of Santa Paula. The evidence tends to show that the two men met in the store, and that Haines bid the defendant “Good morning” as he passed him, whereupon the defendant exclaimed: “You dirty scoundrel, how dare you speak to me?” and taking him by the throat, slapped his face several times. Cohen, the storekeeper, then threw his arms around the defendant and held him, doubtless with a view to put an end to the struggle. Haines then ran to the corner of the store, [109]*109where he had left his rifle on entering the place, and took it up. In the mean time the defendant had got loose from Cohen, and dodging behind the counter, approached Haines in a stooping posture. The evidence tends to show that Haines had got hold of his rifle, and was pointing or endeavoring to point it at the defendant as the latter approached him. The defendant, before reaching Haines, but when quite close to him, fired two shots with his revolver, and on reaching him, took the rifle from him, or knocked it out of his grasp. Haines then ran into the street. The defendant followed and fired a shot as Haines was running away. The defendant’s version of the affair differs somewhat from the foregoing. He says that Haines jostled him in passing, and that he did not fire when Haines ran away.

Three wounds were found upon Haines,—one in tne shoulder, one in the abdomen, and one in the thigh. According to a physician, either of the two former were sufficient to cause death, but the wound in the thigh was not dangerous. There is some' evidence to the effect that the wound in the shoulder was from the first shot, but there is nothing to show the order of the other wounds. Haines died in three or four days after being shot.

The defense was, that the shooting was necessary for the defendant’s protection. He gave evidence tending to show that Haines had threatened to kill him, and that he had been informed of such threats, and introduced evidence tending to show the following facts:—

Haines and his son, a boy about sixteen years old, were in defendant’s employ upon a ranch which he was managing. One day, a short while before the shooting, he intercepted a letter from Haines to his (defendant’s) wife. This letter was as follows: “Mrs. Dye: Meet me at the barn to-night, or I will tell Joe about that medicine. Answer. H. Haines.” Underneath this, on the same paper, was written: “I return your insult, and I say to [110]*110you for the last time, never come upon this ranch or speak to me again. G. L. Dye. August 19, 1886."

This letter was brought to Mrs. Dye by Haines’s son. On taking it from the boy the defendant gave him a whipping, and the next day paid off and discharged both him and his father, and wrote to Haines never to speak to him again.

This evidence, as a matter of course, was not admissible to justify the taking of Haines’s life. But it was admissible in connection with Haines’s threats, for the purpose of showing that the threats were not mere idle vaporings, but came from a man who had, or thought he had, a grievance, and were therefore to be heeded.

During his testimony as to the above matters, the defendant stated that after the affair of the letter, his wife left the ranch to visit her mother in San Francisco. This seems to us to have been an irrelevant circumstance. We cannot see what the movements of Mrs. Dye, after the difficulty as to the letter, had to do with the defense made. When she came on the stand, and had testified concerning the affair of the letter, the prosecution drew from her on cross-examination the information that she had not gone to visit her mother in San Francisco, but had gone to Los Angeles, and went on to cross-examine her, against the objections of the defense, as to her movements there,—eliciting the statements that she staid at Stone’s lodging-house, and that on one occasion she had gone to Congress Hall saloon to see the proprietor, one Baker, and had seen one Crow there. She was also cross-examined as to whether her husband had sent her to see Crow, but she denied that he had.

After this cross-examination the defendant introduced evidence tending to show that at the time of the affair of the Haines letter he discovered that his wife had had improper relations with the Crow mentioned in the cross-examination above referred to, and that a correspondence had been kept up between them through the [111]*111medium of Haines, the letters to her coming under cover to Haines, who thought “ it was rather dangerous business, but he would do it anyhow.”

We hardly see why the defense should have wanted these facts in evidence. But they were admissible on behalf of the defendant, upon the same principle that the Haines letter was admissible; viz., in connection with the threats of Haines, and to show that there was a grievance between the two men, and that the threats were in earnest, and therefore to be heeded.

The defendant went on to introduce a letter from his wife to Crow, written about three days after the Haines letter affair, in which she stated that she was in trouble, and asked him to send her fifty dollars by registered letter, under cover to Haines.

The prosecution then drew out on cross-examination that at the Congress Hall saloon interview she demanded one thousand dollars from Crow. Hot getting that, she demanded three hundred dollars. She got forty dollars or fifty dollars. In this connection she testified, My husband and I had separated at that time.” She denied that the defendant had told her to make the demand upon Crow, or to go to see Baker.

In rebuttal the prosecution' was allowed, against the objection of the defendant, to go into the Congress Hall saloon interview, and to prove that Mrs. Dye there stated that the defendant had sent her there for the purpose of getting money out of Grow, and that when she got some money she wrote to the defendant to “ drop everything; there is no occasion for to make any further trouble.”

. We have been thus particular in stating the proceedings in order that it may be seen how far away the court traveled from the issue it was trying; viz., whether the killing of Haines wa's justifiable. Mrs. Dye’s attempt to get money out of Crow had nothing to do with this issue. The fact that the evidence in rebuttal tended to contradict some of the things she said on cross-examination

[112]*112did not make it proper to extend, the investigation, as was done here. A party cannot cross-examine his adversary’s witness upon irrelevant matters, for the purpose of eliciting something to be contradicted. And if such matters are drawn out, the court should stop the inquiry there. It is well settled that a witness cannot be impeached by contradicting him upon collateral matters. (People v. Webb, 70 Cal. 120; People v. Furtado, 57 Cal. 346; People v. Devine, 44 Cal. 458.) Nor does it make any difference that the subject of the relations of Crow with defendant’s wife was commenced by the defense. The defendant’s evidence on this point stopped far short of the testimony complained of. And conceding a great part of it to have been irrelevant, it furnished no justification for the course taken by the prosecution.

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Bluebook (online)
16 P. 537, 75 Cal. 108, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-dye-cal-1888.