People v. Dye

6 P.2d 313, 119 Cal. App. 262, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 78
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 17, 1931
DocketDocket No. 2127.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 313 (People v. Dye) 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. Dye, 6 P.2d 313, 119 Cal. App. 262, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 78 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

CONREY, P. J.

By indictment of the grand jury, appellant Lloyd W. Dye and one Gordon E. Gauss were accused of the crime of murder, alleged to have been committed by them in the county of Los. Angeles on the eighteenth day of May, 1930, in that they did at said time and place wilfully, etc., kill and murder one Albert Wade Horton. By verdict of the trial jury Gauss was acquitted and Dye was convicted of murder of the second degree. Defendant Dye appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The first three grounds for reversal, upon which appellant depends, are stated by his counsel as follows:

“One: That an alleged confession of the defendant Dye was erroneously admitted by the court; as the voir dire *264 examination established that it was procured under duress and oppression, and by threats and promises of immunity, made by the arresting officers while defendant was held concealed in solitary confinement, and denied counsel, or the right to communicate with friend or family, and subjected to a most outrageous third degree treatment at the hands of the arresting officers.

“Two: That the evidence admitted by the court over the objection of the defendant Lloyd Dye, was.incompetent, and its admission was prejudicial to the rights of the defendant.

“Three: That the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict. ’ ’

In connection with the points thus presented, appellant suggests that, leaving out of consideration the purported confession, the evidence was wholly circumstantial, and he insists that the whole of the circumstances were of such nature that they did not in any way tend, to show any connection on the part of appellant with the death of said Albert Wade Horton. Preliminary to a consideration of the alleged errors, it will be useful to examine and see whether this last assertion of counsel is supported by the record.

On the night of May 18, 1930, said Albert Horton was found dead on the front porch of his house in Mint canyon. It is established by the evidence that his death was caused by a bullet wound; that the bullet entered through the back and passed through the vital organs, including the heart. There is uncontradicted evidence that it would have been impossible for the wound to be self-inflicted. The autopsy surgeon testified that the wound was made by a bullet of medium size, anywhere from a “32” to a “38”. Thus, it was a proven fact that the man had been killed by someone, and it only remained to identify the killer and to establish the circumstances under which the killing was done.

The deceased Horton was sixty-nine years old and lived on the Mint canyon place with his brother George, who was ninety years old. Apparently, George was the only other person staying in the house at the time of the killing. George died about a month after the eighteenth day of May, 1930, and the record contains, of course, no testimony given by him. It was the theory of the prosecution at the *265 trial that appellant and Gauss, for purposes of robbery, came to the Horton house in the automobile of appellant; that they turned the horses out of the corral, in order to attract the attention of the Hortons; that when Albert Horton came to the door, a struggle took place between him and appellant, in the course of which Horton shot appellant in the abdomen with a pistol which Horton had in his hand, and that then appellant fired with his own pistol the shot which killed Horton.

Careful examination was made of certain tire tracks in the vicinity of the Horton house, from which witnesses acquainted with the subject and who had made special study of identification of tire marks and tires, testified that an automobile which came to the ranch at the time of the murder was running on three Goodyear tires and one Firestone, of a stated size, “29 4/50”. The Firestone was on the right rear wheel. Evidence was produced that in February, 1930, at Long Beach, appellant, under the name of Don Parks, obtained from a dealer in Long Beach a 1927 Pontiac blue roadster with a khaki top; that the car was repossessed “by the finance company” and brought back on May 20th; that the car was later sold, with the same tires, to a purchaser named Blake. The witness Love, a special investigator of tire identification, examined the Blake car and found that- the tire size was 29x4/50. The tire on the right rear wheel was a Firestone. This witness gave it as his opinion that the tire prints at the Horton ranch, as photographed, were of the same type of tire which he found on the Blake car. The agent of the company which repossessed the car found it in an alley at Long Beach, and the car did not then have a top on it. About a week later a manager for the dealer who had sold the car to appellant, saw appellant and asked him where the top was. Appellant told him that he had removed the top and that- it was torn a little on the top. Witnesses who examined the premises at the ranch immediately after the murder, testified that-in following the tracks of the automobile which had been there, they found that it had gone under a tree on which limbs had been broken from the lower branch; that- some of the parts of the broken twigs were right on top of the tire tracks. However, there was evidence concerning the height of the limbs or branches of the tree, and that their *266 nearest point was 5.55 feet from the surface of the ground. Also, there was evidence concerning the height of appellant’s car that the distance to the highest point of the top would he 65% inches.

It appears from the evidence that on the ninteenth day of May, 1930, appellant went to a physician in Long Beach to obtain treatment for a gunshot wound in' the abdomen. At that time appellant claimed that he had been shot by the husband of a woman whom he had been visiting. But the witness Crane, a young woman , friend of appellant, testified to two statements made by appellant to her on that- subject. She said that on May 19th appellant told her he had been shot by the husband of some woman; but also, she said that on the twenty-fifth day of May appellant told her he had been up to Saugus and got shot by a rancher. (Saugus is near Mint canyon, and would not be far from the Horton ranch.) The bullet was not- removed from appellant’s abdomen. The nurse testified that the wound was “about the size of a nickel”.

The evidence shows that the Hortons had in their house, prior to the time of the murder, a revolver (a “Bulldog” 44), which had been given to them by their nephew. This revolver was not found in the house after the murder. In September, 1930, following a clue which had been given by defendant Gauss to officers, this revolver, together with another which had belonged to Gauss, was found buried near a telephone pole near the Horton ranch.

Immediately after the dead body of Horton had been found, officers were sent for, who came and inspected the premises. One of them, Deputy Sheriff Bright, identified exhibit No. 5 as being a bullet which he saw on the porch floor about four inches from the foot of Horton. At the ' same time he found a shell and a pipe; the shell (exhibit No. 45) was a .3'2-caliber Remington. The witness Crossman, a ballistic expert, gave testimony concerning the bullet, exhibit 5, and particularly concerning the kind of gun from which it had been fired.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 313, 119 Cal. App. 262, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-dye-calctapp-1931.