People v. Eggers

185 P.2d 1, 30 Cal. 2d 676, 1947 Cal. LEXIS 199
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1947
DocketCrim. 4761
StatusPublished
Cited by168 cases

This text of 185 P.2d 1 (People v. Eggers) 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. Eggers, 185 P.2d 1, 30 Cal. 2d 676, 1947 Cal. LEXIS 199 (Cal. 1947).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

Arthur R. Eggers has been convicted of the crime of murder of the first degree and sentenced to death. The proceedings to be reviewed include not only the trial upon the merits, but also the hearing in regard to the issue presented by his plea of not guilty by reason of insanity and the motion for a new trial.

On the morning of January 2d, the headless, handless torso of a woman, wrapped in a blanket and tied with a rope, was found in a ravine off a mountain highway in San Bernardino county. The discovery was given newspaper publicity the same afternoon. Later in the afternoon, or early in the *681 evening of the same day, Eggers, a clerk employed in the office of the sheriff of Los Angeles County, filed a report stating that Dorothy Eggers, his wife, was missing. According to this report, Mrs. Eggers last had been seen three days before at about 9 a. m.

The body, subsequently identified as that of Dorothy Eggers, had two bullet wounds, one of which penetrated the heart and caused death. The missing head and hands were never recovered.

It appears that at the time of the homicide Eggers and his wife, with two of her young nieces, lived in Temple City, a suburb of Los Angeles. He was assigned to duty in the Temple City substation of the sheriff’s office. A room in the back of the house was rented to one Loomis, who had occupied it for more than two years.

Eggers told the jury that his marriage to Dorothy had been a happy one until two years before her death. She then informed him, he declared, that she was starting the change of life and subsequently she had been difficult to get along with. He also mentioned having heard rumors that his wife had gone to dances and picked up men, but because he trusted her he “did not give it much thought.”

Just prior to her “disappearance,” Eggers and his wife had an argument about Christmas presents. She reproached him for not getting a present for Loomis and called him a “cheap skate,” but she “had a mad on.” At about the same time, as Eggers related the events, Dorothy told him that the certificate showing ownership of their automobile had been burned accidentally. He obtained an application for a duplicate certificate which he “got her to sign” although “she was reluctant” to do so. The title to the car was in her name, and she also signed a power of attorney, which he prepared, authorizing him to transfer or otherwise deal with the automobile. His explanation of the reason for wanting the change in title was that she had been involved in two accidents and he wished to protect his interest in the automobile if she was “killed or something.”

Witnesses other than Eggers testified that they had last seen Dorothy alive on the morning of December 28th. As a witness in his own behalf, Eggers stated that on December 29th he went to work at 5 p. m. and returned home at approximately 1 a. m. on the following morning. As he came near his home, he heard the front door slam and saw a man, after *682 coming from the house, walk hurriedly down the street. Eggers entered from the rear of the house, and upon turning on the lights found his wife standing without any clothes on in their bedroom.

As he related to the jury what then occurred, he told his wife, “Well, I am going to fix the old Doc from ever coming back here again. ’ ’ He grabbed a gun out of the chiffonier and Dorothy stepped into the hallway to intercept him. He tried to get out toward the front door and she struggled with him. After some struggling, they worked their way to the bathroom. “I was trying to shove her away,” he declared, “and she was trying to pull me, and then we both fell in the bathroom, and the gun went off.”

According to Ms testimony, Eggers only remembers one shot. He next found himself “sitting on the toilet seat, crying and scared, and then I know I got in the car, and somebody else was in that car and kept saying, ‘She is in back, she is in back. ’ ’ ’ But he could not identify the other person. He drove out to Long Beach where he stayed until daylight. He then returned home, went to his bedroom and slept. His explanation as to why, after he shot his wife, he did not get a doctor for her, was: “I do not know whether she was hurt badly, or hurt at all, but I got an idea she was shot, and the next thing I know I was in the ear. ’ ’

Testimony offered by the State shows that the day after the body was discovered, Eggers went to San Bernardino “to look at it.” He called at the sheriff’s office there, but after some discussion with the deputy in charge, left without viewing the body. Before returning to Temple City, he telephoned to his brother-in-law in Los Angeles, and, being unable to reach him, had the call transferred to his own home where he talked with Loomis. He told Loomis to call the brother-in-law and tell him that the body was not that of Mrs. Eggers because the feet were too large; they “were as big as Garbo’s.”

He told Loomis he had seen the body, when he had not done so, Eggers explained, because he did not want anyone to know that he had been given the “brush-off” by the sheriff’s office. In response to his inquiries, he testified, he was informed that the body could not be that of his wife for it measured 58 inches from the shoulders to the soles of the feet. Eggers said that his wife was 5 feet, 5 inches tall. Upon another occasion he fixed her height as 5 feet, 2 inches. Other evidence tends to prove that she was 5 feet, 7 or 8 inches, in height.

*683 At one time Eggers told the Sheriff of San Bernardino County that the body was that of his wife, and he would claim it for burial, if he were in a position to do so. But, at the trial, he insisted that he believed her to be alive.

On January 4th, Eggers sold his wife’s engagement and wedding rings to a jeweler for $10, using an assumed name and giving a fictitious address. His explanation of this action was that he knew his fellow employees in the sheriff’s office were suspicious of him, and if his wife’s rings were found at his home “it would implicate” him. At one time he stated that he found the rings in a bureau drawer after her “disappearance”; previously he told the officers that he removed the rings from her body after the fatal shot.

One witness testified that on January 3d, she had seen Eggers working on the back of his automobile. He appeared to be cleaning the baggage compartment.

The record shows that two weeks later Eggers sold the car to one of the deputies in his office. The buyer noticed that the registration certificate was in the wife’s name and, knowing of the missing person report, he asked Eggers how the car could be transferred without her signature. Eggers replied that she was available and he would get her signature; everything would be all right. Marie, the eldest of Dorothy’s nieces living at the Eggers home, testified that he asked her to go to the Division of Motor Vehicles with him and sign her aunt’s name to the papers. To comply with this request, she practiced writing Dorothy’s name several times, but Eggers finally signed his wife’s name to the ownership certificate and obtained another one in the buyer’s name. After Eggers was arrested, the certificate showing that the car was owned by Mrs. Eggers was found among her effects.

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Bluebook (online)
185 P.2d 1, 30 Cal. 2d 676, 1947 Cal. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-eggers-cal-1947.