People v. Eldridge

82 P. 442, 147 Cal. 782, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 470
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1905
DocketCrim. No. 1204.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 82 P. 442 (People v. Eldridge) 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. Eldridge, 82 P. 442, 147 Cal. 782, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 470 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

During an outbreak which occurred on July 27, 1903, among a number of the convicts in the state •prison at Folsom, inaugurated with a view of effecting their' escape, and in which the defendant participated, W. L. Cotter, one of the prison guards, was stabbed and killed by a. *783 convict named Andy Myers. Some of the convicts engaged in the outbreak succeeded in escaping from prison, the defendant among them. A year subsequently he was recaptured at Seattle, Washington, brought back to this state, tried for the murder of Cotter, convicted, and sentenced to be hanged. He appeals from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The theory upon which defendant was convicted was, that the killing of Cotter was committed by Myers in consummation of an unlawful conspiracy to escape from prison, to ■ which conspiracy Myers, in common with defendant and the other convicts engaged in the outbreak was a party.

There is no question made in the case but that a conspiracy was entered into among the convicts to escape from prison, and that the defendant was a party to it; that he participated in the outbreak made as a result of such conspiracy, and- that in the general assault which was made upon the prison officials at that time, the guard Cotter was killed by Myers.

It is, however, insisted by appellant that there was not sufficient evidence produced before the jury to show that „ Myers was a party to the conspiracy, or was conversant with its object or purpose, the claim of appellant’s counsel being (to state his position as he assumes it) that there was nothing in the evidence to show but that Myers “was acting independently, taking advantage of the melee to vent a grudge on Mr. Chalmers or Mr. Cotter, and that Mr. Cotter received a death wound at that time.’’

While it is true, as contended by counsel for appellant, that there was no direct evidence of any express agreement entered into by Myers to join with the defendant and the others in their unlawful scheme to escape, still it was not essential that there should be evidence produced before the jury of such express agreement, in order to establish the fact that he was a party to the conspiracy. It is competent to prove that one was a party to a conspiracy for the commission of crime by circumstantial as well as by direst evidence. That a conspiracy to commit crime was explicitly or formally agreed to is rarely capable of being proved by direct evidence, and must be developed from such circumstances as reasonably tend to prove its existence. As these criminal *784 combinations are uniformly entered into in secret, and hence are rarely susceptible of direct proof, the law, on account of the necessity of the case, has deemed it wise and proper that circumstantial evidence of their existence should be permitted.

As was said by this court in People v. Donnolly, 143 Cal. 398, [77 Pae. 179]: “The ultimate fact here, of course, was the conspiracy on the part of the defendant with the other parties named in the commission of the crime, but it is not necessary in order to establish that fact to prove that the parties met and actually agreed to jointly undertake such criminal action. Prom the secrecy with which unlawful undertakings are adopted it would be generally impossible to make such proof by direct testimony. Evidence is indirect as well as direct,—consisting • of inferences and presumptions,—and it is code law that upon the trial of a case evidence may be given of any facts from which the facts in issue are presumed, or are logically inferable; and the jury, by the exercise of their judgment or reason, warranted by a consideration of the usual propensities or passions of men, may make such deductions or draw such inferences from the facts proven as will establish the ultimate facts or facts in issue.”

Having in mind these principles of law, we find that the evidence in the case established—aside from the fact, of which there can be no question, that a conspiracy to escape from the prison existed between the defendant and other convicts who participated in the outbreak—that on the morning of July 27, 1903, while the convicts were proceeding on their way to prison work, issuing in line from one of the small wicket gates of the prison for that purpose, and being counted by the gatekeeper, Chalmers, as they passed, a sudden rush from the line was made by defendant, Myers, and some ten or twelve others. Nearly all of them were armed with either knives or razors. A number of them, including defendant, immediately made for the office of the captain of the guard, and the prison officials found therein were, after a struggle, made prisoners; other convicts speedily assailed the guards outside the prison and overpowered them. In making these assaults and overcoming the resistance of the officials,, the convicts used the weapons with which they were *785 armed, inflicting severe injuries • upon several of them. Myers rushed from the line with the others, and with drawn knife, assisted by another convict, named Leverone, who accompanied him, assailed the prison gatekeeper, Chalmers. In the struggle that ensued, the guard Cotter started to the assistance of Chalmers and was stabbed and killed by Myers.

It is unnecessary to detail what took place subsequent to the killing of Cotter,—the procurement of arms from the prison armory by the convicts and their escape from the prison, taking with them the officials they had overpowered, as a protection against being fired on by the other guards,— as Myers does not seem to have participated in these subsequent proceedings, and neither he nor Leverone escaped.

It is quite apparent from the evidence to which we have referred, and we are satisfied that the jury were warranted in finding, that the outbreak was the result of a carefully considered plan, in which evidently the details of the work necessary to be accomplished in order to secure escape were agreed on, and that the particular part Myers and Leverone were to take in it, as well as the particular parts that the other convicts in groups were to take, was prearranged. The rush was made from the line by all the convicts engaged in the outbreak at the same moment. There was no hesitancy or confusion accompanying it. As they rushed out they quickly formed into groups, the members of each group immediately proceeding to the particular task which had been assigned to them, and the office, the guards, and the gatekeeper were simultaneously assailed. In order to secure the success of their attempt to escape, it was necessary, in any scheme which was devised for that purpose, that provision should be made for overpowering the gatekeeper as well as the other officials. He was not attacked by any other of the convicts except Myers and Leverone,—the first, principal, and more persistent assault being made by the former,—and if it were not part of the conspiracy that these particular convicts should attack him, an important detail of the scheme for escape was evidently overlooked, an omission which, from the otherwise apparent completeness of its details and the prompt and concerted manner in which they were executed, cannot be reasonably supposed. The assault of Myers upon both *786

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Bluebook (online)
82 P. 442, 147 Cal. 782, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-eldridge-cal-1905.