People v. Elmore

138 P. 989, 167 Cal. 205, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 443
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1914
DocketCrim. No. 1826.
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 138 P. 989 (People v. Elmore) 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. Elmore, 138 P. 989, 167 Cal. 205, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 443 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

*207 SHAW, J.

The defendant was charged by indictment with the crime of murder of the first degree. He was convicted of murder of the second degree and was sentenced therefor to ten. years’ imprisonment. He appealed to the district court of appeal of the third district. That court being unable to agree upon a decision, the cause was transferred to this court.

The victim of the homicide was one Fred W. Polio. There is no dispute over the fact that his death was caused by a knife wound inflicted by Elmore on December 27, 1912. Polio died therefrom a day or two afterward. The indictment was returned on December 31, 1912. The conviction was had upon the second trial of the cause, which was begun on March 18, 1913, and ended on March 20, 1913. There is no substantial conflict in the evidence. George H. Rucker was the only eye witness to the whole affair and his testimony, in effect, constitutes the ease against the defendant. One Allen Rudolph saw the latter part of the affair but his testimony differs in no important particular from that of Rucker. Rucker gave a clear statement of the case of which the following is the substance:

The affair occurred in the Eagle saloon in the town of Willows, in Glenn County. On that day Elmore was sitting near the stove, in which there was a warm fire, with the witness Rucker and an old man, an ex-soldier, known as Smithy. Smithy was sitting by the side of Elmore and was in a state of stupor from intoxication. Polio, being somewhat warmed by liquor but not sufficiently to impair his faculties or affect his movements, entered the saloon, and, apparently in good nature, began to play roughly with Smithy, lifting his hat and jamming it down on his head several times, slapping him on the head and swaying his body and head about. After engaging in this for a few minutes, Polio went out of the saloon and in a very short time re-entered and again began to move Smithy about, finally hitting him on the side of the head with his open hand hard enough to knock him and his chair over against Elmore. Elmore pushed Smithy, still sitting in his chair, back to an upright position and said to Polio “Why don’t you let him alone. That ain’t no way to treat a man.” Polio made some reply which Rucker did not hear. Elmore then said: “I am not butting in, but at the same time *208 it ain’t right. May be yon know this man.” Polio said: “No, I don’t, do you?” Elmore said: “No, I don’t know him nor you neither. But it ain’t right to treat a man that way, an old man.” Polio then stepped up to Elmore and slapped him on the side of the head, calling him a “son-of-a bitch,” and stepped back, saying “You come outside, I can lick both of you.” Elmore rose and said: “No, I am not going out to fight you. I don’t want to fight; I want you to let me alone. You are a much younger man than I am. I want you to let me alone.” Upon saying this he sat down again. Polio then ran to Smithy, caught his feet, jerked him out of his chair and several feet away to the floor, then helped him to his feet and shoved him back into the chair, saying “You don’t amount to nothing.” While Polio was thus engaged Elmore arose and stood by the stove with his left hand resting upon a railing about three feet high surrounding the stove, made of iron pipe. Prom subsequent events it seems that Elmore held in his left hand a small pearl handled pocket knife with the blade open. The blade was two inches long and very sharp. Eucker did not at that time observe it. Polio after placing the old man back into the chair, stepped away a few feet and then turned facing Elmore in an attitude as if about to start toward him, at which Elmore said: “You son-of-a-biteh, don’t you hit me. You let me alone or I will hurt you.” He was then standing facing Polio between the stove and the wall with his hand on the railing. Polio, paying no attention to this warning, rushed at Elmore and struck him on the shoulder, causing him to bend over the. railing which he grabbed with the left hand and thus avoided falling. As Elmore was straightening up Polio struck another blow, which Elmore, still somewhat stooping, warded off with his right hand, at the same time making an upward thrust under Polio’s arm with the knife in his left hand, striking Polio in the neck with the knife and thereby giving him the fatal wound. Polio then grabbed Elmore’s throat with both hands and whirled him around the stove to the other side, Elmore during that passage striking Polio in the ribs two or three times with his right fist. Polio then released his hold of Elmore and stepped back several feet. Elmore stepped back at the same time, saying: “Now, you son-of-a-bitch, you see what you have got.” Eudolph, the other eye witness to this *209 part of the affair, testified that these words were “Now, you take your medicine, you see what you made me do.” Polio then went out at the front door of the saloon and sat down on the curb. Elmore and Smithy went out of the back door into the back yard. All the foregoing acts occurred as rapidly as the successive motions could be made. Just after Polio went out, an officer who was near by came in the front door as Elmore passed out the back door and asked Rucker: “Where is the man who done it?” referring to the wounding of Polio. Rucker, not then knowing Elmore’s name pointed toward Elmore, then in the back yard, saying “There he goes.” The officer went into the back yard and, noticing Elmore and Smithy, but not understanding that Elmore was the man Rucker referred to, asked Elmore which way the man went who did the work. Elmore told him that the man went out into the alley and up toward Walnut Street. The officer then departed in that direction and Elmore and Smithy went back into the saloon. In a few moments the officer came in at the front door, asked Rucker for a description of the man, was told that it was Elmore and thereupon arrested him.

The railing around the stove was about three and a half feet from the wall. At the time Polio made the rush which resulted in his fatal wound, Elmore was standing in this space. There were two chairs behind him so that he could not readily get out of the way and thus avoid Polio’s attack. Polio was a young man about twenty-eight years of age, of rather burly build and strong physique, weighing from one hundred and sixty-five to one hundred and eighty pounds. Elmore was a rather slight man and had been subject to epileptic fits. One of these fits occurred the day after the homicide. There is nothing to show that Elmore had any previous ill feeling toward Polio or that they had any previous acquaintance. After he was arrested and as he was being taken to jail Elmore said to the officer, “Black, you know I wouldn’t do anything like that.” At the jail he said he was not the man who did it. Some blood appearing upon his left hand he was asked how it came there. He hesitated and then said he got it in killing some chickens and turkeys for Zumwalt that morning. There were no other wounds inflicted upon Polio. He was unarmed at the time. The foregoing comprises all the evidence in the case and includes all that tends *210 to indicate the intent of Elmore at the moment when he inflicted the wound.

In order to constitute murder of the first degree there must be a willful, deliberate, and premeditated killing, as well as malice aforethought., By rendering a verdict finding the defendant guilty of murder in the second degree, the jury, in effect, acquitted him of murder of the first degree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 P. 989, 167 Cal. 205, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-elmore-cal-1914.