People v. Emerson

62 P. 1069, 130 Cal. 562, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 886
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1900
DocketCrim. No. 614.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 62 P. 1069 (People v. Emerson) 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. Emerson, 62 P. 1069, 130 Cal. 562, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 886 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

BEATTY, C. J.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death. His appeal is from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The principal ground of the appeal is that the verdict is contrary to law and the evidence, and upon this point counsel contend that all the evidence—that introduced by the prosecution no less than the evidence of the defendant himself— shows clearly and without conflict that the killing (which is admitted) was done in necessary self-defense, or at least under circumstances which negative the existence of any deliberate purpose on the part of the defendant to take the life of the person slain. Necessarily, this contention as to the absence of any conflict in the evidence must be made good in order to sustain the appeal upon the ground stated; for if the evidence which bears against th'e defendant, considered by itself, and without regard to conflicting evidence, is' sufficient to support the verdict, the question ceases to be one of law—of which alone this court has jurisdiction—and becomes one of fact upon which th'e decision of the jury and the trial court is final and conclusive.

*564 The circumstances of the homicide, as detailed by the wit» nesses for the prosecution, were substantially as follows: The defendant was the owner of a ranch which he had leased to Joseph Bodgers, reserving to himself a right to occupy, for living purposes, a certain portion of the premises. Bodgers, with his wife and eight children—the oldest 'eighteen, the youngest four years of age—entered into the possession of the ranch and ranch-house in December, 1898, but defendant continued to occupy one bedroom in the dwelling-house, and a room in an outhouse which he used as a kitchen. Very soon after this joint occupancy of the premises commenced, serious differences arpse between the defendant and Bodgers and his family, the original cause of which seems to have been a dispute as to the right of defendant to retain for his own use the bedroom in the house. What the merits of this quarrel were does not appear, but it evidently produced a very bitter antagonism between the parties, and had eventuated in a suit for damages commenced by Bodgers. Things being in this posture on the morning of -the 11th of April, 1899, defendant and Bodgers met at the well near the ranch-house. At an earlier hour that morning the defendant had removed the rope and bucket used for drawing water from the well for the purpose, as he says, of mending the bucket, which was out of repair. Leaving the well in that condition, he had gone out to a pasture to look for a cow that he was expecting to calve. On his return he found Bodgers at the well engaged in fitting another rope and bucket for drawing water. What then ensued is told by the wife and three children of Bodgers, who were in the house, but within hearing, when the quarrel commenced, and out at the well before it reached its fatal conclusion. The first words which they distinctly heard were from Bodgers, who said to defendant: “You can’t get'any more water out of this well; this is the second well you have kept me getting water from.” Defendant said he would get water whenever he wanted it. Bodgers said: “I would like to see you come and try to get some now.” Defendant said: “I don’t want any now; I will get "it when I need it.” At this point Mrs. Bodgers interjected what I suppose is a quotation from the lease in regard to “water rights and privileges,” to which-defendant replied: “Yes, for your own use.” Then Bod *565 gers said again: “You can’t get any water here; you have to go to the creek.” To which defendant responded by an expression at once contemptuous and unfit to be made in the presence of a woman, whereupon Mrs. Eodgers again interposed with the remark: “That shows how you wefe raised.” Defendant then said: “Where was you raised?” She replied: "I was well raised.” Defendant repeated: “Well, where were you raised?” and she again replied: “I was well raised.” Then he ■said: “I have seen you before,” and she demanded to know “where.” “Well,” he said, “I have seen you before you ever ■came here.” With these word^ the defendant turned to leave, carrying a milk bucket in one hand and a coil of rope in the other—which articles he had held in his hands during the whole colloquy. As defendant moved away from the scene of the quarrel he was followed and apparently overtaken and stopped by Mrs. Eodgers, who demanded again and again to know where he had seen her before. Turning to answer her, he saw before him not only Mrs. Eodgers, but her husband also, who held in his hand a stone as large as he could grasp with one hand, and who, in advancing upon defendant, said: “I want to know what you mean; I want to know where you ever saw her before?” At this instant defendant drew his pistol and commenced firing. His first bullet passed through Eodgers’ thigh, who immediately dropped the stone which he carried and turned to run, but before he had moved perceptibly a second bullet entered his head two inches above and one inch behind the left ear, producing a wound which caused almost instant death.

This account of the circumstances immediately surrounding the killing is taken from the testimony of Mrs. Eodgers. It is corroborated and not materially varied by the testimony of three of her children—aged from nine to seventeen years—who arrived upon the scene during the progress of the quarrel between defendant and deceased. The only other material testimony for the prosecution was that of the coroner and autopsy surgeon, who testified to the cause of death, and of a witness who testified that about a we'ek before the homicide he heard defendant say he would “put Eodgers where the dogs would not bark at him.”

The only evidence'for the defense which it is material to *566 state in this connection was the testimony of the defendant himself. He recounted the quarrels and the litigation between himself and Eodgers growing out of the leasing and joint occupation of the premises, detailed the facts from which he had inferred an intention on the part of Eodgers to do him some injury, stated that he had been warned that it was necessary to 'be prepared to defend himself—that he only commenced carrying a pistol in consequence of such warning, and only shot because at the moment he believed his life to be in danger from the attack of Eodgers with the stone which he held in his hand. He gave a version of the quarrel at the well not widely different from that of Mrs. Eodgers and her children, hut somewhat more favorable to himself. In particular, h'e denied the use of the indecent expression attributed to him by Mrs. Eodgers, and stated that he used other words of similar sound, but not at all offensive.

Hpon this evidence a jury has found—and the finding has been approved by the trial judge—that the defendant is guilty of murder in its highest grade, and that he deserves to suffer the extreme penalty of the law. We are asked to say, as matter of law, that this verdict is so entirely without support in tiieevidence that it cannot stand. But after the most careful consideration of the case we do not feel ourselves justified in setting aside the verdict upon this ground. Certainly, the showing against the defendant was not a strong one as to the question of deliberation such as characterizes murder of the first degree. He did not seek or provoke the quarrel which was the-immediate cause of the killing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 P. 1069, 130 Cal. 562, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-emerson-cal-1900.