People v. Finali

160 P. 850, 31 Cal. App. 479
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 19, 1916
DocketCrim. No. 347.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 160 P. 850 (People v. Finali) 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. Finali, 160 P. 850, 31 Cal. App. 479 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Defendant was informed against by the district attorney of Shasta County for the crime of murder, and at his trial was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to imprisonment for the term of seven years in the state prison. He appeals from the judgment of conviction and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

Defendant shot and killed Vincenzo Coudera on Sunday at about half-past 4 o’clock in the afternoon of November 28, 1915, at the warehouse (sometimes called stable by witnesses) of Giacossa & Bellone, near the Mammoth mine, in Shasta County. Defendant justifies the killing on the plea of self-defense. Defendant and deceased met near this warehouse shortly before the homicide; they were but casually acquainted with each other; defendant had been told that deceased had said that defendant was watching for one Tony Claro every evening with intent to assault him; at the meet *481 ing of defendant and deceased above referred to, deceased was pointed out by one Peselli as the person who had made the statement, whereupon defendant asked deceased why he had made such statement to Claro; deceased denied that he had made it and defendant replied that he, deceased, did make the statement because Tony so told defendant. Thereupon defendant extended his hand toward deceased, whether in a threatening manner or by way of assault or as an invitation for an encounter, does not clearly appear. However, the two men grappled and a scuffle ensued, in the course of which they fell to the ground, defendant on top of deceased. Bystanders interfered and the two separated, defendant walking away a few steps. When deceased arose he picked up a stone and threw it at defendant, hitting him on the left shoulder, and immediately ran into the warehouse and closed the door.

The eye-witnesses were Italians, whose testimony was taken through interpreters. Several exhibits were introduced to assist the jury in understanding the facts and circumstances surrounding the homicide, among which was the bullet causing the death of deceased, taken from the body of the deceased, the latter’s clothing worn at the time, defendant’s revolver, the door through which, as was claimed by the prosecution, the fatal shot was fired and in which two bullet holes appeared, the door casing or four by four scantling to which the door was latched when closed, and which showed an indentation claimed by the prosecution to have been made by one of the bullets when the first shot was fired, sundry photographs, diagram of the warehouse premises, and two or three other exhibits, none of which was sent up with the record. Obviously, we are deprived to some extent of the aid which these exhibits afforded the jury. For example, defendant claims that the bullet found in the body of deceased was a fragment only, and that the first shot fired by defendant struck a beer bottle which the deceased threw at defendant, and that the bullet was split and a fragment of it caused the death of deceased, and not one of the bullets that went through the door of the warehouse. The scantling or door case was introduced and the indentation found on it was shown to the jury in support of the theory of the prosecution that the bullet from the first shot struck the edge of this door casing and passed on into the building. The second *482 shot was shown to have gone through the door and the bullet hole was in line with a bullet hole through the opposite side of the building. The third shot concededly went through the door, and the position of the hole tended to show that it was where deceased was pushing at the door.

We think, however, that the evidence found in the record is quite sufficient to justify the verdict without having these exhibits before us to explain the testimony.

It appeared that when the first altercation occurred the parties were within two or three feet of the warehouse door; when defendant released the deceased and the latter got up, defendant moved away two or three steps and was standing sidewise to deceased when the latter threw the rock, hitting defendant on the left shoulder as above mentioned. Deceased immediately ran into the warehouse, the keeper, Fracchia, with him, and closed the door and both braced themselves against it on the inside, deceased next to the latch and Fracchia next to the hinges. When defendant was hit with the stone he ran after deceased and reached the door about the same time the two other men had closed it. He immediately endeavored to force it open, kicking and pushing it and calling to deceased to “come out.” It was testified by witnesses who were outside of the warehouse that defendant had his revolver in one hand while he was trying to force the door open. It was in evidence that during this struggle on the part of defendant to open the door and deceased and FraeChia to hold it fast, it was opened and closed a few inches at intervals, during one of which deceased threw or struck with a quart beer bottle which he had picked up with one hand while pushing with the other and at about the same instant defendant fired the first shot. The bottle was broken into pieces, some of them falling within and some without the door. The evidence does not show how the bottle was broken. Defendant was not hit with it. He testified that he shot Coudera because he thought he was about to hit him with the bottle. Fracchia testified that he heard the bottle strike and break against the door easing just before the shot was fired." After the first shot the door was shut and Fracchia and deceased remained pushing against it. The second and third shots followed in quick succession, the last one, it is claimed by the prosecution, being the one that hit and killed the deceased. When deceased was hit he exclaimed, “I am shot *483 in the stomach,” and Fracehia cried out to stop shooting, that one of them was wounded. Deceased staggered back from the door to another part of the warehouse and shortly afterward expired. The door was opened and among others defendant went in, looked at deceased, and immediately left, and was the next day arrested at the town of Tehama.

Fracehia testified: “Q. Now, when Coudera came inside the warehouse, what did he do ? A. He shut the door right away. Q. Was the door open or closed when Coudera came inside? A. Open. Q. When Coudera closed the door what did he do ? A. He put himself right away against the door. Q. And how did he hold the door? A. With both hands. (Witness illustrates.) Q. What did you do? A. I put myself also against the door. (He explained the relative position of the two men, deceased on his right, next to the door latch.) Q. When you and Coudera placed yourselves against the door as you have illustrated, what next occurred? A. Finali was pushing at the door and we was pushing back. Q. Did Finali say anything as he was against the door on the outside? A. He was saying to open the door—‘Open, open.’ Q. While Finali was pushing against the door from the outside and you and Coudera were against the door on the inside, what happened to the door, if anything? A. It happened that after he pushed the door several times, Coudera got ahold of a bottle. Q. When you say, ‘He pushed the door several times, ’ whom do you refer to ? A. I think it was Finali; I couldn’t see outside. (It elsewhere appeared, that defendant was the only person pushing the door from the outside.) Q. Where did Coudera get the bottle? A. From the floor. Q. And what part of the floor? A. To the right side—north side. Q.

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Bluebook (online)
160 P. 850, 31 Cal. App. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-finali-calctapp-1916.