People v. Fitch

81 P.2d 1019, 28 Cal. App. 2d 31, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 484
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 30, 1938
DocketCrim. 1632
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 81 P.2d 1019 (People v. Fitch) 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. Fitch, 81 P.2d 1019, 28 Cal. App. 2d 31, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 484 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The appellant shot and killed Earl C. Smith at Tule Lake in Modoc County, July 21, 1937. He was convicted of murder of the second degree.

It is contended the verdict and judgment are not supported by the evidence; that the court erred in receiving testimony of the good reputation of the deceased for peaceableness, and in giving to the jury certain instructions.

Earl C. Smith and the defendant's sister, Grace, were husband and wife. They owned seventy-three acres of farm land *33 near Alturas upon which they had resided for five years. They had one son, who was thirteen years of age at the time of the homicide. Mr. Smith was a large man, six feet, two inches tall, and he weighed 200 pounds. The defendant was six feet tall, but. he had been sick and he weighed only 117 pounds. The defendant resided in Pasadena. Prom year to year he had been accustomed to go north and live in the home of his sister, Grace, during farming seasons, helping to produce potatoes and onions in partnership with his brother-in-law. Domestic trouble arose between Mr. and Mrs. Smith. She procured a divorce from him in August, 1936. The defendant was a witness in her behalf at the divorce proceeding. The farm was divided between the spouses. Mrs. Smith was awarded the thirty-five-aere tract containing the dwelling house and barn. Earl Smith built a cabin on his portion of the ranch about a quarter of a mile from his wife’s house. He sometimes ate and slept in the house of his wife after the interlocutory decree was granted. In a voluntary statement made by the defendant and transcribed immediately after the shooting occurred, he said that Mr. Smith had not personally threatened him, although he thought that he did blame him for his domestic troubles. The defendant said in that regard:

“Well, we put in the crop [in 1936], He and his wife had trouble, and he could not take the blame on his own shoulders, so he had to blame me. Q. Why would he blame you? A. Well, he thought I was the cause of their family trouble. Q. What would he actually say [to you] about this matter? A. He would not say anything to me about it, he would not say that I was the cause of the trouble, but he commenced to treat me that way, that I was not welcome, and I thought at that he blamed me for the trouble. Q. But he never at any time ever said anything directly to you about this trouble? A. No. Q. You are sure? A. Yes, sure.”

In January, 1937, the defendant returned to his home in Pasadena. Thereafter John Pitch, the brother of the defendant, and his wife, came from Montana and lived in the home of their sister, Mrs. Smith, until after the homicide occurred. Their mother, Mrs. Clementine Pitch, a widow, who was seventy years of age, also came to live with her daughter.

The defendant returned to his sister’s home at Tule Lake in July, 1937, a few days before the homicide occurred. The *34 defendant, Mrs. Smith, and her son, the defendant’s brother John and his wife, and their mother were then all living together in the Smith home. His brother John kept an automatic revolver in the bureau drawer in his room. The defendant slept upstairs in the east bedroom. He was then engaged in digging a potato pit in the field on his sister’s premises, adjacent to the roadway, some distance from the house. After returning to Modoc County in July, 1937, the defendant did not see Earl Smith prior to the time of the shooting, for he was employed in the trucking business, hauling produce from Sacramento to Tule Lake. The defendant testified at the trial that after he returned from Pasadena he was told by his brother John that Earl Smith had threatened to kill him if he came back to the ranch. Having discovered his brother’s revolver in the bureau drawer, the defendant secretly took it and carried it to the field with him for two days prior to the homicide. On the morning of the affray the defendant was told that Smith had returned to his cabin. About 8 o’clock that morning the defendant again secretly took his brother’s revolver from the bureau drawer, and concealing it inside the top of his right boot, he drove to the field to continue his work on the pit. Prior to the time of the shooting a neighbor lady called at the Smith home for some eggs. Mrs. Pitch, the mother of the defendant, rode with that lady across the field to the place where the defendant was working. At that point she left the machine and crossed a ditch to the locality of the potato cellar, and was present when the shooting occurred. Mrs. Smith and her brother John related circumstances of the affray which they claimed to have observed from a considerable distance. Otherwise, Mrs. Clementine Pitch and the defendant were the only eye-witnesses to the homicide.

The defendant testified that he secretly took his brother’s revolver, as he had previously done, and tucked it into his boot top to defend himself against an anticipated attack by Earl Smith, who had threatened to kill him if he returned to the ranch. He said: “I knew I was going to be working alone, and I wanted to take the gun with me for protection.” He drove his team of horses over to the potato cellar some time after 8 o’clock the morning of July 21st, and began to work on the pit. His mother arrived soon thereafter. In a short time Earl Smith drove along the road in his truck and stopped *35 adjacent to the pit. The defendant said that Smith got out of his truck and walked over to a point eight or ten feet away from him and said:

“I warned you about coming back up here, you skinny ungrateful s-of-a-b. He kept abusing me, and I told him to go away, that I was not bothering him. Then he said I owed him four hundred eighty dollars and would give me four days to pay it. I said I did not owe him anything, but if I did, I would pay him. I told him to go and get in his truck and leave me alone. . . . He started away and walked off four or five steps and then turned around rapidly and called me a g— d— lying thief and s-of-a-b, and started back toward me. As he started back, he put his right hand to his hip pocket as if to pull out a gun and I pulled my gun and stopped him.”

Continuing his description of the affray, the defendant testified:

“Q. What did Smith do when you fired the first shot? A. He put his left hand here. [Illustrating.] Q. Did you keep on shooting? A. Yes sir, I fired after that. Q. How far away from you was he? A. About eight or nine feet, something like that. . . . Q. Then what did he do? A. He turned his [left] shoulder around toward me. . . . Q. Did you keep on shooting? A. Yes sir. Q. What did Mr. Smith do next if anything ? A. He turned around facing the north. . . . Q. Which side was towards you? A. His right side. Q. Were you still shooting? A. Yes sir. . . . Q. Were you afraid of Earl Smith? A. Yes sir. Q. For what reason? A. Because he was a man with a violent temper. Q. . . . Were there any other reasons that you were afraid of him? A. Because he had threatened me.”

The defendant emptied his revolver, firing six bullets into the body of Mr. Smith, who then fell to the ground and lay in the roadway, where he died. The defendant reloaded his revolver, and taking his mother he went back to the house, leaving the body of deceased where it had fallen.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 P.2d 1019, 28 Cal. App. 2d 31, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fitch-calctapp-1938.