People v. Fleming

23 P.2d 28, 218 Cal. 300, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 492
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1933
DocketDocket No. Crim. 3609.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 23 P.2d 28 (People v. Fleming) 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. Fleming, 23 P.2d 28, 218 Cal. 300, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 492 (Cal. 1933).

Opinions

CURTIS, J.

Defendant was accused of the crime of murder, together with three prior convictions. The first *303 prior conviction of which defendant was charged was burglary ; the second, robbery; and the third, assault with intent to commit murder. All of said convictions were under judgments rendered in this state. Defendant admitted the prior convictions, but pleaded not guilty to the charge of murder. He was tried by a jury which rendered a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree without fixing the punishment for said crime. The court thereupon rendered judgment imposing the death' penalty. From this judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial the defendant has appealed. Appellant in his brief has set forth thirty-two specifications wherein he claims that error was committed, and upon which he relies for a reversal of the judgment. These specifications are discussed quite fully in a lengthy brief in which each is given attention in detail. The argument of appellant may be properly divided into four general divisions in which the following contentions are respectively made:

1. That the evidence is insufficient to support a verdict of guilty in that it shows that defendant took the life of the deceased in defense of his own.

2. That the evidence is insufficient to support a verdict that defendant was guilty of the crime of murder, or any other or greater crime than manslaughter.

3. Misconduct on the part of the district attorney which was prejudicial to the rights of the defendant.

4. That the court erred in the admission and rejection of ■evidence.

The contention of the defendant that the evidence is insufficient to support a verdict of guilty against the defendant, in that it shows that he acted in self-defense in the killing of the deceased, rests upon the claim of defendant that the deceased, at the time defendant drew his gun, held in his hand an automobile crank and that he was then in the act of striking defendant over the head with said automobile crank when the defendant shot the deceased to protect himself from death or great bodily injury. This claim is unsupported except by the uncorroborated testimony of the defendant. It is inconsistent with the evidence of all the other witnesses in the case present at the shooting. Mrs. Leece, the wife of the deceased, Amos Leece, *304 was the only eye-witness to the shooting other than defendant and deceased. She was in deceased’s machine, and the shooting took place on the opposite side, of the machine in which she was sitting. She was evidently in a greatly agitated and excited state of mind due to the tragic death of her husband and her account of the affair was conflicting, incomplete and exceedingly indefinite. Her testimony will be referred to later. At the time of the shooting four people were in the Midway Gas Station, in front of which the deceased was killed. One of them, Peggy O’Day, was so intoxicated that she was in no condition to give any account of what happened, and she did not attempt to do so. The other three persons in the building, Charles Adcock, the proprietor of the station; Marie Young, his housekeeper, and Angus Kerr, a patron at the station, immediately rushed out of the building on hearing the shots from defendant's gun on to the front porch of the building where the shooting took place. They saw nothing of any automobile crank in the hands of the deceased or on the floor of the porch, or in the vicinity of the porch. Adcock and Kerr had seen the deceased as he left the front room of the building and went out on to the porch just prior to the shooting, and neither of them saw any automobile crank in his hand. The defendant himself, who came into the room from the porch just as the deceased turned to leave the room, also says that he saw no weapon of any kind in Leece’s hand as the latter walked toward the door to go out on to the porch. The defendant’s testimony is that he was standing some two steps within the room in front of the door, and that the deceased- pushed him backward through the door, and then followed him on to - the porch, and that as soon as he, the defendant, recovered himself, “Mr. Leece had this crank in his hand coming toward me with it.” But how or where Lecce secured the crank the defendant does not attempt to show. The whole affair happened within a few seconds of time. The shots were fired, according to Adcock, a couple of seconds after the men went through the door on to the porch. Angus Kerr testified that “they had scarcely disappeared out of the door when two shots rang out; just as they disappeared out of the door two shots went off”. The testimony of the defendant that deceased assaulted him with an automobile crank taken by itself is not at all convincing, *305 and, when we consider it in connection with the other evidence in the case, we are of the opinion that it is completely overcome and discredited. The facts immediately preceding the shooting will be given in detail in discussing another phase of the case. It is not necessary to state them here. The verdict of guilty, therefore, finds ample support in the evidence.

In connection with the automobile crank, however, it should be said that Mrs. Leece, after denying that her husband had any such crank that evening, testified that when her husband came but to the machine after paying his bill in the station, he went to the rear of the machine where the crank was kept and took it out of the machine for the purpose of cranking his machine. She did not, however, see what her husband did with the crank when he re-entered the building. Some hours after the killing the crank was found on the floor of Lecce’s machine. If we disregard the testimony of the defendant, as the jury evidently did, and we think properly so, then the only reasonable construction to place upon the acts of Leece is that when he decided to return to the barroom, he returned the crank to the machine, where it remained until found there some hours later. This construction harmonizes with all the evidence in the case, including that of the defendant that Leece did not have the crank with him when he was last in the front room of the station.

We now pass to the consideration of the second general contention of the defendant that there is no evidence in the case that justified a verdict finding defendant guilty of murder, or any crime greater than manslaughter. In support of this phase of the case, the defendant contends that the evidence is insufficient to show either malice, premeditation, or an intent to kill on his part before or at the time he fired the shots which resulted in the death of Amos Leece. A consideration of this contention will require a somewhat more extended reference to the events leading up to the shooting that has heretofore been given.

The Midway Service Station is about a mile north of the town of Red Mountain on the highway from Atolia to Randsburg. At the time in question it was conducted by Charles Adcock, who lived at the station. There was also *306 living there at the time Marie Young, who acted as his housekeeper, and Peggy 0 'Day. The latter had been brought by the defendant from Long Beach, her home, to the Midway Service Station some time in the month of January, 1932. The homicide occurred on May 21, 1932.

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Bluebook (online)
23 P.2d 28, 218 Cal. 300, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fleming-cal-1933.