People v. Flores

58 P.2d 1311, 15 Cal. App. 2d 58, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 11
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 1936
DocketCrim. 2845
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 P.2d 1311 (People v. Flores) 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. Flores, 58 P.2d 1311, 15 Cal. App. 2d 58, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 11 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

WHITE, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a judgment after conviction of the crime of murder, and from orders • denying appellant’s motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial.

*61 To the charge of murdering one Louis Mock, appellant interposed his pleas of not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. By the verdict of the jury appellant was found guilty of murder in the first degree, with the penalty fixed at life imprisonment. Subsequent to the rendition of the verdict aforesaid, appellant regularly and duly withdrew his plea of not guilty by reason of insanity.

The evidence, in our opinion, conclusively shows that on the 11th day of October, 1935, the appellant shot and killed Louis Mock. The evidence indicates that on the date of the homicide, and for some months prior thereto, the appellant was occupying a room in the home of the deceased in Santa Barbara County; that appellant and deceased had been acquainted for several years, and prior to October 11, 1935, had worked together as general ranch hands. On the evening preceding the killing it appears that the deceased,- his wife, appellant, Mrs. Frances Ontiveros, and the latter’s daughter, Mrs. Amparito Ontiveros, relatives of Mrs. Mock, were visiting in the home of deceased, along with one John Franzini. During the course of the evening Mr. Franzini and appellant left the house, and returned a short time later with two half-gallon jugs of wine. Some drinks of wine were served, but no one appears to have become intoxicated, nor is there any evidence of any quarrel or acrimonious discussion among those present. The record indicates that the deceased and his wife retired before the guests, and that about 11 o’clock Mr. Franzini left, the appellant retired to his room, and Mrs. Ontiveros and her daughter went to bed.

The following morning, October 11th, about 8 o ’clock, Mrs. Mock went to the kitchen to prepare breakfast, and at that time saw appellant, who came into the kitchen and got a jug of claret wine. About that time Juan Grijalva, of Santa Ynez, and a friend of appellant, came into the kitchen of the Mock home to see appellant. The latter served Grijalva two glasses of wine, and he himself drank a like amount. At that time Mrs. Mock left Grijalva and appellant alone in the kitchen. The witness Grijalva testified that appellant asked him if he had a gun, to which Grijalva replied in the negative. Shortly thereafter Grijalva left the kitchen and returned to his home. In a short while Mrs. Mock returned to the kitchen and continued with the preparation of breakfast. The deceased, Mrs. Amparito Ontiveros, Mrs. Frances *62 Ontiveros, and appellant all came into the kitchen about that time, and appellant began to complain to them that on the previous night, after 11 o’clock, he had gone to the home of a friend of his, Charles Ontiveros, where he had been denied admittance. The deceased told appellant that it was no time for him to be visiting at that late hour, advising him to forget it and eat some breakfast. Appellant refused to have any breakfast, and declared he would not stay in that house as i1 seemed to him he was not wanted. The deceased again urged appellant to eat breakfast and forget about the matter, but appellant left the kitchen. Mrs. Amp arito Ontiveros, Frances Ontiveros and deceased went into the dining room, which adjoined the kitchen, and seated themselves at the table preparatory to eating breakfast. Mrs. Mock, who was serving breakfast, had just started into the dining room with a pot of coffee in her hand, when she observed appellant standing beside the bed in the bedroom of deceased and saw him take a .32-caliber Colt automatic pistol from a holster which was lying on the table beside the bed and walk out of the bedroom towards the front of the house. Stepping into the dining room, Mrs. Mock said to her husband, “lie took the pistol,” whereupon Mr. Mock got up from the dining room table and went towards the front of the house, through the kitchen, through the bedroom which appellant had just left, through the hall, into the living room, and out the front door. Mrs Mock and the others in the front part of the house heard the deceased walking rapidly through the house and heard the front door slam, followed a few seconds thereafter by the sound of a shot, and the voice of appellant saying, “You are dying, huh?” and then immediately the sound of a second shot. The three women thereupon rushed to the front of the house by the same route taken by appellant and the deceased, and when they arrived at the front door they saw the deceased lying on the front porch. All the doors separating the various rooms through which the deceased walked and through which the three women followed were standing wide open, and the ladies testified that there had been no scuffling of any kind, nor did they hear any conversation between deceased and appellant in the house on the way out. After observing the deceased lying on the front porch, Mrs. Mock collapsed, and was taken into the house. Mrs. Amp arito Ontiveros, however, testified she noticed appellant standing *63 diagonally across the street, and also observed the next-door neighbor, Joe Calderon, and Modesto Monte, a visitor, standing in front of the former’s house, which adjoins that of the deceased. At that time, she testified, she heard appellant say to the two men, “I killed the son-of-a-bitch. Go pick him up.” In this statement the witness was corroborated by the neighbor, Mr. Calderon, while Mr. Monte, who was standing near Calderon, testified he heard appellant say, “Calderon, I killed a man. Go pick him up. I shot him. He is shot.”

What happened between appellant and deceased after the latter followed the former out of the house was observed by the witness Juan Grijalva, the friend of appellant, who at the time was standing near the front porch of Calderon’s house. He testified that he saw deceased and appellant come out of the former’s house, walking side by side; that they were walking out towards the gate; that they walked out to about the center of the grapevine arbor when the witness heard two shots; that the two men separated, the deceased going towards the porch, while appellant stood there a moment with an object in his right hand. The witness was unable to identify the object, and testified that appellant had his coat over his left shoulder. This witness further testified that immediately following the shooting appellant exclaimed, “You will follow me!” This witness was only about 85 feet from the men when they walked out of the house, and was very definite in his statement that they were not fighting or wrestling, but were walking side by side towards the gate leading to the street. The evidence further indicates that shortly after the homicide appellant came into the lunchroom of E. C. Craig on the main street of Santa Ynez, and obtained from Craig a pint bottle of Old Quaker whiskey. Craig testified that at that time appellant was sober. Appellant was next observed at the house of Mrs. Virginia Ontiveros, mother of the estranged husband of Mrs. Amp arito Ontiveros, in the northwesterly part of Santa Ynez. It was to this home that appellant had gone the night before and at which house he had been denied admittance. Mrs. Ontiveros stated she heard appellant say that he had shot Mr. Mock with Ms own gun when the latter tried to kill him. This witness also secured the gun from appellant which he had taken from the bedroom of Mr. and Mrs. Mock.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P.2d 1311, 15 Cal. App. 2d 58, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-flores-calctapp-1936.