People v. Gingell

296 P. 70, 211 Cal. 532, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 731
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1931
DocketDocket No. Crim. 3366.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 296 P. 70 (People v. Gingell) 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. Gingell, 296 P. 70, 211 Cal. 532, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 731 (Cal. 1931).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

By information filed by the district attorney of Los Angeles County the defendant was charged with the murder, on February 21, 1930, of his wife, Yera Gingell, in the first count, and of Sigurd Bjorneby, in the second count. The jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree on each count and in each verdict fixed the extreme penalty. From the judgment on each verdict and from the order denying his motion for a new trial the defendant presents this appeal.

The defendant and Vera Ramsey were married at Portland, Oregon, on December 24, 1919. In 1924 they moved to Los Angeles, where they resided together as husband and wife until June 5, 1926, when the defendant departed for Washington, D. C., where he had formerly lived. His wife followed him to that city in November of the same year, and they resided there for three years. In November, 1929, the wife left Washington, D. C., by train to New York, thence by boat to New Orleans, thence by train to Los Angeles. Because of lack of funds the defendant did not accompany his wife but proceeded later by stage, arriving in Los Angeles on January 18, 1930. He registered at the Hayward Hotel and telephoned his wife, who was living at 253 South Lake Street with Jean Chappelear, a friend under whom, as a department manager, the wife had worked *535 as a saleslady in a department store during her former residence at Los Angeles. According to the defendant’s testimony he was without funds to rent an apartment for himself and wife, so he rented a room for himself at 1039 South Hope Street. He continued to live at that place until the night of the tragedy. He had known Jean Chappelear in the former years of his residence 'at Los Angeles and was dissatisfied with his wife’s living with her. He had heard rumors that his wife was attending parties and going put with other men, whereupon he proceeded to spy upon the Chappelear apartment for the obvious purpose of satisfying himself of the actions of his wife and of the identity of her male company. His activities in this respect were carried on to such an extent that he was discovered several times watching his wife’s apartment and was ordered by third parties to stay away from that vicinity. On one occasion he followed a man leaving the apartment to the latter’s home and upon investigation found him to be Sigurd Bjorncby, the deceased, a man of foreign birth, thirty-four years of age, who had been employed on a whaling vessel but having his residence in San Francisco and who had been visiting his brother at Los Angeles from December 20, 1929, until the time of the homicides.

Although the defendant and his wife maintained separate habitations after their return to Los Angeles they saw each other frequently and cohabited as husband and wife. Their association was without strife except as to accusations on the part of the husband as to the wife’s association with other men and going out on parties. There is some evidence of counter accusations of the same sort on the part of the wife. After consultation the two decided that the wife would move from Jean Chappelear’s apartment. Accordingly they spent much of the day of February 19th looking for an ápartment acceptable to the wife. They finally decided on a single apartment,' No. 32', on the fourth floor at 1225 West 6th Street, where ten dollars was paid as rent for one week and a receipt for the money was issued to “Miss Gingell”. Nothing was said at the time as to anyone else occupying the apartment with her. The next day, the 20th, the defendant helped his wife pack her personal belongings at Jean Chappelear’s apartment and conveyed some of them by suitcase and traveling bag to the new place. *536 Later on in the day he borrowed an automobile from his employer, who conducted a market in Glendale, and by that means transported a wardrobe trunk to the new place, at which time he asked the apartment house manager for and was given the key to the apartment for the purpose of placing the trunk therein. When he was given this key he also stated to the landlady that he would probably bring some more things later in the evening and as it might be late he requested and received a key to the outside door. The landlady testified that at no time did either of them state that they were husband and wife. The defendant testified that the landlady was so informed. The wife registered as “V. Gingell” and notified the landlady early that evening that she would probably be called on the telephone by the name of Ramsey from the motion picture studio where she had been employed.

The defendant was working at a Glendale market as a meat cutter. He returned with the borrowed automobile to his work at Glendale about 4 o’clock on the afternoon of the 20th and worked until his regular quitting time at 7 o’clock, when by prior arrangement his wife called him on the telephone, at which time she told him that she was going on a party or at least to a 'show and then to a friend’s house for a late dinner after the party. After the homicides the defendant stated that he suspected that his wife was not telling him the truth and determined to find out. He returned to his room on Hope Street, Los Angeles, had his supper, and armed himself with a 45-caliber United States army revolver which he had obtained many years before from an ex-marine and had since kept in his possession. He then walked to Sixth and Witmer Streets, where he called his wife’s apartment on a drug-store telephone about 9 :15 o ’clock. The wife answered and told him that there were four in her apartment; that they were just ready to leave for a little house party and that they had decided not to go to a show.. From then on he watched the apartment from a point on the opposite side of the street where he stationed himself behind a signboard and where he could see the light in the window of his wife’s apartment. No one entered or left the apartment house after he commenced his watch whom he suspected of going to or leaving the apartment. At 11:45 the light of the *537 apartment was turned out, whereupon the defendant entered the apartment house, proceeded to the fourth floor and rapped on the door of apartment 32. After the second rap and no answer he unlocked and opened the door, turned on the light and saw his wife and Bjorneby in bed together. The defendant exclaimed “ ‘What’s the idea’ or something like that”, whereupon the wife replied that it was none of his business. Bjorneby jumped out of bed and the defendant asked him to sit down, that defendant wanted to talk to his wife. The defendant testified that Bjorneby did not sit down but started toward him with a clenched fist and in a menacing manner and that he, the defendant, thereupon drew his gun and shot one shot into the air. Bjorneby then sat down on the bed. The defendant then asked his wife to dress and go with him to his room, whereupon the wife said: “Take that damn gun and get the hell out of here and leave us alone.” He repeated his request to his wife to dress and join him and received a similar answer. Bjorneby rose again, so the defendant testified, and started toward him, and his wife jumped out of bed and started toward him, when “I then lost control of myself and started firing”. Four shots were then fired, the first two into the body of Bjorneby, the second of which entered his head and killed him instantly. The other two shots entered the body of his wife, the second of which entered her head, rendered her unconscious and she fell to the floor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
296 P. 70, 211 Cal. 532, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gingell-cal-1931.