People v. Green

302 P.2d 307, 47 Cal. 2d 209, 1956 Cal. LEXIS 270
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1956
DocketCrim. 5782
StatusPublished
Cited by128 cases

This text of 302 P.2d 307 (People v. Green) 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. Green, 302 P.2d 307, 47 Cal. 2d 209, 1956 Cal. LEXIS 270 (Cal. 1956).

Opinions

SCHAUER, J.

Defendant was charged with the murder of Joseph LaChance. He pleaded not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. He was tried before a jury which found that he was guilty of first degree murder and expressly fixed the penalty at death, and further found that he was sane at the time he committed the offense. Defendant’s motion for new trial was denied and he was sentenced to death. This appeal, wherein defendant asserts insufficiency of the evidence and various errors of law which are hereinafter discussed, is taken pursuant to the provisions of subdivision (b) of section 1239 of the Penal Code. We have concluded that the judgment and order denying a new trial should be affirmed insofar as relates to the conviction of murder of the first degree but must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial on the issue of penalty only, because of the instruction that ‘ ‘ The discretion which the law invests in you ... is to be employed only when you are satisfied that the lighter punishment should be imposed. If you find the defendant guilty of first degree murder and do not find' extenuating facts or circumstances to lighten the punishment it is your duty to find a verdict of murder in the first degree and fix the penalty at death.”

[213]*213The following summary of the evidence refutes defendant’s contention that it is insufficient to support the finding that defendant was guilty of first degree murder: On August 20, 1954, defendant went to work as a kitchen helper at a country club in Pasadena. There he met LaChanee, who was employed as a guard. LaChanee learned that defendant was looking for a place to live and at the suggestion of LaChanee defendant on August 28,1954, moved into an apartment-room next to a cabin rented by LaChanee. Defendant had been living in an apartment with his wife and her small daughter by a former marriage; he testified that he left there because he was in California in violation of a Florida parole and he feared that his mother-in-law would report him to the Florida parole officer.

On September 1, 1954, LaChanee and defendant drove to Ojai in LaChance’s car to look for work at an inn where LaChanee had previously been employed. They stopped several times for beer. LaChanee bore the expense of the trip ; defendant had no money. At the inn they learned that the manager in charge of employment would not be in for two hours. They drank more beer, then drove into the country and shot at cans with LaChance’s shotgun and played with a baseball and baseball bat. They walked to a creek to obtain drinking water, defendant carrying the bat. LaChanee saw a water tank. It is the prosecution’s theory (supported by circumstantial evidence and by a voluntary statement of defendant, which statement was made March 29, 1955, and which, insofar as it relates to motive, is contrary to defendant’s testimony and other statements), that as LaChanee was bending over a faucet on the tank, with his back to defendant, defendant hit him twice over the head with the bat; defendant’s purpose was “to take that money” and “get my wife and kid and leave California.” According to defendant’s testimony and other statements of defendant, he struck La-Chance because LaChanee proposed that they engage in a homosexual act. Either of the two blows was of sufficient force to have been fatal.

As related by defendant in his statement of March 29, he went through LaChance’s pockets and took his money and his wrist watch. According to defendant’s testimony, he had no recollection of taking money from LaChanee, and LaChanee had given defendant the watch three days before his death.

Defendant returned to Pasadena in LaChance’s car. The [214]*214next day, September 2, 1954, he left California in the car with his wife and her daughter. As he traveled across the country he sold tools which were in the car, pawned the watch, and finally sold the car, using various assumed names. He was apprehended in Texas in March, 1955.

The jury could, and presumptively did, believe the prosecution theory of the evidence that the murder was of the first degree because committed in the perpetration of robbery (Pen. Code, § 189). They were fairly instructed as to the law applicable in the event they accepted the theory of defendant as expressed in his testimony, that “If you find that the defendant . . . had not formed an intention to take the money or other property of Joseph O. LaChance until after he struck Joseph O. LaChance for the last time, and even if you find that [defendant] . . . did in fact kill Joseph 0. LaChance then you are instructed that the killing of Joseph O. LaChance was not murder in the first degree committed in the perpetration of a robbery.” (See People v. Kerr (1951), 37 Cal.2d 11, 13-14 [229 P.2d 777] ; People v. Carnine (1953), 41 Cal.2d 384, 388 [260 P.2d 16]; People v. Hudson (1955), 45 Cal.2d 121, 124 [287 P.2d 497].) Manifestly, the jury could and did reject defendant’s theory.

According to the confession of defendant which was in evidence, he murdered in the commission of a robbery in which he took the wrist watch of LaChance (which defendant later admittedly pawned). At the trial defendant repudiated this confession and said that a few days before the killing LaChance had loaned him the watch and that defendant had thereafter worn it when he visited his wife and mother-in-law. In argument the district attorney called attention to the fact that defendant called no one to corroborate his story that he had worn the watch for a few days before the killing. Although the argument was not particularly and expressly directed to the failure of defendant’s wife to testify, defendant, citing People v. Wilkes (1955), 44 Cal.2d 679, 687 [284 P.2d 481], urges that it constituted improper comment on her failure to take the stand. Insofar as this comment could be understood by the jury as referring to defendant’s failure to produce his wife’s testimony, it was undoubtedly erroneous. However, in the light of the entire record, we are satisfied that such brief and indirect reference to the matter was not sufficiently important to prejudice defendant in the eyes of the jury and result in a miscarriage of justice (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 4½). In the Wilkes case there was not, as there [215]*215was here, a mere single, unspecific, passing reference; rather, there was particularized comment which “erroneously and deliberately struck at the heart of defendants’ only defense” and which was aggravated by erroneous comment of the trial court (p. 688 of 44 Cal.2d).

Over objection the prosecuting attorney, in connection with the opening statement, was allowed to show the jury a motion picture depicting locations where the events in question took place and articles which were subsequently introduced in evidence as exhibits. Later the film was properly identified and admitted in evidence. Also in connection with the opening statement the prosecuting attorney showed photographs of the wounds of deceased and of defendant in prison garb.

Even where a map or sketch is not independently admissible in evidence it may, within the discretion of the trial court, if it fairly serves a proper purpose, be used as an aid to the opening statement. (State v. Sibert (1933), 113 W.Va. 717 [169 S.E.

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Bluebook (online)
302 P.2d 307, 47 Cal. 2d 209, 1956 Cal. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-green-cal-1956.