People v. Hamilton

192 P. 467, 49 Cal. App. 30, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 148
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 5, 1920
DocketCrim. No. 491.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 192 P. 467 (People v. Hamilton) 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. Hamilton, 192 P. 467, 49 Cal. App. 30, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 148 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

NICOL, P. J., pro tem.

The defendant, Fred Hamilton, was charged by an information filed in the superior court of Plumas County, on the twelfth day of August, 1919, with the murder of one Gussie Redhead, an Indian woman, on or about the twenty-seventh day of July, 1917, near Quincy, in said county of Plumas,' and on the trial of the ease the defendant was convicted of the crime of manslaughter, and judgment was pronounced thereon. This appeal is from the judgment and an order refusing to grant a new trial.

The principal point upon which defendant relies for a reversal is that the evidence is insufficient to prove the corpus delicti; that it fails to prove that any criminal violence had been used, and that the identity of the deceased was not sufficiently established.

It appears that on or about the twelfth day of April, 1919, two children while gathering wild flowers at a place called “Hospital Hill,” about one and one-eighth of a mile from the town of Quincy and about one-quarter of a mile from the county hospital, at a point about one hundred yards from the county road between Quincy and Greenville, found two human skulls. They reported the find and the officers made an investigation and found the remains of two human beings. One of the skeletons was apparently that of a woman, the ribs being encased in a corset, while the other was apparently that of a male. These skeletons were near together, being about one hundred yards apart. There was a man’s coat by the female skeleton, and an arm bone was still in one of the sleeves. It was a blue coat, with small white stripes. There were also found by the female skeleton a part of a shirt, underclothes, some lace, crochet, and a silver watch, and near the male skeleton were found some teeth, hair, a pocket-knife, and part of ,a vest, the *32 cloth of which was identical with the cloth of the coat by the remains of the female. At the trial the skeleton of the female was identified to be that of Gussie Redhead, and the skeleton of the male to be that of Henry Lee, an Indian. The defendant and the said Gussie Redhead had been for some time living together and in the early part of July, 1917, he was working on a ranch for one Hugh Seaman. During the time he Was employed on this ranch he was absent at one period for two days, and on his return Mr. Seaman asked him where he had been, and he replied that he had been hunting for his wife, who had run away.

On the night of July 26, 1917, after a picture show in the town of Quincy, the said Gussie Redhead, Henry Lee, Noanie Hardgrave, Tom Hardgrave, Harry Beatty, and the defendant, Fred Hamilton, went together from the town of Quincy to a place on the road called by one of the witnesses “the pines,” near the high school. They were drinking and during the time that they were there a violent quarrel ensued between the defendant and Gussie Redhead, and the language used by both of these parties, according to the. evidence of the witness Harry Beatty, was very profane. That during this quarrel the defendant attempted to strike said Gussie Redhead and he'said something to her about “trying to kill him.” While at this place Gussie Redhead complained to Henry Lee about her being cold and asked him for his coat, which he gave her and she put the coat on and wore it. It was a blue coat with small white stripes and was of the same material as the vest then being worn by the said Henry Lee. As above stated, this coat was found by the remains of Gussie Redhead and a portion of the vest by the remains of Henry Lee. During the time these parties were at this particular place, Harry Beatty went to sleep among the pines. Afterward Tom and Noanie Hardgrave went to their home and Gussie Redhead, Henry Lee, and the defendant left and went in the direction of the town of Quincy. This was the last time Gussie Redhead and Henry Lee were seen alive. Beatty slept out in the pines until the next morning at about, daylight. When he went there the evening before he had on his person a silver watch, which was missing when he awoke in the morning. He stated that “during the night there was someone came to me and put their arms around me and was talking to me, *33 but I couldn’t understand what the person said.” That he knew that the person was a woman by the voice. But he did not remember anything that she said. This silver watch was found lying on the inside of the coat by the remains of Gussie Redhead, rolled up in an old handkerchief, a piece of lace and crochet.

The next morning after this meeting on the road, at about daylight, the defendant called at the home of Mike Hedrick and borrowed a rifle, saying that he wanted to go hunting. The rifle was a 30-caliber Winchester, model 94. Hedrick also gave him six cartridges for the rifle. These cartridges were soft-pointed, with jackets. Two empty 30-30 cartridge shells (the same kind of cartridges as used in this rifle) were found near the remains of Henry Lee and near the body was also found a jacket from a bullet of a 30-30 cartridge. There was also found by Dr. Sty an in the decomposed tissues still adhering to the spinal column of the remains of Henry Lee a similar jacket of a bullet, which jacket was lying against the- vertebral column, against the twelfth dorsal vertebra.

The defendant, on the fourth day of July, 1918, in speaking to one Charley Redhead in reference- to Henry Lee and Gussie Redhead, said: “He camped out this side of hospital son-of-a-biteh Gussie and Henry Lee.” He also in 1918, about a year before the trial, in talking to one Tom Epperson about Gussie Redhead, said that she was at Beck-with; that he had been so informed. On or about the first day of August, 1917, the defendant called at the “Quincy Laundry” and told a Mrs. G. Que that Henry Lee and Gussie had gone away. This statement was untrue.

In the note to State v. Williams, 78 Am. Dec. 253, it is said by the editor, after referring to the rule that direct and positive evidence is unnecessary to prove the corpus delicti, and the cases in support thereof, that: “This rule is now clearly established, and it would be most unreasonable to always require direct and positive evidence. Crimes, especially those of the worst kind, are naturally committed at chosen times, in darkness and secrecy. Human tribunals must, therefore, act upon such indications as the circumstances of the case present or admit, or society must be broken up. The cases just cited show that the jury may *34 find a verdict -of guilty upon circumstantial evidence, and that the corpus delicti may be proved by such evidence, as well as any other part of the case, and that this rule applies in cases of murder and manslaughter, as well as in all other crimes. But a few courts have, by refined distinctions, qualified this doctrine slightly. Thus in New York it was laid down, in the first instance by a divided bench, that in murder, either the death, or the criminal agency producing it, must be proved by direct evidence; then the other may be proved by circumstantial evidence. (Ruloff v. People, 18 N. Y. 179.) The same thing was held as to the crime of murder or manslaughter in People v. Bennett, 48 N. Y. 137; but the court was divided. The better rule, however, is that either element of the corpus delicti,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 P. 467, 49 Cal. App. 30, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hamilton-calctapp-1920.