People v. Hashaway

155 P.2d 101, 67 Cal. App. 2d 554, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1177
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 17, 1945
DocketCrim. 3808
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 155 P.2d 101 (People v. Hashaway) 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. Hashaway, 155 P.2d 101, 67 Cal. App. 2d 554, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1177 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

WOOD (Parker), J.

Defendant was accused of the crime of murder. A jury found her guilty of murder of the first degree and fixed punishment at life imprisonment. Her motion for a new trial was denied, and she was sentenced to life imprisonment. Defendant appeals from the verdict, from the “judgment” denying her motion for a new trial, and from the sentence.

Defendant contends: (1) that the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction of murder of the first degree; (2) that the trial court committed prejudicial error in admitting “purported” dying declarations of deceased; and (3) that the trial court erred prejudicially in giving an instruction concerning involuntary manslaughter.

On October 23, 1943, Ceberlee Clark was shot by defendant and died the next day (the time of day is not shown by the record). He was a special policeman, twenty-six years of age, five feet nine inches in height, and 212 pounds in weight. The weight of defendant was 118 pounds. In April, 1943, Clark moved into a hotel which was on the second floor of a building located at 815% East 5th Street, Los Angeles. The en *557 trance to the hotel was by means of a stairway in the front part of the building extending from the ground floor to the second floor. There was another stairway from the second floor to the third floor. A hallway, about three feet in width, extended from the front to the rear of the hotel, and the rooms were along each side of the hallway. At the rear end of the hallway there was a door, which opened inward. Outside the door there was a porch about two feet nine inches wide which extended across the rear of the hotel. The porch was enclosed by a railing about three feet high, and there was a stairway from the porch to the third floor, and another stairway from the porch to the ground. The stairway to the ground had been closed, and was not in use at the time of the homicide. The manager of the hotel lived in an apartment consisting of rooms 1 and 2 in the front of the- building near the entrance stairway. Clark occupied room 6, which was the fourth room from the manager’s apartment and was the second room from the back porch.

He and the defendant became acquainted in July or August of 1943, and two or three weeks later defendant moved into his room at the hotel. They lived there about two months, and then Clark left the state and was gone about three weeks. After he had gone, defendant continued to live in his room until the Saturday preceding the Monday when he returned. On that Saturday she moved out of the hotel. According to her testimony, she then went to live with her friend, Beatrice Terry, until she could find a place of her own, and on October 22d, she moved into an apartment on 1st Street. On the evening of October 23, 1943, about one week after Clark had returned to Los Angeles, he took a woman and a man to his room in the hotel. He left them there, and went back to the street where he saw defendant for the first time following his return. Clark told defendant there was a woman in his room. About 9 ¡00 that evening, he and defendant went into the hotel together, defendant knocked on the entrance door to the manager’s apartment, which was the door to the kitchen, and the door was opened by the manager’s daughter. Defendant entered, but Clark did not enter at that time. He sat on the steps of the stairway which extended from the second to the third floor. The door of the apartment was left open when defendant entered, and Clark could be seen from the manager’s apartment as he sat on the steps laughing. Defendant *558 asked the manager for the return of a butcher knife, which she had either given or lent to the manager while she was living in the hotel. Other statements made at that time concerning the knife will be referred to hereinafter when the testimony of certain witnesses is related. The defendant did not get the knife. A few minutes after defendant had gone into the manager’s apartment, Clark entered and sat down in the kitchen. When he entered, and as he sat in the kitchen, he was laughing. At this time defendant was in the bedroom of the apartment, and she told the manager that Clark had a woman in his room. After some conversation about going to the street, hereinafter to be related, defendant and Clark left the apartment together and went into the hallway. While they were in the hallway, it appears that they had a disagreement concerning whether defendant should go into Clark’s room. According to the alleged dying declaration of Clark, defendant wanted to go into his room and he would not permit her to do so. According to the testimony of defendant, Clark tried to push or force her into his room, and she resisted his efforts and refused to go in. Details concerning happenings in the hallway will be stated hereinafter when testimony of certain witnesses is related. Defendant reached into her coat pocket and “pulled out” a pocket knife. The handle of the knife was 3% inches long; one blade was two inches long, and the other blade was iy§ inches long; Clark took the knife away from her, and then defendant snatched Clark’s pistol from the holster which was strapped to his waist. Defendant testified that thereupon Clark took a “billy” from his belt, and advanced toward her with it in his upraised hand; that she retreated as far as she could-to the railing of the porch; that he continued advancing, and she fired the pistol in self-defense. The bullet entered the left side of Clark’s abdomen, about two inches below his heart, followed a horizontal course and lodged in his back. Defendant then went into the street with the pistol in her hand, and was arrested near the hotel.

The manager testified: that on the night of the homicide, she was in her apartment with her daughter and Edward Peters when defendant came to her apartment; that it was the first time she had seen defendant since she moved from the hotel; that defendant had given her the butcher knife in question; that after defendant asked for the knife, she (the *559 manager) looked outside and saw Clark laughing, and sitting “on the third bottom step” of the stairway, and she replied, “ ‘Not no knife’ ”; that defendant did not say why she wanted the knife; that when Clark came in the apartment, he “started a book-turning the pages, ’ ’ at which time defendant was “walking around the basin” in the bedroom; that it was necessary to go through the kitchen to get to the bedroom; that Clark was laughing and appeared to be jolly while he was in her apartment; that defendant did not appear to be angry or disturbed; that she (the manager) overheard no argument of any kind between them, and she had no reason at that time to feel there was any ill feeling upon the part of either toward the other; that they stayed about ten minutes; that Clark was playing with defendant; that he “got her leg between his legs,” and defendant pulled loose and “went on to the back door to go out from the kitchen to the hall,” and said, “ ‘I believe I will go up the street’ ”; that Clark said “ ‘Well, I am going up the street,’ ” and defendant replied “ ‘I won’t go then,’ ” and Clark said, “ ‘You don’t have to-Just going up the street because I am going-you don’t have to speak to me’ ”; that they went outside and closed the door; that they had been gone about fifteen minutes when she heard a shot; that Peters knocked on her door, said “something” to her, and she ran into the street, called a police officer, and did not return until after Clark had been taken to the hospital.

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Bluebook (online)
155 P.2d 101, 67 Cal. App. 2d 554, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hashaway-calctapp-1945.