People v. Hill

48 P. 711, 116 Cal. 562, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 588
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1897
DocketCrim. No. 214
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 48 P. 711 (People v. Hill) 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. Hill, 48 P. 711, 116 Cal. 562, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 588 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

Van Fleet, J.

Defendant was convicted of murder of the first degree in the killing of his wife, Agnes Hill, and adjudged to suffer death. He appeals from the judgment and an order denying him a new trial, the exceptions urged all being based upon rulings at the trial.

1. To support the defense of insanity relied on by defendant, he introduced evidence tending to ■ show certain peculiarities of temperament, disposition, and conduct in his father and in himself, from which an inference might have been drawn of a want of perfect mental balance in defendant at times. The prosecution did not attempt to controvert the facts thus shown, but, to rebut the inference of insanity therefrom, called Dr. Robertson as an expert on mental diseases, who, in response to a hypothetical statement of the facts, gave, as his opinion, that defendant was sane at the time of the commission of the act. Thereupon, defendant desired to introduce the opinion of a physician on his behalf in rebuttal of the opinion expressed by Dr. Robertson. The court refused to permit such evidence as rebuttal, on the ground that it was properly a part of defendant’s case in chief, but offered to permit defendant to reopen his case for the purpose of putting in such evidence if he so desired. This offer was declined, and the [566]*566refusal to admit the evidence as rebuttal is now assigned as error.

The defendant was entitled to rebut any new matter offered on the subject by the people, but the evidence of the expert involved nothing new. It was purely evidence in contradiction of defendant’s evidence, and nothing more. Its purpose and effect was, instead of denying the facts shown by defendant, to rebut by a perfectly proper method the inference sought to be drawn therefrom. It was only the method of meeting defendant’s evidence, and not the matter which was new or different; no new fact was shown, and there was nothing, therefore, which was the proper subject of rebuttal. If defendant desired the opinions of experts to support the facts as to his state of mind, such evidence was a part of his original case.

2. Defendant objected to the hypothetical question put to Dr. Robertson, on the ground that it did not embrace a statement of all the evidence, and that it misstated that which it did embrace.

It is not necessary in framing a hypothetical question to include a statement of all the evidence in the case upon the subject of inquiry'. While the question should have for its basis some probable, or at least possible, theory to be deduced from the evidence in the case, counsel have a right to frame the question to accord with their theory of what the material facts are as shown by that evidence, and in so doing may omit facts which from their point of view have no material bearing upon the subject. As stated by Mr. Thompson: “ The hypothetical questions must be based either upon the hypothesis of the truth of all the evidence, or upon a hypothesis specially framed of certain facts assumed to be proved for the purpose of the inquiry. Such questions leave it for the jury to decide in the first case whether the evidence is true or not, and in the second case whether the peculiar facts assumed are or are not proved.” (Thompson on Trials, sec. 604.)

[567]*567“It is no objection to a hypothetical question,” says that author, “ that the state of facts which it assumes is erroneous, if within the possible or probable range of the evidence; since the judge cannot decide as a preliminary question on an objection to evidence, -whether it is erroneous or not, the question being for the jury. .... It is the privilege of counsel in such cases to assume within the limits of the evidence any statement of facts which he claims the evidence justifies, and have the opinion of experts upon the facts thus assumed. The facts are assumed for the purposes of the question, and for no other purposes.” (Thompson on Trials, secs. 606-610.) The rule thus stated is amply sustained by the great weight of authority found in the adjudged cases. (See People v. Durrant, ante, p. 179.)

The question objected to did not depart from this rule. It contained a fair statement of the case, as embraced within the prosecution’s theory of what the evidence established, and made no material misstatement of the facts. If the theory on which the question proceeded did not accord with that of the defendant as to the effect of the evidence, it was the privilege of the latter on cross-examination to put to the witness questions formulated upon his theory of the case, and take the opinion of the witness thereon, leaving to the jury the question as to which theory, if either, was warranted by the evidence.

3. There was no error in excluding the evidence of Dr. Webster, offered by defendant, tending to show that deceased had been guilty of unchaste conduct with other men during defendant’s absence from home. There was no offer or attempt to show that knowledge of the facts was communicated by the witness to defendant before the homicide. The evidence was wholly immaterial for any purpose, and irrelevant to the issues before the jury.

The same is true of the evidence of the same general character sought to be elicited from the witness Susie [568]*568Bolden and others. The trial court very correctly ruled that it would not deny the privilege of showing any statement of the kind made to the defendant, but that it was “not a question in this action as to the morality or immorality, good, or bad character of Mrs. Hill. It is simply a question of what was said to the defendant with reference to that, and the effect those statements and that information might have had upon his mind.”

Nor was there error in excluding the evidence of the witness Lamont as to a conversation' with the defendant in regard to certain anonymous letters received by the latter relating to the conduct of his wife. The evidence was wholly without materiality, even if competent.

4. The question asked Dr. Hamlin as to the probable position of the person of deceased toward defendant at the time the fatal shot was fired, judged from the location of the wound, was clearly improper, and the objection thereto should have been sustained. The subject of inquiry involved no question of skill or science, and was not, as has been repeatedly decided by this court, a proper subject matter of expert testimony. (People v. Westlake, 62 Cal. 303, 309; People v. Smith, 93 Cal. 447; People v. Lemperle, 94 Cal. 46.) But while the evidence was erroneously admitted, it was manifestly harmless to defendant’s case, since no question was made but that defendant killed the deceased by shooting her with a pistol, and there was no issue upon which the admitted evidence could have exerted any prejudicial influence with the jury. (See People v. Lemperle, supra.) The error, therefore, affords no ground for reversal.

5. We cannot say that the court erred in holding that the witness Peterson did not show himself an “intimate acquaintance ” within the rule of the statute which requires a witness, not an expert, to sustain that relationship toward a party to qualify him to give his opinion on the subject of the latter’s sanity. The question is largely one of discretion in the trial judge, and [569]*569his ruling will not be disturbed except for manifest abuse, which the record does not disclose. (Estate of Carpenter, 94 Cal. 418; Peoples. McCarthy, 115 Cal. 255.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P. 711, 116 Cal. 562, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hill-cal-1897.