People v. Holloway

151 P. 975, 28 Cal. App. 214, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 483
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 9, 1915
DocketCrim. No. 498.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 151 P. 975 (People v. Holloway) 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. Holloway, 151 P. 975, 28 Cal. App. 214, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 483 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

The defendant in this ease was charged, in an information filed in the superior court of Santa Clara County, with the crime of murder. Upon his trial he was convicted of murder in the first degree, and the penalty therefor, life imprisonment, was fixed by the jury.

Briefly stated the essential and practically undisputed facts of the case pertaining to the points presented in support of the appeal are these: The deceased was the wife of the defendant. The homicide occurred at the home of the defendant in Palo Alto. An autopsy upon the body of the deceased showed that she came to her death as the result of hemorrhage of the brain caused by gunshot wounds. Two bullets were found in the body of the deceased, “one of which passed through the right forearm . . . and entered to the right of the temple.” This bullet fractured the skull of the deceased. The second bullet lodged in the brain of the deceased, and its point of entrance was found to be directly in the back of the head. The bullet wound in the right forearm of the deceased was *216 powder-marked. There was no eye-witness to the killing of the deceased. The defendant, however, upon his trial admitted the killing, and attempted to justify it upon the ground that he had fired the fatal shots while defending himself against an assault which the deceased had made upon him with a knife. In support of this defense the coat, shirt, undershirt, and suspenders worn by the defendant at the time of the killing were offered and received in evidence. The front of the coat on the right and left sides showed the downward cuts of a knife, and the back of the coat from the collar almost down to the bottom seam showed similar cuts. The overshirt and suspenders were likewise cut. The undershirt showed a cut or a tear, and all of the cuts when the several garments were superimposed corresponded in width, length, and direction.

In rebuttal of the defendant’s claim of self-defense, Almond H. Holloway, Jr., a son and the only child of the defendant and the deceased, was called and sworn as a witness for the prosecution. At the time of the trial this witness was seven years old. At the time of the homicide he was six years old. His testimony, as elicited upon direct and cross-examination, was to' the effect that he was in the rear yard of his home near the gate when the first shots were fired. He heard three shots. He was at the bottom of the rear stairs leading to the house when he heard the third shot. The witness ran up the stairs into a room of the house the door of which was open, and there saw his father, the defendant, in a stooping position cutting the back of his coat, which apparently was on the floor, with a butcher knife. Upon the approach of the witness the defendant ceased cutting the coat, and hung it on a nail in the wall.

The theory of the prosecution was that the killing was willful and deliberate, and that the motive for the billing was founded in the fact that the community property of the deceased and the defendant had been awarded to the deceased by an interlocutory decree in divorce proceedings which had been instituted by her against the defendant upon the ground of the latter’s extreme cruelty. In support of this theory the prosecution offered in evidence the interlocutory decree in the divorce proceedings, to which the defendant objected upon the ground that it was incompeter t, irrelevant, and immaterial. Thereupon the district attorney announced that the *217 purpose of the offer was to show that at the time of the killing, the community property of the deceased and the defendant had been awarded to the deceased. The objection was overruled, whereupon counsel for the defendant specifically objected to the reading in evidence of any portion of the decree which did not refer to and deal with the disposition of the community property. The district attorney thereupon in effect retracted his offer of the decree in evidence for the limited purpose originally stated by him, and insisted that the decree be received and read in evidence for all purposes. The trial court in effect overruled the last objection of counsel for the defendant by directing the district attorney to read the entire decree in evidence, which in part declared that it was grounded upon and granted because of the defendant’s extreme cruelty toward the deceased.

Proof of the pendency of divorce proceedings between the defendant and the deceased was admissible because it tended in a measure to show the state of feeling existing between the defendant and the deceased at and prior to the homicide; but the ruling of the trial court admitting the divorce decree in evidence for all purposes was error (1 Michie on Homicide, 705, sec. 165, 2bb; 6 Ency. of Evidence, 718; State v. Zellers, 7 N. J. L. 220; Monroe v. State, 5 Ga. 85; Binns v. State, 46 Ind. 311; Binns v. State, 57 Ind. 46, [26 Am. Rep. 48] ; Pinckord v. State, 13 Tex. App. 468; Hedger v. State, 144 Wis. 279, [128 N. W. 8.0]). The ruling, however, was without prejudice to the defendant. While the reading in evidence of that portion of the decree which declared that the defendant had been guilty of extreme cruelty toward the deceased might have suggested to the jury, as counsel for the defendant contends, that the defendant had been in the habit of inflicting physical violence upon the deceased, nevertheless the defendant could not have been harmed by such suggestion because, as the record shows, there was an abundance of other uncontradicted evidence to the effect that the defendant had been guilty of repeated acts of physical cruelty and brutality toward the deceased.

There was no error in the ruling of the trial court which permitted the child witness, Almond Holloway, Jr., to bo sworn and testify, over the objection of the defendant, as a witness for the people. Upon the objection of the defendant that the child was of such a tender age at the time of the *218 homicide as to be incapable of receiving and retaining just impressions of the facts concerning which he would be called upon to give evidence, he was subjected to a searching examination by the trial court and by counsel for the defendant as to his competency generally to be a witness, and that examination showed, we think, not only that he knew the difference between truth and falsehood and appreciated the moral obligation to speak the truth, but that his powers of observation, memory, and expression were developed to a degree which justified the trial court in permitting him to be a witness. The burden of showing the incompetency of the child as a witness within the meaning of section 1880 of the Code of Civil Procedure, was upon the defendant; and in the absence of an affirmative showing of an abuse of discretion the determination of the trial court as to the competency of the witness is conclusive upon us.

These observations apply with equal force to the objection that the trial court abused its discretion in permitting the child witness Frances Virginia Gray to testify for the people.

Conceding that certain questions propounded to the witness Alice B.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Gregory
225 P.2d 1059 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1950)
State v. Hughes
125 S.W.2d 66 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1939)
People v. McNeer
57 P.2d 1018 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)
People v. Bolton
8 P.2d 116 (California Supreme Court, 1932)
People v. Stewart
288 P. 57 (California Court of Appeal, 1930)
People v. Khan
268 P. 701 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
People v. Gasser
168 P. 157 (California Court of Appeal, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 P. 975, 28 Cal. App. 214, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-holloway-calctapp-1915.