People v. Hong Ah Duck

61 Cal. 387, 1882 Cal. LEXIS 631
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 1882
DocketNo. 10,673
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 61 Cal. 387 (People v. Hong Ah Duck) 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. Hong Ah Duck, 61 Cal. 387, 1882 Cal. LEXIS 631 (Cal. 1882).

Opinion

Morrison C. J:

The defendant was prosecuted by information for the crime of murder, and was convicted of that crime in the first degree. The jury failed to fix the punishment, and sentence of death was passed on him by the Court. The record presents a great many exceptions taken to the rulings of the Court, during the progress of the trial, and also several exceptions relating to [389]*389instructions given and refused, which we will notice in the order in which they are presented.

But the first point in the case relates to the sufficiency of the information. It fails to state the means by which the defendant took the life of Ah Mow, the deceased-whether the homicide was perpetrated by shooting, stabbing, poisoning or otherwise. In all other respects the information is sufficiently certain, and clearly charges an act of murder in the first degree. The question then arises, is it necessary for the pleading, whether it be an indictment or an information, to set forth and describe the weapon used and the wound inflicted, or the other means employed to take human life ? This question has been considered in several cases in this State, and in all of them it has received a negative answer. The question of the sufficiency of an indictment under our Criminal Code was fully considered by Sanderson, C. J., in the case of People v. King, 27 Cal. 511; and it is there said: “Under the pretense of informing the defendant of the nature of the charge against which he was called upon to defend, it was necessary at the ancient common law, to describe the means by which the homicide was committed and the nature and extent of the wound and its precise locality; from which it necessarily followed that a trifling variance between the proof and the allegation frequently defeated a conviction, no matter how manifest the guilt of the defendant. It was a long time before legislators and Judges discovered that this rule had nothing but the most flimsy pretext to support it. If the defendant is guilty, he stands in need of no information to be derived from a perusal of the indictment, as to the means used by him in committing the act, or the manner in which it was done, for, as to both, his own knowledge is quite as reliable as any statements contained in the indictment. If he is not guilty, the information could not aid in the preparation of his defense.” The learned Judge then proceeds to discuss the relaxation of the common law rule, and to show what is necessary for an indictment to contain under the new system of rules introduced by the Criminal Code.

The case of The People v. Cronin, 34 Cal. 191, is to the same effect, and it was there held that an indictment charging the homicide to have been committed “ by some means, [390]*390instruments, and weapons to the Grand Jury unknown,” was sufficient. The doctrine of the Cronin Case is sustained by the later case of The People v. Martin, 47 id. 101, and we see no good reason for rejecting it at this late day. Section 960 of the Penal Code declares that no indictment or information is insufficient * * by reason, of any defect or imperfection in matter of form, which does not tend to the prejudice of a substantial right of the defendant, upon its merits.” We are of the opinion that the information substantially conforms to the requirements of the Code, and that the demurrer thereto was properly overruled.

2. The second question in the case relates to the admission in evidence of certain threats made by the defendant against the deceased. The witness testified that the defendant held up a dead chicken in his right hand and said: “If I don’t kill Áh Mow, I am dead like this chicken.” The witness does not state the precise time when this threat was made, but simply says, “ I could not tell the exact date—about a month before he killed Ah Mow.”

We do not understand upon what principle of law such evidence could he considered incompetent; and that it was clearly admissible might be shown by a large number of adjudged cases. The testimony as to the threats made by the defendant was competent, notwithstanding they were made a long time prior to the commission of the homicide. Testimony of that character was admissible for the purpose of showing malice; and its competency is unaffected by the lapse of time,- though its weight may be impaired.” (People v. Cronin, supra, and cases referred to therein.)

3. An effort was made on behalf of the defense to show that a certain Chinaman of the name of Ah Pon was known by the name of China Tom, and also by another opprobrious name. Objection was made to the evidence by the prosecution, and the objection was sustained by the Court. It does not appear to us what the object of the defense was in seeking to get the evidence before the jury, and we cannot see what bearing it had upon the case. It was properly excluded.

4. One Thompson was called as a witness on behalf of the prosecution, and was asked to describe a wound which he saw on the hand of the deceased. To this question objection was [391]*391made by the defense on the ground that the witness was not an expert. It was not necessary that he should have been an expert in the matter of wounds. He was simply asked to describe a wound inflicted by a knife on the hand of the deceased, which wound, he, the witness, saw, and there was no legal objection to his describing it.

5. The bloody shirt of the deceased was offered in evidence by the prosecution, against defendant’s objection. It is a practice, not at all uncommon, to offer in evidence the bloody clothing worn by the deceased at the time of the homicide, and sometimes it may be important evidence in the case, as a part of the res gestee.

6. We now come to a point in the case upon which serious doubts were entertained by us for a time, but after examination and reflection, we have been enabled to arrive at a satisfactory conclusion respecting it. It had already appeared in the case that both the defendant and the deceased were inmates of the State Prison; that upon the day of the homicide the defendant had been engaged in the performance of a certain labor task, imposed upon him in company with other convicts; that the term of service of the deceased had nearly expired—but what the term of defendant’s sentence was had not appeared. The prosecution then offered to show that the defendant was a life-long convict; to the introduction of evidence on this point, defendant, by his counsel, objected. A very lengthy argument then ensued, for and against the introduction of the evidence, and the result was a decision of the Court below in favor of its competency. This ruling is assigned as error.

The evidence was not offered as affecting in any manner the question of defendant’s guilt; such a purpose was disclaimed by the prosecution, and was clearly guarded against by instructions of the Court to the jury. The object of the evidence was simply to give the jury to understand that if they found the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree, ancl fixed his punishment at imprisonment for life (which they could'do under the provisions of the Penal Code), there would be no addition to the punishment to which the defendant was already condemned, under a former conviction. The Court instructed the jury that they could not find the defendant [392]

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Bluebook (online)
61 Cal. 387, 1882 Cal. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hong-ah-duck-cal-1882.