People v. Jo Fong

210 P. 548, 59 Cal. App. 259, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 77
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 30, 1922
DocketCrim. No. 601.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 210 P. 548 (People v. Jo Fong) 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. Jo Fong, 210 P. 548, 59 Cal. App. 259, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 77 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HART, J.

The appellants and one Fred Fong were jointly informed against by the district attorney of Yuba County, in the superior court of said county, for the crime of murder, alleged to have been committed on the thirtieth day of July, 1921, and were jointly tried under said information. At the conclusion of the talcing of the testimony on behalf of the people, the information, in *262 so far as it concerned Fred Fong, was dismissed and said defendant discharged, The jury found each of the other defendants guilty of murder of the first degree, but in each case fixed the punishment at imprisonment in the state prison for life. (Sec. 190, Pen. Code.)

Each of the defendants appeals to this court from the judgment of conviction and the order denying him a new trial. All the appeals are based upon the same record, which appears here according to the alternative method.

The party whose life is alleged to have been unlawfully taken by the defendants was a Chinese by the name of Ng Shea Wah, also known as Sing Binney. The homicide occurred at the Chong Wo Company store on the northwest corner of First and C Streets, in the city of Marysville, near the hour of 10 o’clock P. M. of July 30, 1921. The building in which the tragedy occurred is in the Chinese quarters of said city.

The defendants set up an alibi, claiming that they were not present at the scene of the shooting at the time that it occurred. A vast amount of evidence was received both against and for the defendants. It would subserve no useful purpose to enter into a detailed recapitulation herein of the testimony received. It will be sufficient to state generally the facts which the jury could well have drawn from the testimony as produced by the people and upon which, obviously, they founded their verdicts against the accused. In this connection, it may be stated that counsel for defendants in their opening brief, at the outset thereof, virtually admit that the testimony upon the question of the guilt of the defendants is in pronounced conflict, but declare that the jury would have been equally justified upon the evidence as a whole in finding the defendants not guilty as they were in reaching the conclusion which is responsible for these appeals, and that for this reason certain rulings of the court in admitting certain testimony and certain alleged misconduct by the district attorney in his argument to the jury must be' held to have been so prejudicial to the substantial rights of the accused as to require this court to declare that but for such errors a different result would have been reached as to each of the defendants. In the concluding part of their brief, however, said counsel declare, with much emphasis, that *263 “the evidence of the plaintiff [meaning the people], taken at its best, is absolutely insufficient upon which to base-verdicts of guilty against certain if not all of the defendants.” And this is the point first urged and discussed in their briefs. We may as well at this place express the opinion that, after a careful examination of the testimony, as it is presented here, there is sufficient evidence supporting the verdicts as returned, albeit it is to be conceded there is a positive and direct conflict upon this proposition between the testimony given in behalf of the people and that presented by the defendants in support of their asserted alibi.

The facts as revealed by the testimony of witnesses introduced by the people may thus be stated: The deceased and the defendants were members of rival tongs or Chinese societies, the former of the Suey Sing tong and the latter of the Hop Sing tong. The headquarters of the Marysville branch of the Hop Sing tong were in a building adjoining the store in which the deceased was killed. On the night of the 30th of July, 1921, between the hours of 9 and 10 o’clock, the sheriff of Tuba County had occasion to visit the Chinese quarters of the city of Marysville on official business. He took his seat on a bench, with two Chinese who were acquaintances of his, in front of the Hop Sing building. He remained there for about twenty or twenty-five minutes, engaged in conversation with the Chinese sitting beside him. During that time Jo Pong, one of the defendants, was seen to come from the Hop Sing tong building to the sidewalk and stand and look about for a short time and then return to the building. Jo Pong repeated this conduct some three or four different times while the sheriff was sitting on the bench in front of said building. Shortly before 10 o’clock, whether prior to or after the sheriff left the place where he had been sitting and engaged in conversation with the Chinese does not clearly appear, the deceased stepped into the store of Chong Wo, which, as we have seen, adjoins the Hop Sing building. After the sheriff had left Chinatown, Jo Pong stepped out of the Hop Sing building and went to the store of Chong Wo and looked in and thereupon retraced his steps to the Hop Sing building, went inside and immediately returned to the side *264 walk, followed by the other defendants. Tom Yu, Wong Ai, and Lee Ping took positions on the sidewalk near said store and Jo Fong and Gin Wah stepped to the door of the store and immediately began shooting at the deceased. At the time this occurred there were in the store Chin Yook, the manager, Mrs. Wy Lung, Wong Shea, and the deceased, Ng Shea Wah, who, when attacked, was engaged in counting some money which he desired and intended to deposit with Chin Yook. Some four or five shots were fired, three of which entered the body of the deceased, one passing through the upper lobe of the right lung and another entering at the juncture of the clavicle and the breast-bone and shattering “the inner end of the clavicle, the carotid and jugular vessels, and piercing the right lung and making its exit to the right three inches from the tenth dorsal vertebra.” The death of Ng Shea Wah followed almost instantly. The wounds were inflicted by Luger bullets from 9 millimeter Luger shells. Wong Shea received a bullet wound in the neck and also one in the leg,' but these wounds were not fatal. Chin Yook positively identified Jo Fong and Gin Wah as tw.o persons who entered the store together with weapons in their hands. He testified, though, that as soon as the shooting began he dropped down under the counter and that he saw Jo Fong firing his weapon but did not see Gin Wah do any shooting. Mrs. Wy Lung witnessed the shooting and testified that Jo Fong and Gin Wah did it. Immediately after the shooting ceased, Jo Fong and Gin Wah hurriedly left the store and with the revolvers still in their hands ran toward the door of the Hop Sing tong building at 113% C Street. Gin Wah was in the lead and got inside the door first. Jo Fong ran a few doors farther on and then ran back to the Hop Sing building and attempted to open the door through which Gin Wah had just previously passed, but found it locked. He thereupon, so a witness testified, ran to No. 115 C Street to the door of Hong On Wo and went in, thus disappearing from .the street.

One Wah Poon, a member of the Suey Sing tong, just before Jo Fong and Gin Wah made their appearance in the store of Chong Wo, left said store, where he had been for some minutes, and started east on C Street. Just as *265 he was about to pass Tom Yu, Lee Ping, and Wong Ai, who were standing on the sidewalk near the Chong Wo store, the sound of the shooting was heard.

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Bluebook (online)
210 P. 548, 59 Cal. App. 259, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-jo-fong-calctapp-1922.