People v. Johnson

234 P.2d 116, 105 Cal. App. 2d 478, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1496
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 17, 1951
DocketCrim. 2715
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 234 P.2d 116 (People v. Johnson) 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. Johnson, 234 P.2d 116, 105 Cal. App. 2d 478, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1496 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

Appellant, charged with the murder of his wife, pleaded not guilty and was convicted by a jury of murder of the second degree. The appeal is from the judgment and the order denying a new trial.

Appellant and his wife lived in a three-room apartment numbered 2-C on the second floor of an apartment building on Taft Avenue in Richmond, California. Mrs. Johnson died in the bedroom thereof somewhere between 10 and 11 o ’clock on the evening of March 14, 1950, from a gunshot wound produced by a .22 caliber rifle. The officers arrived after she had expired, and appellant was taken into custody then and there.

The verdict rests on circumstantial evidence and on extrajudicial statements of the appellant.

*480 An adult son of the Johnsons visited them on that evening, from about 8:50 to about 9:40. The subject of the conversation between the three persons does not appear; nobody else was present. Shortly after the son departed, appellant left the apartment, visited neighbors - living around the corner, and returned to the apartment shortly after 10 o’clock.

The witness Clifford E. Burns, who lived on the first floor of the same building, testified that on arriving home at about 10:08 or 10:10 he saw appellant at the foot of the stairway, apparently on his way upstairs.

The witness, Ruth N. Austin, a housewife living on the first floor directly beneath the Johnsons’ apartment, testified that after retiring she heard a scream and then heard someone say “ ‘No Ernest, no, don’t, don’t,’ something to that effect. Then, I heard another scream and a thud.” The thud she placed at “probably 10:20 or 10:25.” She “sat up trying to think where it could come from, thinking it might be a little girl 'in the back” and then heard walking back and forth directly overhead in the Johnson apartment which, she judged, lasted about 15 minutes, or until about 10:40. Then she heard someone walk to the door, and the door opened and shut, “and somebody come downstairs and I heard a knock at the door” of the next apartment [the Graceys’] and then she heard appellant’s voice. Later she heard people going upstairs from the Graceys’ apartment. At the time of the screams, the outcry, and the thud she heard no man’s voice.

The witness Nancy Láwson, a housewife, lived on the second floor, next door to the Johnsons. She had retired at 9:30. She testified that she was awakened (but could not fix the time), and “the first I heard was Mrs. Johnson’s voice pleading ‘Ernest don’t, Ernest, don’t’ . . . And then I heard her scream— ... I ran to the front of the house to see if anyone had heard anything, and then I went and knocked on Mr. Johnson’s door. ’’ She apparently got no response, and started to go back to bed when someone knocked. She asked who was there. “And they said Johnson, and I told him to get away from my door. And he went down stairs.” Later appellant said to her ‘1 Come on over, Nancy ... Go on in and see Lou.” She did so and found her on the floor. When the witness asked her what had happened she did not at first answer but later “ . . . She told me she was shot, she was dying.” “I asked Mr. Johnson what he hit her with, and he said he didn’t hit her. ’ ’

The witness, Everett L. Gracey, whose apartment was on *481 the first floor of the building, testified to having heard a “deep thud” at approximately 10:20, coming from upstairs toward the rear of the apartment, and that when they (he, his wife, and their guests) heard it, they stopped and exclaimed about it “because it was louder than usual.’’

The witness Reuben Brehm and his wife were visiting the Graeeys. He testified that “we noticed a thud ... It appeared to come from overhead.” It was “approximately 10:20 or 10:25.”

Mrs. Brehm testified that they heard loud noises—a heavy noise on the floor which appeared to come from upstairs.

None of these witnesses heard the report of any shot.

Inspector Grimes identified the .22 caliber rifle which he found on the top bunk of a double-bunk sleeping arrangement in the room where decedent’s body lay on the floor. He also identified the cartridge casing and the spent bullet which Officer Lee found. He testified that he examined Mrs. Johnson’s clothing for powder burns but found none. His examination was by the naked eye, not by microscope.

Officer Lee testified to finding the spent .22 slug on the floor “Laying to the back of the body.” He also found a .22 shell which had not been fired, lying on the bed.

The rifle had belonged to appellant for some years.

The foregoing sums up the circumstantial evidence produced by the prosecution. We interrupt the narration of facts to point out that up to this point there has been no narration of any testimony respecting appellant’s admissions. While Mrs. Lawson was testifying, defense counsel called attention to the fact that the corpus delicti had not been proved. The court halted proceedings until the autopsy surgeon could attend, and he testified as to the cause of death and gave his findings. Thus the usual order of proof was observed and no testimony was offered respecting extrajudicial admissions until after prima facie proof of the corpus delicti had been made.

Somewhere around 10:30 p.m. appellant left his apartment and went downstairs. The witness Gracey testified that appellant came to his apartment and was rather nervous and fidgety. He sat down on the edge of the couch and said “My wife is upstairs dying. Call an ambulance, and help me.” Brehm exclaimed “What—you shot her?” and he said “Yes.” Gracey and Brehm then went upstairs to investigate and *482 found Mrs. Johnson lying on the floor between the bed and the wall. The witness did not remember appellant saying “I shot her, she forced me to do it. I had to do it” but testified that he did hear him say “I shot her.” He fixed the time of the conversation at approximately 10:35. Appellant was in the Gracey apartment from five to ten minutes, according to this witness, before they went upstairs. When they did so Mrs. Johnson was still alive; it was then approximately 10:45. He estimated the time of death at about 11 o’clock.

Mrs. Gracey placed appellant’s appearance at their apartment at about 10:15 or 10:20, but was not sure. She testified that he said 1 ‘ I shot my wife. She is dying; call the ambulance . . . but not the police.” When Gracey and Brehm went upstairs appellant tarried momentarily and after they left he said to Mrs. Gracey “Don’t get nervous, I didn’t do it.”

Mrs. Brehm fixed the time when appellant came to the Gracey apartment at approximately 10:30. She testified that he said “ ‘My wife is dying, I shot her.’ And then he said, ‘She forced me to shoot her.’ And as he was leaving, he said, ‘ I didn’t shoot her. ’ ”

- The witness Brehm testified that appellant “came in and sat on the edge of the chesterfield, and said, ‘My wife is upstairs dying, I had to shoot her. ’ . . . I then asked him what he meant by shoot, and he said ‘ She forced me to do it; I had to shoot and fast.’ ” Then after a few seconds he said ‘You had better get an ambulance, or do something for her.’ ” He estimated that it was about five minutes before he and Gracey went upstairs, about 10:35 or 10:40. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 P.2d 116, 105 Cal. App. 2d 478, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-johnson-calctapp-1951.