People v. Jones

288 P.2d 544, 136 Cal. App. 2d 175, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1467
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 13, 1955
DocketCrim. 2602
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 288 P.2d 544 (People v. Jones) 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. Jones, 288 P.2d 544, 136 Cal. App. 2d 175, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1467 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, P. J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment based upon a verdict by which a trial jury found him guilty of the charge of murder in the first degree with the penalty fixed at life imprisonment. On motion for new trial the court modified the verdict by reducing the degree to second. The People have not appealed.

Defendant-appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to justify a conviction of second degree murder; that the court committed prejudicial error in the refusal of a requested instruction and in the rejection of evidence; and that the district attorney was guilty of such misconduct that the judgment ought to be reversed therefor. In order to pass upon these assignments of error it is necessary to state the evidence somewhat fully.

Appellant was boarding at the home of Marguerite Bivens, paying $20 a month room rent and supplying funds in various amounts for living expenses of the two. Mrs. Bivens was a widow, her husband having died after appellant came to room and board with the pair. Appellant and Mrs. Bivens had occasionally quarreled and sometimes these quarrels were bitter. He worked as a laborer. He was 54 years of age when he killed Mrs. Bivens. He had little education, was illiterate and the court-appointed expert pronounced him to be a simple *178 ton. He said appellant could count from 1 to 10, but could not count from 10 to 1 backwards, could not subtract and gave other signs of low mentality; that his memory was very hazy; that when the witness asked him who his attorney was, naming one of his court-appointed counsel, appellant said he had never seen him before and wasn’t sure about the names of his counsel; that he was nervous and excitable, but slow to get angry, and was inclined to agree with everybody; that his mental level was about 6th grade; that his reflexes were sluggish, which the expert attributed to his low intelligence; that he was quite open to suggestion and the expert gave this example: that if you stated it is now 10 o ’clock on an Easter morning he would agree with you; that he had sufficient intelligence to form the intent to kill somebody and to commit premeditated murder; that being a simpleton he would say things he didn’t mean and sometimes contradict himself without meaning to do so; that for him to answer a question took a lot of premeditation and on most of the questions the expert had asked him he wouldn’t have any idea what the expert was talking about, would answer yes or no and if brought back to the subject a few minutes later would not recognize it as the same subject matter.

A Mrs. Beasley, who had long lived across the street from the home of Mrs. Bivens and who knew her well, testified that she met Mrs. Bivens a short time before the killing occurred and went into her house with her. There she saw appellant, and a man unknown to her and who was not a witness at the trial, sitting in the living room of Mrs. Bivens’ four-room cottage. They were watching television. The two women went into the kitchen and Mrs. Bivens called appellant who went to her and started talking with her. After some talk both went into the back bedroom where they continued to talk, but were now using bad language. The witness said “when it got so hot I left . . . the kitchen and went into the back bedroom where they both were. ’ ’ She tried to quiet the two, but couldn’t stop them. Mrs. Bivens told appellant she wanted him to leave the house and get out, that she was tired of him coming in “full of wine” and “raising hell.” He replied that he did not raise any more hell than did Mrs. Bivens, that she came in at 3 or 4 o’clock in the morning full of wine and he made no protest. She replied it was her house and she could come and go as she pleased. Then said the witness: “He called her a bad name and she rushed through, the hall.” The witness moved back into the living room. The other man *179 was gone. Through an intervening door she saw Mrs. Bivens go to a dresser in her bedroom, pull the drawer out and get a package which was wrapped in a white cloth of some kind. At that point she hurried from the house. She said she expected something bad to happen. She heard a shot and in five or six seconds she heard three more fired in rapid succession. The argument between appellant and Mrs. Bivens was described by the witness as being very loud. She said they were shouting at each other, using bad language and that while she didn’t run from the house she wanted to get out as quickly as she could for fear of what was going to happen. (It may be said here it is not disputed that the object Mrs. Bivens took from her dresser drawer was a revolver in its scabbard, the whole wrapped in a white cloth. She was killed by shots from this gun.) Aside from the foregoing, the only direct testimony as to the homicide by an eyewitness was that of appellant himself. His testimony on direct examination follows: He came to California in 1951 and moved directly to Oroville, where he had lived since. After rooming around at various private homes he went to the Bivens home where he stayed two years and up to the time of the homicide. He and the Bivenses were good friends. Although merely a roomer and boarder, he occasionally bought food for the household and helped in every way he could. After Mr. Bivens died he stayed on as roomer and boarder. He continued buying some groceries, spending all he had on room rent and food for the household. He bought a television set in Mrs. Bivens’ name, but he wanted it to entertain his friends. He had quarrels with Mrs. Bivens after her husband died; both she and her daughter “jumped on” him. She sometimes threatened to 11 fill me full of lead, ’ ’ but he paid no attention to that. She had sometimes got the gun and threatened him and he would just walk away. Every other time but the last when Mrs. Bivens had threatened him with the gun he had been in a position where he could run away. Appellant testified further, without objection, that he had never in his life been in trouble with the police, never had been picked up for any crime, never had been questioned for any crime, never had a traffic ticket and that his record was completely clean. He said that on the morning of the homicide he went to the Union Hall to see about work, stayed there about an hour, went back to the Bivens cottage, cut some grass and then went to a neighbor’s house where he and three other men in the course of several hours drank one-fifth of wine. On his *180 way to the neighbor’s he met Mrs. Bivens who asked him where he had been. He told her he had been out to the Union Hall, but had not gotten any work. She then said: “I am going to fill your rump with lead.” He laughed and said “I know what you mean by that” and kept walking. She had said things like that before. He thought nothing of it. He returned home about 6 o’clock with the man that Mrs. Beasley saw with him and sat down to watch television. When Mrs. Bivens came in she called him and he went to where she was. She said, “You are drunk” and he said, “Drunk with what? You ought to be the last person to say about drunk. ’ ’ She said “I am going to fill your rump with lead” and he said “Uh-huh” and thought no more about it until she came in with the pistol. He knew then she was going to shoot him, but was afraid to run because “by running she’d shoot me sure as the world.” He was sitting down, she had the gun in her hand; it wasn’t wrapped up. We quote the following from the transcript: “Q. Do you remember the discussion that you had with her before she got the gun? A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 P.2d 544, 136 Cal. App. 2d 175, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-jones-calctapp-1955.