People v. Kelley

140 P. 302, 24 Cal. App. 54, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 127
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 23, 1914
DocketCrim. No. 238.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 140 P. 302 (People v. Kelley) 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. Kelley, 140 P. 302, 24 Cal. App. 54, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 127 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

HART, J.

Under an information duly filed in the superior court of Humboldt County charging him with the crime of murder, the defendant was found guilty by the jury of the crime of involuntary manslaughter, and this court is asked to review the record and set aside the verdict for alleged errors of the trial court, presented here on an appeal from the judgment of conviction and the order denying the defendant a new trial.

The facts as disclosed by the record are these: At about the hour of two o’clock on the morning of May 22, 1913, the defendant shot and killed one Edward B. Schnaubelt, the homicide having occurred in the northern part of Humboldt County on property belonging to the Lagoon Lumber Company. Said company acquired said property by deed, dated December 28, 1910, from the Humboldt Shingle Company, the latter company having for many years prior to said transfer of the property maintained and operated a shingle mill thereon. While the property was owned by the last named company, the deceased was, for many years, superintendent of the shingle mill, and, with his family, resided on the premises. The deceased was finally compelled to surrender possession of and remove from the premises, but, claiming an interest in said mill and certain personal property situated on *56 the premises, he subsequently returned and again took possession of the property. Thereafter—either in the month of September or October, 1912—he was again deprived of possession and evicted from the premises by appropriate legal proceedings. At about this time, the Lagoon Lumber Company placed the defendant and one Hevener in charge of the premises, their duties being to watch the same and so prevent the wrongful taking of any of the personal property situated thereon. Kelley remained on the premises in that capacity continuously up to the time of the homicide, with the exception of a few weeks, during which time he was in a hospital, where he was required to go and remain on account of illness. Hevener was succeeded by a man named Deiser, the latter by one Bridges,, and finally one Henry Hanson was installed in the place of Bridges and remained as an assistant of the defendant up to the day on which the shooting occurred, he having witnessed that act.

Early in the month of May, 1913, the Lagoon Lumber Company sold the machinery in the shingle mill and all the personal property on . the premises to one J. P. Helms, who, shortly thereafter, sold the property so purchased to the firm of Larsen & Bell. After Kelley was placed in charge of the premises, it appears that therefrom various articles of personal property were, from time to time, surreptitiously taken or removed. Most of the property so taken was removed from the shingle mill and the blacksmith shop. Kelley and Hanson, up to the twentieth day of May, had been sleeping in a cabin which was situated on the premises at a distance, approximately, of five hundred yards from the blacksmith shop and of almost six hundred yards from the mill. Reasons existed for suspecting that the deceased and his sons —-young boys, of the ages of eleven and thirteen at the time of the homicide—had made a practice of visiting the premises at late hours of the night or the early morning hours, and taking with them from the mill and blacksmith shop such articles as they claimed belonged to the deceased. In fact, the evidence discloses that Kelley and Hanson knew of certain property having been taken from the premises by the deceased.

In the month of May, 1913, Larsen & Bell commenced the dismantling of the mill for the purpose of removing the ma *57 chinery thereof from the premises. Having been apprised of the taking of certain parts of the machinery and other personal property from the premises, Larsen, a few days before the shooting, admonished and requested Kelley and Hanson to keep stricter vigil or watchfulness than they had theretofore maintained and thus prevent persons from coming on the premises during the night-time and removing therefrom any property. In obedience to the admonition so given, Kelley and flanson, on the twentieth day of May, moved their bed from the cabin which they had been occupying as a sleeping apartment out in the open and upon the ground, at a point between and about equal distance from the shingle mill and the blacksmith shop.

Kelley had had some trouble with -Sehnaubelt and his sons over the trespassing of the stock of the.deceased upon the premises upon which the mill was located. He had also had some controversy with the deceased over the taking by the latter of certain property from said premises, both Larsen & Bell and the former claiming to be the owner thereof. During the course of the controversy referred to, Kelley requested Sehnaubelt to keep away from the premises and declared that he (Kelley) had been placed in charge of the property to keep him (deceased) away. The latter rejoined by saying that he well knew for what purpose Kelley had been put in control of the property and remarked that other watchmen had previously been placed there for the same purpose but that they did not remain there long.

Kelley had also been told by other persons that the deceased was a “dangerous man”; that he was “an anarchist and a bomb thrower,” and that he had said that he would “get those fellows,” referring to Kelley and Hanson. It further appears that Kelley was aware of trouble which the deceased had had with Deiser, who served as watchman at the premises at one time, and in the course of which the deceased took a shotgun from the possession of Deiser and carried it to his (the deceased’s) home.

Kelley and Hanson together occupied the bed which, as above explained, was placed out in the open and upon the ground. Kelley remained awake most of the night beginning, with the twentieth day of May, but nothing out of the ordinary happened or occurred on the premises during that *58 night. On the following night—May 21, 1913'—Kelley and Iianson retired at about eight o ’clock p. m., the former placing a Smith & Wesson 38-caliber revolver under his pillow. The moon was out that night, and, although an ocean fog, hanging high above the earth, prevailed, a person with ordinary eyesight could easily recognize an acquaintance a short distance from him. Shortly after retiring on the night last mentioned, both Kelley and Hanson fell into a sleep and so remained until at about the hour of two o’clock the following morning— May 22nd—when Kelley was suddenly awakened by a noise which, according to his description of it, sounded like that produced by one stumbling against some object. Upon opening his eyes, he saw the deceased approaching and then within twelve feet of his bed. He at once recognized Schnaubelt, and he thereupon uttered a loud scream and at the same instant reached for and procured his revolver and began shooting at the deceased. He emptied four, shells in firing at Schnaubelt. But one of the shots took effect in the body of the deceased, the bullet entering just below the collar bone, and taking a downward course, severing the artery leading to the heart, and lodging in the shoulder by the side of the back-bone, just under the spine. The wound thus inflicted produced almost the instant death of Schnaubelt.

Hanson testified that he was awakened by the loud, shrill outcry sent out by Kelley and the shot which was fired almost instantaneously therewith.

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Bluebook (online)
140 P. 302, 24 Cal. App. 54, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kelley-calctapp-1914.