People v. Kellogg

57 P.2d 1305, 6 Cal. 2d 448, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 534
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1936
DocketCrim. 3936
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 57 P.2d 1305 (People v. Kellogg) 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. Kellogg, 57 P.2d 1305, 6 Cal. 2d 448, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 534 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

The defendant was charged with the murder of Curtis William Hupp on June 9, 1935, in the county of Fresno, and with a prior conviction in January, 1933, in the same county, of second degree burglary, a felony, for which he served a term of imprisonment. He entered pleas of not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity to the homicide charge, but admitted the prior conviction. He subsequently withdrew his plea of not guilty by reason of insanity. He was convicted of murder of the first degree without recommendation. From the judgment imposing the death penalty and from the order denying his motion for a new trial he has appealed.

The deceased, Hupp, a white man, was last seen alive on Sunday, June 9, 1935, in the company of the defendant, a negro of about 21 years- of age. On the afternoon of that day the defendant drove Hupp in the former’s Essex automobile twice to the home of Hupp’s father-in-law, about three *450 miles northwest of Fresno, where Hupp’s wife was residing. On the first trip Hupp’s wife was not at home, but on the second trip Hupp saw and conversed with his wife. There is evidence from which the jury could believe that at that time Hupp had money on his person consisting of silver and a roll of bills at least one of which was of the denomination of ten dollars. About eight days later officers inspected the farmhouse where the defendant lived with his father and sister. They found evidence that blood on the floor of the living room, kitchen, back porch and on the ground in the rear of the house had been partially cleaned away, and that a rug or piece of carpet, a man’s hat and a gunny sack had been burned on the ground across the driveway from the house. The defendant was questioned and made five separate statements, three of which were taken down by a phonographic reporter and transcribed. All of these statements appear to have been voluntarily and freely given and without any promise of immunity. It also appears that at all times when he was examined he was fully advised of his rights and that his statements might be used against him. The three written statements were introduced in evidence. In the first the defendant related that when he came into his house alone on the afternoon on Sunday, June 9th, he saw a large cat getting at the meat on the kitchen stove; that he chased the cat around the kitchen, bedroom and living room, and killed it with a stick or bat; that the cat bled profusely and that he carried it by the tail to the rear of the house and wrapped it in burlap, put it in the back of the Essex automobile, and took it to and threw it into an irrigation ditch at Haynes Avenue and Belmont near the city of Fresno. He admitted, however, that he told his sister that he had had a fight with a man; that his sister assisted him in washing the floors and removing blood in and outside of the house, and told him to burn a blood-stained rug, which he did. There was blood on the Essex, and one of the rear side windows was broken. This was explained by the defendant’s statement that before he arrived home he drove an intoxicated man to Chinatown, and that as he turned a corner the man bumped his head against the window, breaking it, and that blood from the cuts dripped on the car.

In the second statement the defendant stated that he had had a fight at his home with a colored man by the name of *451 Clarence, which was instigated by some insulting remarks made by “Clarence” about the defendant’s sister; that the blood found on the premises issued from the cuts which “Clarence” received first from a grape knife which the defendant picked up, and then from his use of a stick or bat with which he knocked “Clarence” unconscious; that he dragged him outside and poured water on him to revive him, without success, and then becoming scared, that he wrapped him in burlap and put him, unconscious but still breathing, in the back of the Essex to take him to the hospital, but that “Clarence” revived and started to fight again, whereupon “Clarence” opened the door of the car, alighted and walked away. He admitted, however, that he had told “Jackie”, his sister’s friend, that he had had a fight with a white man. He also admitted that the story about killing the cat was not true. In this second account he stated that the automobile glass broke when he stopped the car and the fight recommenced, and that this also accounted for the blood on the car.

On June 18th the body of Curtis William Hupp was taken out of the ditch at the location hereinbefore mentioned, in the presence of the defendant, who took the officers to the spot, and who identified the corpse as the body of a man he had wrapped in burlap and thrown into the ditch on June 9th. In the third written statement, made later that day, the defendant admitted that he twice drove Hupp to the latter’s father-in-law’s residence. He stated that he had not known Hupp before that day; that the deceased offered to put some gas in the defendant’s car if he would drive him to his father-in-law’s home; that between the two trips to that place Hupp spent his last money for four bottles of beer, and that after the second trip the defendant took him to his own house, where they had some wine; that thereupon Hupp began making improper advances to the defendant which angered him; that Hupp threatened him with the grape knife and that the defendant then ran to the woodbox where he found the stick or bat; that Hupp started to fight and that he (the defendant) then hit him with the bat and “hit him pretty hard”; that Hupp fell down unconscious; that he then dragged the deceased out through the kitchen to the ground, poured water on him to revive him, but failing in this attempt, he then placed a “gunny” sack over his head, put the *452 body in the Essex, drove to the irrigation ditch and rolled the body into it; that the glass broke by the door flying open and slamming as he was driving away with the body; that he thought the man’s first name was “Clarence”, but he admitted that it might have been Curtis.

There was testimony from which the jury could conclude that when the body of Hupp was taken from the ditch a watch which he carried, was gone; that he had no money on him, and that the pockets of his clothes were turned inside out. In this last statement the defendant denied that he had searched Hupp’s pockets. The evidence is conflicting as to whether the defendant had any money on Sunday morning, but there is evidence that he was not paid his wages on Saturday night and that he admitted on Sunday morning that he had no money, although his father testified that he saw five dollars then in his possession, and his mother testified that she had given him $2.50, and there is further evidence that he received $1.80 for some work previously done. There is also evidence that on Sunday evening the defendant paid a garage bill for replacing a bearing that he had “knocked out” that day.

The defendant did not testify on his own behalf. His counsel sought to defend the charge on the theory that the defendant killed Hupp in self-defense. The defendant in his first statement said that he received a cut or scratch found on his back by scraping his back on the bedspring when he crawled under the bed in his chase after the cat. According to another account the scratch was received when “ Clarence” threw him against the bed. In the last account the wound was ascribed to the handling of the grape knife by Hupp.

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Bluebook (online)
57 P.2d 1305, 6 Cal. 2d 448, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kellogg-cal-1936.