People v. Kermott

91 P.2d 215, 33 Cal. App. 2d 236, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 215
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 7, 1939
DocketCrim. No. 384
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 91 P.2d 215 (People v. Kermott) 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. Kermott, 91 P.2d 215, 33 Cal. App. 2d 236, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 215 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

The appellant was charged with the murder of his brother, James C. Kermott. A jury found him guilty of manslaughter and he appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The appellant lived on a two-acre tract north of the city of Upland, the house being about 80 feet back from the road and some 500 feet from the nearest other residence. There were a number of trees and shrubs to the east and south of the house, which faced in an easterly direction. On the evening of November 30, 1938, the appellant was playing cards with his wife and his wife’s father and mother. At about 10 o’clock his wife went to the bathroom and on her return told the appellant that she had heard a noise outside of the house and requested him to go out and investigate. After waiting a few moments the appellant took a flashlight and a revolver [239]*239and went outside. He went out through a rear door and after looking around the west side of the house he passed around the north side and walked in an easterly direction across the front yard and toward the street.

Having seen nothing he started to return across the lawn toward the front door of the house. As he arrived at a point about fifteen or twenty feet from the front door he saw the figure of a man by a tree near the southeast corner of the house and some twenty feet to his left. He called out something, just what he could not remember, and immediately fired a shot at the intruder. About the time this shot was fired the man turned toward him and then started to walk easterly toward the street. The appellant followed him, firing three more shots and when he was within ten feet of him the man fell to the ground. The appellant approached and, as he testified, for the first time turned his flashlight upon the man and saw that he had shot his brother. He then entered the house and requested members of the family to call a doctor and the police, after which he went back and found that his brother had ceased breathing. When the officers arrived they found near the left hand of the deceased a sock, in the end of which had been tied a metal Chinese image. They also found footprints, similar to those which would be made by the tennis shoes worn by the deceased, along the south side of the house and near the northwest corner thereof, where the bathroom is located. The deceased’s automobile was found parked on another road about 200 feet from the appellant’s home. The appelant told them what had occurred, and on the next day he made a statement, which was taken down by a shorthand reporter, and testified at the inquest.

The deceased lived in Ontario, about nine miles from the appellant’s home. He left his home about 9 :45 P. M. on the night in question. His wife testified that the sock found near his body was one belonging to him, that she saw him put this sock in his pocket before he left home, but that she did not see the Chinese image, which was usually kept on a stand in their home. Evidence was received of ill-feeling between the brothers arising out of controversies over some books in the possession of the appellant, over some furniture which he had previously borrowed from the deceased, and over the appellant’s handling of an estate in which he was a trustee. It appears that the two brothers had met by appointment and had held a conference at a street corner near the business district [240]*240of "Upland, about 5 o’clock on the afternoon preceding the tragedy.

The appellant contends that the court erred in instructing the jury with regard to, and in submitting to it the issue of whether he was guilty of, murder, and further erred in admitting evidence concerning prior disputes and controversies between the brothers for the purpose of showing ill-will, malice and criminal intent. It is argued that it conclusively appears that the appellant did not know the identity of the intruder, and that evidence of ill-will or malice toward the brother was therefore inadmissible.

While the appellant testified and insisted at all times that he did not know that the intruder was his brother we think there was sufficient evidence to justify the submission of this issue to the jury. There was evidence that it was a rather clear night although there was a light high fog. A deputy sheriff testified that when he arrived shortly after the shooting he could distinguish between people who were known to him at a distance of 30 feet. The deceased was dressed exactly as he had been when the appellant saw him at 5 o’clock, wearing overalls, a dark blue shirt, a light gray sweater shirt, and tennis shoes. Although the appellant was carrying a large flashlight with which he said he could distinguish objects at from 70 to 75 feet, and which he had taken with him for the purpose of seeing who was there, he says he did not turn this flashlight toward the intruder until after he fell, although he followed him a considerable distance and was within 20 feet of him when he first shot. He testified that the intruder did not approach him, that he made no movement toward him with his hands, and that he walked away from him toward the road. He did say, however, that before the intruder started to walk away he turned, facing him. The bullet that killed the deceased entered his body about the middle of his chest and came out of his back. When the appellant went into the house after the shooting he said to his wife and his wife’s parents: “Somebody came up once too often. ’ ’ When the officers came and asked what had happened, he told them “I have had trouble but it was not worth this”. When asked at the inquest why he had arranged to meet the deceased at a street corner at 5 o’clock instead of asking him to come to his house, he replied: “To avoid trouble.” It is not without significance that during that interview they had quarreled over some books, a part of which [241]*241were stored in the basement of appellant’s home, which basement had an outside door, and that the deceased had said to the appellant that “he was going to get them some way or another”. There was sufficient evidence to justify an inference that the appellant knew the identity of the intruder, the murder issue was properly submitted to the jury, and the evidence of prior disputes and ill-will was admissible on the question of malice.

It is next urged that the court, having admitted evidence of prior disputes between the brothers, erred in refusing to permit the appellant to introduce certain testimony for the purpose of showing that these disputes had been settled at least six weeks before the date of the .homicide and that, therefore, any such occasion for ill-feeling, at least in so far as the appellant is concerned, had been terminated. The court rejected this evidence on the ground that the parties were not entitled to go into the merits of the previous controversies but were only entitled to go into the matter for the purpose of showing whether or not any ill-feeling existed. In our opinion, the court unduly restricted the appellant with respect to going into these matters. While some of the rulings thereon were technically correct, it clearly appears that a considerable portion of the rejected evidence went to the issue as to whether or not ill-feeling existed at the time of the shooting rather than to the merits of the prior controversies.

However, we think these errors were not prejudicial for two reasons. While it was sought by the offered evidence to show that any cause for ill-feeling between the brothers growing out of these matters had been terminated, the testimony of the appellant himself discloses that as a matter of fact such feeling still existed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 P.2d 215, 33 Cal. App. 2d 236, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kermott-calctapp-1939.