People v. King

90 P.2d 291, 13 Cal. 2d 521, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 272
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1939
DocketCrim. 4219
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 90 P.2d 291 (People v. King) 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. King, 90 P.2d 291, 13 Cal. 2d 521, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 272 (Cal. 1939).

Opinion

THE COURT.

In an amended indictment returned by the grand jury of Fresno County, the defendants were jointly charged with the crimes of murder and robbery, each offense being separately stated. The defendant Anderson was also *523 charged with having suffered a prior conviction of felony in the state of Nevada in 1936, for which he served a term of imprisonment. Bach defendant entered a plea of not guilty to both counts. Defendant Anderson admitted the prior conviction. Subsequently, the defendants withdrew their pleas to the robbery count and entered pleas of guilty thereto, the degree of which was fixed by the trial court as of the first. At the conclusion of the trial, verdicts were returned by the jury finding each defendant guilty of murder of the first degree without recommendation. Judgments were accordingly entered imposing the death penalty upon the defendants. The cause comes before us on appeals from the judgments and the orders denying a new trial.

The facts surrounding the commission of the robbery and murder are simple of statement and free of dispute. It appears that the defendants had been friends for a period of several years and for a few months prior to the perpetration of the crimes here involved they had roomed together in the city of Fresno, where, by their own admission, they had jointly participated in a series of thefts and robberies culminating in the robbery and murder of one G-. B. Ward at approximately 10:30 P. M. on July 17, 1938. Defendants freely admitted in confessions made by them prior to trial and when on the witness stand in their own defense, that as the victim Ward brought his automobile to a stop in response to an automatic traffic signal at an intersection of two streets in the city of Fresno, they stepped from the curb where they had been standing and forcibly entered the victim’s ear. Defendant Anderson, flourishing a loaded gun in the victim’s face, opened and entered the right door of the car while the defendant King went around the rear of the car and opened and entered the left door. Ward was pushed over between them on the seat and the defendant King immediately took over the operation of the ear. Almost simultaneous with Anderson’s entry of the car the gun held by him belched forth several shots, five of which entered Ward’s body and according to medical testimony, caused his demise shortly thereafter. Upon entering the car and shooting its operator, the defendants, wdth King at the wheel, drove the car some distance, robbed the victim of seventy dollars, which they admittedly divided, removed the victim from the car, and then proceeded on to another point where they abandoned the vehicle. Anderson was later apprehended in Las *524 Vegas, Nevada, and King was subsequently taken into custody in Provo, Utah.

The presence of several persons at or near the intersection where the defendants entered Ward’s ear and shot him did not deter them in the carrying out of their admittedly prearranged plan to forcibly enter an automobile. These persons testified as prosecution witnesses. The testimony shows and the defendant King admits that he had purchased the gun about one month prior to the homicide. It had been used by them in their earlier thefts and robberies, each having apparently indiscriminately carried it. On cross-examination, the defendant Anderson testified that as he entered Ward’s car he “told him this was a hold up.” To more fully state the facts would add nothing to this opinion for it must now definitely appear that the confessed and admitted homicide was perpetrated in the commission of a robbery, and, under the provisions of section 189 of the Penal Code, can be designated only as murder of the first degree. We therefore direct our attention to the contentions of the defendants that certain alleged errors occurring during the conduct of the trial served either to deny them a fair trial or to prejudice them before the jury. The defendants have filed separate briefs but such of the contentions as are common to both shall, of course, receive joint attention.

Both defendants urge that the trial court erred in refusing to give an instruction upon murder of the second degree. They concede that the refusal of the court below “was based upon the premise that the evidence conclusively disclosed that the homicide was committed in the commission or the attempt to commit the crime of robbery, and was therefore murder in the first degree or nothing”. As already indicated, we are in accord with this asserted ‘ premise” of the trial court and we cannot accept the defendants’ theory that they were not engaged in a robbery or attempted robbery for the reason that the shooting preceded by a short interval of time the actual taking of the money from the person of the victim. The facts above stated clearly disclose that the shooting was simultaneous with the forcible entry and assumption of possession of the victim’s car which, in turn, constituted but one of the preliminary steps in the consummation of the “hold up” or robbery which one of the defendants announced to the victim as they entered his. qar, In Other words, the forcible entry of the ear and the *525 shooting were the initial overt acts in the actual perpetration of an admittedly preconceived “hold up” of any person who might be unfortunate enough to happen along. However, even if the defendants had terminated their plan after entering the car and shooting its operator and thereafter had made no effort to take his money, the homicide would still constitute murder of the first degree because committed in an attempt to perpetrate a robbery. (Sec. 189, supra; People v. Anderson, 1 Cal. (2d) 687, 689 [37 Pac. (2d) 67].) There was no occasion in this case for the giving of an instruction on murder of the second degree and the contention of defendants is wholly lacking in merit.

Both defendants complain of an instruction which, in effect, told the jury that in the event it returned a verdict of murder of the first degree and found “some extenuating fact or circumstance in the case” it could in its discretion relieve the defendants, or either of them, from the extreme penalty of the law but that such discretion was “not an arbitrary one” and should not be exercised in the absence of “some extenuating fact or circumstance”. It is now urged, as it has been on many other occasions, that section 190 of the Penal Code does not limit the right of the jury to fix the punishment at life imprisonment to those cases wherein extenuating circumstances appear but that, on the contrary, the jury is free to prescribe such punishment, in its discretion, in any and all eases. Though perhaps not in literal compliance with the provisions of section 190, supra, the instruction is practically identical with one given in People v. Rogers, 163 Cal. 476, 483 [126 Pac. 143], in which ease it was held that “The law of this state thus appears to be thoroughly settled to the effect that the instruction in question is not erroneous”. On many occasions the giving of a similar instruction has been held not to constitute error. (People v. Bawden, 90 Cal. 195 [27 Pac. 204]; People v. Casade, 194 Cal. 679, 682 [230 Pac. 9] ; People v. Harris, 219 Cal. 727, 733 [28 Pac. (2d) 906] ; People v. Goodwin, 9 Cal. (2d) 711, 715 [72 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P.2d 291, 13 Cal. 2d 521, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-king-cal-1939.