People v. Lanzit

233 P. 816, 70 Cal. App. 498, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 19
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 2, 1925
DocketDocket No. 1130.
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 233 P. 816 (People v. Lanzit) 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. Lanzit, 233 P. 816, 70 Cal. App. 498, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 19 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

Defendant was charged with an attempt to murder his wife. From a judgment of conviction *501 and from an order denying Mm a new trial he appeals to this court. As his main ground for the appeal he claims that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict.

There is evidence to show the following: On March 13, 1924, defendant’s wife owned and conducted a restaurant known as the Boyal Barbecue, on Washington Boulevard not far from the city of Venice, in the county of Los Angeles. Her brother and likewise her mother lived in Venice. There was a bedroom in the Boyal Barbecue in which defendant’s wife customarily slept. Immediately in the rear of this bedroom is a toilet. It was in this toilet that defendant and a man of the name of Woodhead, sometimes referred to by defendant as Tate, on the night of March 13, 1924, were about to place a bomb, when they were seized- and arrested by officers of the law. Defendant and his wife had been married but a short time prior to this occurrence. In the month of February and in the early part of March, 1924, defendant, who had quarreled with his wife shortly after their marriage and had left Los Angeles County; was operating a restaurant or lunch-stánd in Ventura County. It was there that he met Woodhead, who was experienced in the handling of explosives, and who was the principal witness for the prosecution. At no time did Woodhead intend carrying out defendant’s scheme to murder his wife; instead it was his purpose to turn defendant over to the authorities before any killing was actually accomplished. The pith of Wood-head’s testimony, reduced to narrative form, is substantially as follows: I first met defendant on February 3, 1924, at the restaurant which he was then running in Ventura County. I met him at the same place a week later. He told me that he had had family troubles and that he Avould like to put his wife out of the way. I mentioned dynamite and. told him that things like that had happened before. In one of our conversations he told me that a few weeks previously he had unsuccessfully tried to poison his wife. When I mentioned dynamite he said, “I think you are the man that can put her out of the way. She has a brother and I want him out of the Avay by all means.” I knew that if he could not get me to blow up his wife and her family it was his intention to get someone else to do it. I was trying all the time to find out whether he was going to dynamite his wife or poison her or what he was going to do. I saw defendant again on February 11th at the same *502 place. On that day he said to me, “I am nearly sure this thing can be pulled off, you using dynamite. I think you can pull the job off for me.” I said, “All right, if that is the case we will see how we can fix plans.” He said, “There is a lot of money in this. My wife’s brother is very wealthy. I would like to have my wife’s mother out of the way. I would like to kill her first; there are five in the family, and my wife will get a fifth share. Then we will plan to put my wife out of the way. Then the whole bulk will come to me.” He figured that there would be somewhere near one hundred thousand dollars. On February 13th I again saw defendant at his restaurant. I told him I had been using dynamite on some work that I was doing nearby and showed him three sticks of the stuff. He said, ‘ ‘ This is just the thing. I will fix you pretty well for this if you can pull the job off. I am going to sell out my restaurant on the first of March and then we will go down to Los Angeles and make the final arrangements. ’ ’ The next day he wanted to know whether I could go to his wife’s restaurant near Venice in Los Angeles County, look it over and get the lay of the land. He told me he would like to have me put the dynamite in the oven of the Royal Barbecue. He said, “It is easy.” I said, “Such things like this are not so easy. They have to be planned carefully, to take life like that.” He showed me a photograph of his wife’s restaurant. He drew a diagram of the place showing where the oven was. He said, “I want you to put it there, because my wife sits at the cash register nearly all the time and the best time to get her will be 9 o’clock in the morning, because then the cook is not on duty.” Upon another occasion, before going to Los Angeles, defendant and I experimented with dynamite. I showed him how a detonator works. We timed it. He said it went off too soon—that it would not allow sufficient time to get away. He said, “I think my wife has a gasoline tank just back of the oven in the Royal Barbecue. You can go down there with a bomb, and if that does not get them you can set the gasoline going and empty the gasoline out of the can and string it all the way around the house. ’ ’ Then he showed me with a rag saturated with gasoline how to make a ring of fire around the house. Defendant sold his restaurant on-March 3d, and on the 5th or 6th of that month we came to Los Angeles. On the 8th of March defendant took me to Venice and pointed out to *503 me his mother-in-law’s house. He took me under the house and showed me the spot which he thought would be the best place to plant a bomb. On the 11th of March I went to see defendant’s mother-in-law at her house in Venice. I told her of the plot. She sent for her daughter. I told them what defendant intended to do. They brought me to the district attorney’s office. There I told a deputy district attorney about the case. Through him I met two deputy sheriffs who instructed me to go ahead and prepare a dynamite bomb. Before coming to Los Angeles nothing had been said by the defendant and myself about blowing up the house otherwise than by putting dynamite in the oven of the Royal Barbecue. On the 13th of March defendant met me at my hotel room in the city of Los Angeles. I told him I had got a real proper bomb, clock, and dry battery, sticks of dynamite, wire and everything attached. He said, “That is fine. Are you sure it will work?” I told him it would. He said, “I want you to kill my wife, kill all of them. I want you to go to my wife’s place at 7 o’clock this evening and meet me in front of her place and bring the bomb with you.” He said he would give me two or three thousand dollars for the job. I met him shortly after 7 o’clock that evening as we had agreed. He conducted me to the rear of the Royal Barbecue, near his wife’s bedroom. We came to an outbuilding where the cook lives. I was carrying the bomb. Defendant said, “I want this job done and I want you to get it done sharp. Can you fix the bomb to go off at 3 o’clock in the morning?” I said I could, but that I would have to pull the detonator out. I told him that monkeying with bombs is not a good thing, but that I would wind the clock up and put the alarm on so it would go off at the time he wanted it to. He then brought me back to the toilet immediately in the rear of his wife’s bedroom. He told me that his wife had gone to a show but that she probably would be back about 9 or 10 o’clock in the evening. He said, “According to what I heard my wife say they are all [defendant’s wife, mother-in-law, and brother-in-law] going to sleep here in my wife’s place, the Royal Barbecue to-night. So I want you to get this bomb properly timed. Fix it for 3 o ’clock in the morning.” I set it for 3 o’clock in the morning as he told me to. He said, “This is my wife’s bedroom here.” I had opened up the box containing the bomb and had taken out *504 the detonator. I told defendant to light a match for me so I could see to fix the detonator.

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Bluebook (online)
233 P. 816, 70 Cal. App. 498, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lanzit-calctapp-1925.