People v. Lim Foon

155 P. 477, 29 Cal. App. 270, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 3
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 28, 1915
DocketCrim. No. 323.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 155 P. 477 (People v. Lim Foon) 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. Lim Foon, 155 P. 477, 29 Cal. App. 270, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 3 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant was convicted in the superior court of San Joaquin County of the crime of murder of the first degree, the jury fixing the penalty at imprisonment for life. (Pen. Code, sec. 190.)

This appeal is prosecuted by the defencjjant from the judgment and the order ‘denying him a new trial.

The homicide occurred in the Chinese quarters of the city of Stockton, on the seventh day of March, 1915, and the party killed was an aged Chinese by the name of Tip Suey.

There is testimony showing that the shooting resulting in the killing of Tip Suey took place a short time after the noon hour of the day mentioned; that it was witnessed by several white-men and a number of Chinese; that two Chinamen, the defendant and another, the latter not having been captured, simultaneously shot into the body of the deceased, one of the Chinamen so shooting being approximately on the right and the other likewise on the left side of their victim; that, after the shooting, both the Chinese engaged in the shooting ran from the scene thereof, the defendant going in a southerly direction and throwing the pistol with which he did the shooting on the sidewalk or street as he ran, and the other going rapidly in the opposite direction; that the defendant was pursued and ran into a building into which he was followed by some citizens and was finally apprehended near a chicken-house in the rear of the building into which he fled and which was occupied by Chinese; that, when arrested, he was freely perspiring and bore the appearance of being nervous; that, shortly thereafter, the assistant district attorney brought the *273 defendant into the presence of Yip Suey and asked the latter if he knew the Chinaman so brought before him and Yip Suey, who had previously stated that he expected to die from his wounds, declared, pointing at said Chinaman, “Yes, him man shoot me”; that Yip Suey shortly thereafter expired from the effects of his wounds; that an autoptical examination disclosed that into his body six shots had been fired, and that at least two of the wounds so produced were necessarily mortal.

The defendant at the trial claimed that he had nothing to do with the shooting, was not present at the scene of the homicide when it occurred, and, therefore, sought to establish an alibi.

It is not claimed on these appeals that the verdict is not sufficiently supported by the evidence, but it is contended that alleged errors in the rulings upon the evidence and in the action of the court in giving and in refusing to give certain instructions so seriously militated against the substantial rights of the accused at the trial as to compel a reversal of the judgment and the order. It is further insisted that the court should have granted a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence, and that its refusal so to consider and determine the effect of the showing made in that particular constituted an abuse of its discretion and, therefore, prejudicial error.

The assignments involving attacks upon the action of the court with respect to certain instructions are numerous, and some of them merit and will receive special notice.

1. The first point under this head is directed against an instruction in which the trial court described to the jury the two classes of evidence—direct and circumstantial—which are permissible in courts of justice for the proof of a disputed fact, and upon either of which, in a criminal case, a verdict of conviction may be predicated, if it measures up to the requirement of the rule in that class of cases that guilt must be established to a moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt. The particular part of said instruction to which the strictures of the defendant are confined is as follows: “There is nothing in the nature of circumstantial evidence that renders it any less reliable than other classes of evidence ; a man may as well swear falsely to an absolute knowledge of the facts as to a number of facts, if true, the fact on *274 which the guilt or innocence depends must follow.” In the same instruction, the court explained to the jury with clearness that in any case, whether the proof relied upon to establish guilt was direct or merely circumstantial, a conviction could not be justified unless such proof was such as to establish the fact of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

Instructions explaining to juries in criminal cases the distinction between direct and circumstantial evidence have often been given in substantially the same language as the one challenged here and have as often been approved by reviewing courts. (People v. Morrow, 60 Cal. 142, 144; People v. Wilder, 134 Cal. 182, 184, [66 Pac. 228]; People v. Simmons, 7 Cal. App. 559, 565, 566, [95 Pac. 48].) And such an instruction may with propriety be given in all appropriate cases, for there is a distinction between those two classes of evidence—an inherent distinction which is expressly recognized and explained by our laws (secs. 1828, 1831, and 1832, Code Civ. Proc.)—which should be explained to juries with the further explanation that the degree of proof essential to a conviction is in no sense or measure influenced by such distinction. The common notion with respect to the proofs in criminal cases is that a stronger ease should be made before a conviction is justified where, for a conviction, sole reliance is placed upon evidence of purely a circumstantial character. This is, of course, an erroneous notion, the true rule being that the degree of proof necessary to a conviction is precisely the same whether the proof relied upon for a conviction be direct or circumstantial. In other words, whatever may be the character of the evidence, whether it be the direct testimony of an eye-witness to the fact in dispute or evidence of circumstances from which the existence of the fact in dispute may be inferred, it being relevant and competent, a conviction will be justified and sustained if the guilt of the accused is shown to a moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt, and, as stated, it is with eminent propriety that the jury should be enlightened upon these important matters.

While the language above quoted from the instruction in question here, as it appears in the record, is lacking in that clearness of expression which should always characterize instructions to juries, and, indeed, is not strictly grammatical, because of the omission to have inserted in the part quoted *275 above the words, “from which,” immediately following the phrase, “as to a number of facts,” still, taken as a whole, the instruction appears to be sufficiently clear in the expression of its true meaning as not to have had the effect of misleading the jury with respect to the proposition which it was the purpose and intention to explain by it.

2. The following instruction was proposed by the defendant, but disallowed by the court: “ . . .

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Bluebook (online)
155 P. 477, 29 Cal. App. 270, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lim-foon-calctapp-1915.