People v. Lisenba

94 P.2d 569, 14 Cal. 2d 403, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 350
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1939
DocketCrim. 4068
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 94 P.2d 569 (People v. Lisenba) 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. Lisenba, 94 P.2d 569, 14 Cal. 2d 403, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 350 (Cal. 1939).

Opinions

THE COURT.

This cause is before this court on rehearing. In the former opinion (People v. Lisenba, (Cal.) 89 Pac. (2d) 39) every point then raised by appellant was discussed. On further consideration of this appeal, we are of the opinion that the proper conclusions were reached in said former opinion on all points then raised. We therefore adopt said opinion as a part of this opinion upon rehearing. Said former opinion follows:

“In an indictment returned by the grand jury of Los Angeles county, Major Raymond Lisenba (also known as Robert S. James and who will be referred to as the defendant), and one Charles H. Hope were jointly charged with the murder of Mary Emma James, defendant’s wife. The alleged homicide was perpetrated on or about August 5, 1935, and remained undetected for a period of several months. In fact, the indictment was not returned until May 6, 1936. Thereafter, the accomplice Hope entered a plea of guilty to the charge and at the time of defendant’s trial was awaiting sentence. He has been since sentenced to life imprisonment. Hope was the principal witness for the prosecution upon the defendant’s trial, at which trial it was the theory of the People that defendant, in league with Hope, had plotted and consummated the death of defendant’s wife for the purpose of collecting and dividing the proceeds of certain insurance policies on her life. It was also the theory of the prosecution that the homicide was perpetrated in such manner as to give the appearance of accidental death not only to allay suspicion but in order to bring into operation the double indemnity provisions of the insurance policies. In this connection, the evidence of the prosecution tends to establish that the conspirators undertook to bring about the deceased’s death by means of a deliberately inflicted poisonous rattlesnake bite on the under side of deceased’s left foot (the assumption probably being that, if fatal, such bite or laceration would appear to have been incurred in or about [407]*407the garden of her home) and that this ingenious method of destruction having proved ineffective the conspirators accomplished their objective by deliberately drowning the deceased in the bathtub of her home, whereupon her body was placed in the fish pond on the premises to further the ‘accidental’ appearance of her demise. The methods assertedly employed to bring about the deceased’s untimely death will hereinafter be more fully described upon a detailed recitation of certain of the evidence. Upon the conclusion of defendant’s trial, a verdict was returned finding him guilty of murder in the first degree, without recommendation. This appeal is from the judgment imposing the extreme penalty and from the order denying a new trial. We turn now to a discussion of pertinent evidence in the case.
“Viola and James Pemberton, husband and wife, when called by the prosecution, testified, in substance, that they had accompanied the defendant to his home on the evening of August 5, 1935, where they were to take dinner with the deceased and defendant; that upon arrival there they failed to find the decedent in the house whereupon defendant procured flashlights and suggested a search of the grounds and garden; that the defendant went to the back and James Pemberton to the front of the premises; that as the witness James Pemberton walked back through the shrubbery he saw the body of the deceased in and near the fish pond, with the upper part of the body and head (face down) submerged in the water; and that when the defendant was told of the gruesome discovery he cried and otherwise expressed his grief.
“John P. Toohey, a deputy sheriff, testified that he, in company with another deputy and in response to a summons, appeared at the scene at approximately 8:30 p. m., at which time he saw the body of the deceased near the fish pond; that at the time the head was in the water, face up (the discoverers undoubtedly having previously moved it) ; that the water was approximately 14 inches in depth; and that the body was so placed that he could see that the left leg ‘was swelled and very blue’.
“A. L. Hutchinson, also a deputy sheriff, testified that when he arrived at the scene he ‘noticed a cut on her [deceased’s] left toe, her big toe on the left foot’; that the flesh of her left leg ‘was very dark . . . and it was almost [408]*408black between the ankle and the knee, very black’; that the ‘whole [left] leg was black and blue from the ankle up to the knee and on the inside of the leg’ and was ‘some swollen’.
“Charles H. Hope, the defendant’s confessed accomplice and who at the time was awaiting sentence upon his plea of guilty to the charge of murder, testified, as the state’s principal witness, that he had known the defendant for approximately seven years; that when conversing with the defendant in the latter’s barber shop in June, 1935, the defendant asked him if he had any knowledge of rattlesnakes, to which the witness answered in the negative; that the defendant thereupon stated that he had a friend who had a wife he wanted to kill and desired rattlesnakes for the purpose, adding that if he (Hope) would ‘get me some rattlesnakes, I will give you $100’ and ‘defray all expenses’; that subsequently he (Hope) bought three rattlesnakes in Long Beach and delivered them a few evenings later to the defendant at his home; that the snakes cost $5 but the defendant paid him $20 prior to their delivery; that the defendant then had him stay at his (defendant’s) home for several days and while there had the witness go to town and have two boxes made for the snakes with sliding glass tops; that the boxes were approximately two feet long and nine inches high; that in July, 1935, he again talked with the defendant at his barber shop at which time the defendant said his friend was dissatisfied with the snakes because they were not fighters and that fighters could be procured at the Ocean Park Snake Pit; that thereafter he went with the defendant to said snake pit where the defendant conversed with the attendant and said ‘that is the one I want’; that the following day the defendant sent him to purchase the snake so designated; that the purchase was made and the snake was delivered to the defendant; that he next saw the defendant on August 3, 1935, two days prior to the homicide, at which time the defendant said that the snake was no good and that he wanted some fighters; that he (the witness) thereupon went to ‘Snake Joe’ at Pasadena and purchased two snakes which he delivered to the defendant; that the defendant said ‘his wife [the deceased] had $5000 worth of insurance and he was going to collect it’; that he went to the defendant's home on August 4, 1935, the day preceding the homicide, at which time the defendant stated that the witness was in as deep [409]

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Bluebook (online)
94 P.2d 569, 14 Cal. 2d 403, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lisenba-cal-1939.