People v. Madison

46 P.2d 159, 3 Cal. 2d 668, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 469
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1935
DocketCrim. 3826
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 46 P.2d 159 (People v. Madison) 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. Madison, 46 P.2d 159, 3 Cal. 2d 668, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 469 (Cal. 1935).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

The defendant was convicted of murder of her husband, Erie D. Madison. The jury returned a verdict of first degree murder without recommendation. The court imposed the death penalty in accordance with law. From the judgment of conviction, and from an order denying her motion for a new trial, the defendant appeals.

About 4 o’clock on Sunday afternoon, March 25, 1934, a body identified as that of Eric D. Madison was found in the room occupied by the couple in an apartment house in the city of Burbank in Los Angeles County. The evidence also showed that four out of six bullets fired from a 32-20 Colt revolver pierced the body. The shots were shown to have been fired at close range. One of them pierced the head, coming out at the corner of the left eye near the nose. Another entered the back and passed through the great aorta into the liver. Some pierced the mattress and bedding and lodged in the floor beneath the bed. Others lodged in the wall. The body of the deceased was found clad only in underwear, lying partly on the floor with the left arm over a chair. There were large blood stains on the bed linen, and the underclothing on the deceased was blood stained. The evidence satisfactorily established that the body had been dead more than twelve hours.

On the previous Friday, March 23d, about noontime, the defendant had purchased a 32-20 calibre Spanish revolver from a second-hand dealer. At the time she made this *672 purchase she stated that she and her husband were going on a trip and wanted a gun. She was shown a 25 Colt automatic which she rejected, stating she “was not used to automatics”. She signed an application for the Spanish gun, paid a deposit and returned for the gun the next day a little before noon. She received the gun and a few shells, the remains of a broken package. About noontime Saturday she took the Spanish gun to a hardware store and asked for some shells that could be fired from it. She was told that the gun would have to be repaired before it could be fired. She thereupon purchased a 32-20 calibre Colt revolver and shells. She did not have sufficient money with her to pay the bill of $31 and said she would have to get more money from her husband. About three-quarters of an hour later she returned with the money. She then explained that she and her husband wanted the gun for target practice on a week-end trip to Frazier Mountain Park and did not want to wait the required 24-hour period before she could have possession of the gun. At the store she called up the police department and asked for two persons by name, who were not available. She then went to the upstairs telephone and when she came down she reported that “Lew” had authorized her to take the gun. She left the shells for the Spanish gun at this store and departed with both guns, and shells for the Colt revolver, in her possession.

At 8 o’clock on Saturday evening the defendant sat in the lobby of the apartment house where she and her husband resided. The caretaker testified that he had a conversation with her in which he asked where her husband was. She replied in substance that he was out and might be home at 10, or 12, or 1, or 2, or not at all. That he said in a manner of “kidding”, “What, another woman?” to which she replied, “Yes, another woman”. About ten minutes past ten her husband came into the lobby, spoke to the caretaker, and then passed into their apartment without speaking to his wife. She followed him into the apartment. The record indicates that that was the last time Eric D. Madison was seen alive.

That night about fifteen minutes to 12 loud, sharp noises or “cracks” which sounded like pistol shots were heard by several of the other residents of the apartment house. Several people gathered in the hall in the vicinity of the Madi *673 son apartment looking for the source of the sounds. Some testified that they heard five shots with an interval of a few seconds before the last four, and others testified that there were six shots, with such' an interval. It was in evidence that in this interval an agonizing scream was heard. The occupant of the apartment adjoining the Madisons’ apartment testified that the sounds seemed to originate right outside her door, and that besides the scream she also heard some moans or groans at the termination of the succession of “cracks” or shots. The jury could believe from the evidence that the vocal sounds referred to were made by a man’s voice. Others testified that the shooting was “right down the hall”, meaning in the direction of the Madison apartment. The manager commenced a check-up of the apartments. She knocked , on Mrs. Madison’s door and asked if she had heard the shooting and whether she was all right, to which Mrs. Madison answered in the affirmative. Mrs. Madison then came out of the room into the hall and pulled the door shut behind her. She said the noise was down underneath her. She joined the others in the hall. She also made the statement that “perhaps it was from an automobile passing; that just last week an automobile had gone by with a girl screaming for help; that it was a weird place to live in and most anything was liable to happen”. The defendant appeared calm and serene. She was asked if she was afraid and answered “No,” and that her husband would be home in about ten minutes.

The Warner Brothers studio was situated in the neighborhood about 500 to 1,000 feet distant from the apartment house. The deceased had been employed in the coffee shop of the studio, from which he usually returned home about 6 o ’clock. The defendant was occasionally employed at the studio. That Saturday night the studio was engaged in taking a gun shooting scene in a certain film and, the shooting of guns was noticeable about 1,000 feet away. Work had continued on that picture that night until about midnight. It was also in evidence that animals and fowl were kept on the studio premises; that peacocks sometimes gave shrill cries or screams; that such sounds were often heard from the studio and that frequently the neighborhood did not settle into quiet until past midnight, but that the witnesses were not disturbed by the sounds coming from the studio.

*674 The fears of those who had gathered in the hall of the apartment house on the night of March 24th were finally allayed by the suggestion of one of the men that the noises perhaps emanated from the Warner studio.

Mrs. Madison was seen leaving her apartment at half-past 8 the next morning dressed for the street, and carrying a paper wrapped parcel. About the same time and later during the day there was seen hanging on the door of her apartment a sign which read, “Please do not disturb. I will get my laundry later.” No one else was seen to leave or enter the Madison apartment until about a quarter to 4 that Sunday afternoon. At that time two persons carrying a suitcase called on the manager of the apartment house and stated that Mrs. Madison had arranged to reserve an apartment for one of them. The manager had not so been informed and they proceeded to Mrs. Madison’s room. The “please do not disturb” sign was on the door. The manager received no response to her knock and opened the door with her passkey. The body of Brie D. Madison was discovered in the condition hereinbefore described.

About midafternoon of the following day three officers arrived at the Cuddy ranch, eleven miles west of the Ridge Route highway in Kern County.

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Bluebook (online)
46 P.2d 159, 3 Cal. 2d 668, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-madison-cal-1935.