People v. Matthew

228 P. 417, 68 Cal. App. 95, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 210
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 8, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 1085.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 228 P. 417 (People v. Matthew) 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. Matthew, 228 P. 417, 68 Cal. App. 95, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 210 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

*100 FINLAYSON, P. J.

This appeal is by the defendants Williams and Pope, who, with the defendants Matthew, Warmley, and Sinnel, were jointly charged with the murder of one Coleman Stone, the proprietor of a grocery at Bell Station, near the city of Los Angeles. The defendant Warmley, it would seem, was not apprehended. The remaining four defendants were tried jointly. Matthew and Sinnel were convicted of murder in the first degree, the death penalty was imposed upon them, and they have taken an appeal to the supreme court. The defendants Pope and Williams were convicted of murder in the second degree, and now appeal to this court from the judgment of conviction and from the order denying their motion for a new trial.

The appeal to this court is based upon the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict against Pope and Williams, upon asserted errors of law in admitting and in- excluding evidence and in giving and refusing certain instructions, and upon alleged misconduct of the district attorney.

It is, of course, well settled that if the evidence which bears against the accused, considered by itself and without regard to conflicting evidence, is sufficient to support the verdict, the question ceases to be one of law—of which alone this court has jurisdiction—and becomes one of fact, upon which the decision of the jury and the trial court is final and conclusive. (People v. Emerson, 130 Cal. 562 [62 Pac. 1069].) Accordingly, as a reviewing court it is our duty, in passing upon the question whether the evidence is sufficient to support the verdict, to consider in its strongest light all evidence which tends to support the verdict, to disregard such testimony as conflicts therewith and to affirm the judgment if there be any substantial showing which tends to establish the guilt of the accused.

The facts, as shown by the testimony which bears most strongly against the accused, are substantially these: At about 6:30 o’clock on the evening of October 30, 1923, the accused, all of.whom are negroes, drove in a Winton automobile to a spot on Becker Avenue, about half a block west of Stone’s grocery. There the machine, with Pope at the wheel, was brought to a stop. The defendant Sinnel alighted from the car and proceeded to the grocery, presently fol *101 lowed by the defendant Matthew. After entering the store Sinuel asked Stone for a package of cigarettes, tendering a dollar bill in payment. About this time Stone’s son-in-law, standing in the doorway and peering into the store, saw his father-in-law apparently looking down at his hand “making change,” while Sinuel was seen to walk around the end of the counter, “pull a gun” from his overcoat and walk behind the counter toward the unsuspecting grocer. At about the same instant Matthew was seen to “poke an automatic over the counter at Stone.” Thereupon the son-in-law left the spot where he had been standing watching these proceedings. He left to get his “ gun. ” An instant later Stone was heard to cry out, and then there came the muffled report of a pistol. The evidence shows that it was Sinuel who fired the shot. Stone was mortally wounded and died the next day. Sinuel and Matthew made admissions to the effect that they entered the grocery with the intention of committing robbery. The evidence for the prosecution discloses beyond all question that the killing was committed in the perpetration of or attempt to perpetrate robbery, and that it was a brutal murder. The real question, so far as the appellants Pope and Williams are concerned, is this: Was there sufficient evidence to justify their conviction upon the theory either that they were aiders and abettors of the homicide, or that they, together with Sinuel and Matthew, had entered into a conspiracy to commit robbery and that Stone’s life was taken in the course of the prosecution of the common design?

The facts tending to establish that such a conspiracy was entered into are these: The Winton automobile in which the men were riding on the evening of the homicide belonged to a colored woman, a Mrs. Braxton, who lived at 620 Ceres Avenue, in the city of Los Angeles. She, it appears, had entered into some sort of an arrangement with Sinuel and with an agent of the concern from which she had purchased the ear on credit, whereby Sinuel was given an opportunity to become the purchaser of the car if he so desired. It would seem, however, that notwithstanding this arrangement, whatever its nature may have been, Mrs. Braxton continued to treat the car as her own and to exercise all the rights of proprietorship. Pope was hired by her as her chauffeur, receiving as compensation for his services his board and *102 lodging. Pope, Sinuel and Matthew occupied rooms in Mrs. Braxton’s house. At about 5 o’clock on the afternoon of the day of the homicide Mrs. Braxton, who had been using her car that afternoon, returned home, told Pope to put the machine in the garage and strictly enjoined him not to take it out. It seems that on the preceding night Pope had taken the car without Mrs. Braxton’s permission and had not returned with it until 3 o’clock in the morning. Late in the afternoon of the day on.which the murder was committed Sinuel, Matthew, and Williams went to a resort at Twenty-sixth Street and Boyle Avenue, in the city of Los Angeles, where they procured and drank a quantity of intoxicating liquor. At about 6 o’clock in the evening Pope, disobeying his employer’s order not to take the car out of the garage, drove up to the house on Twenty-sixth Street where the three other defendants were drinking. He was accompanied by Warmley. Upon the arrival of Pope and Warmley at this place with Mrs. Braxton’s automobile, Sinuel, Matthew, and Williams entered the ear and were driven by Pope in an easterly direction beyond the outskirts of Los Angeles. On their way back the five men passed through Bell Station, where, as we have stated, the car was brought to a stop about half a block west of the grocery, when Sinuel and Matthew got out and the killing of Stone occurred. After alighting from the machine Sinuel “snatched” from Warmley, who remained in the car, the revolver with which Stone was shot. When the shot was fired Warmley exclaimed, “Those niggers [referring to Sinuel and Matthew] done shot somebody,” and ordered Pope to drive back to town. Thereupon Pope put the transmission in gear—the engine had been left running while Sinuel and Matthew were in the grocery—and accompanied by Warmley and Williams drove back to the house at 620 Ceres Avenue. Meanwhile Sinuel and Matthew made their escape from the scene of - the shooting, walked some distance to a street-car and arrived at the Ceres Avenue house some time after Pope and his two companions reached the same destination. During the comparatively short interval that the automobile was standing on Becker Avenue about half a block from the grocery, and while Sinuel and Matthew were carrying out their plan to rob the proprietor, Pope got out of the car, and seeing another machine approaching from the east stepped in front *103 of it and raised his hand. Thereupon the driver of that vehicle, a woman, stopped her ear. Pope looked at her but said nothing,, and she then drove on. The driver of that machine, after she had driven about a quarter of a mile from the spot where she had been stopped, heard the report of the pistol.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P. 417, 68 Cal. App. 95, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-matthew-calctapp-1924.