People v. Miller

455 P.2d 377, 71 Cal. 2d 459, 78 Cal. Rptr. 449, 1969 Cal. LEXIS 267
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1969
DocketCrim. No. 11998
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 455 P.2d 377 (People v. Miller) 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. Miller, 455 P.2d 377, 71 Cal. 2d 459, 78 Cal. Rptr. 449, 1969 Cal. LEXIS 267 (Cal. 1969).

Opinion

McCOMB, J.

A jury found defendant. guilty of first degree murder and fixed the penalty at death. This appeal is automatic (Pen. Code, § 1239, subd. (b)).

Facts; About 9:30 Saturday morning, August 12, 1967, defendant, 40 years of age, called at the home of Mrs. Betty Abron. He was drinking a can of ‘ ‘ Colt' 45 ’ ’ stout malt and carried a paper sack containing two additional unopened cans of “Colt 45." stout malt. About 30 minutes after his arrival, he told Mrs. Abron that he would go to the grocery store to [464]*464get some soda pop for her five children. Jéannine Abron, aged 8, received her mother’s consent to accompany defendant to the store. In response to Mrs. Abron’s inquiry, defendant said he would bring Jeannine right back. Jeannine collected some empty pop bottles, climbed into the front passenger seat of defendant’s 1954 Ford station wagon, and rode away with him about 10 a.m. This was the last time Mrs. Abron saw Jeannine alive. She was wearing a red- turtleneck sweater, white underpants without rips or holes, and blue bermuda shorts, slightly split along the outside seams at the hemline. Her nude, partially decomposed body was found about 7 a.in. the following Wednesday, face down in the shallow water of Dry Creek, at a point adjacent to the intersection of Elkhorn Boulevard and 10th Street in Sacramento, approximately four miles from her home. The head was under the water', and the heels nearly touching, the bank of the creek. The body was in a semi-kneéling position, with the legs drawn up. The back and buttocks were out of the water. The arms were in the water, elbows bent. Two branches approximately 13 feet long with considerable foliage and leafy material had been chopped down and placed in a trée above the body, tending to obscure it from observation by light planes taking off and landing on an adjacent north-south airfield runway.

Jeannine’s red sweater was hanging in the branches of a tree approximately 15 feet south of the body. Also hanging on a branch below the sweater wére her blue bermuda shorts, completely torn across the crotch and along the sides of the legs. Submerged in the water under the shorts were her panties, torn at the crotch. On the bank of Dry Creek above the body there was a matted area of grass, oval -in shape, about 6x10 feet in area. Within the trampled grass area an unsmoked Capital’s Palma cigar in cellophane wrapping and a “Ballerina” brand ballpoint pen were found. An empty “Colt 45” unrusted one-pint can was found in the nearby grass.

Before the body was recovered defendant was arrested on suspicion of murder, and, pursuant to a search warrant, his station wagon was towed to the Sacramento County morgue and searched. Two Capital’s Palma.brand cigars in cellophane wrappings were on the front seat. Defendant had previously purchased Capital’s Palma cigars and had four or five of them in his station wagon on Saturday, August 12, 1967. The police also seized a shirt belonging to defendant, which shirt defendant identified as one he had worn on Saturday morning. The shirt pocket was stained with ink. A [465]*465chemical examination of the ink stain and the ink in the ballpoint pen found near Jeannine’s body .showed that both inks were of the same type.

An autopsy was performed by a physician and surgeon specializing in pathology on Wednesday afternoon, August 16, about 54 hours after Jeannine was last seen alive. The body was in a bad state of decomposition. In the physician’s opinion, the swelling of the body, the discoloration of the skin, and the distortion of the features were due to degenerative processes occurring after death. The left vulva (an area on the left side of the genitalia, outside the body of a female) was more swollen than the right vulva and was discolored differently from the surrounding tissues. These 'conditions led the pathologist to believe that injury or abrasion had occurred to the left vulva. Because of the decomposition, he was unable to reach a definite medical opinion as to the cause of death, which he estimated to have occurred on the previous Saturday or Sunday.

Mrs. Lillian Hayer, who resided on “G” Street in a southeasterly direction across the Rio Linda High School athletic field from the place where Jeannine’s body was found, testified that sometime between 11:30 and 11:45 a.m. on Saturday she observed that an old two-toned station wagon had been driven into the shrubbery along the ba.nk of Dry Creek. The station wagon was identified by Mrs. Hayer as .“the same one” as the station wagon pictured in photographic exhibits of defendant’s car. She marked the place the station wagon had been parked on an enlarged aerial photograph of the scene. This same place was identified by two prosecution witnesses as the spot where they discovered Jeannine’s body. Mrs. Hayer’s son’also observed a light colored 1954 or 1955 Ford station wagon parked at that point on Dry Creek at approximately noon on Saturday. Mrs. Hayer observed the station wagon leaving the area some time prior to 1:10 p.m. Saturday, driven by a “dark-complected” man.

Mr. Royden E. Hayer (Lillian Hayer’s husband) who operated an airport adjacent to the Hayer residence on “G” Street, was working in a building at the airport when he heard a shrill cry, like a child’s frightened scream, about 11:15 a.m. on Saturday. He went outside to see if he could locate the source of the scream. He looked around but was unable to see anyone and returned to his work.

At noon on Saturday, Jerry Leikauf was working on a friend’s car parked on 10th Street easterly across the Rio [466]*466Linda High School athletic field from the point in Dry Creek where the body of the victim was discovered. lie observed a Ford station wagon of the same malee and model as defendant’s parked near Dry Creek across the athletic field. Between 12:30 and. 1 o’clock Saturday afternoon, he saw the station wagon leave the area, driven by a Negro with dark complexion.

Shortly after 11:15 Saturday night, Jeannine’s mother located defendant asleep in his station wagon parked in front of his apartment about four or five blocks from the Abron residence. She asked defendant if he knew where Jeannine. was and he answered, “I left her standing on your front porch.” Mrs. Abron replied, “No, you didn’t.” Defendant said, “When I left your house, she was standing on your front porch.” Mrs. Abron told him that her neighbors had seen defendant leave the Abron residence with Jeannine, to which he replied, “Well, I’m going to talk to them,” and drove off.

About 2:10 Sunday morning, Sacraménto police officei's met Mrs. Abron in front of defendant’s apartment and asked defendant if he knew where Jeannine was. He answered that he didn’t know where she was and said she hadn’t left with him in his car. lie said that the last time he had seen her she had been standing on the Abron porch. He denied that he had been at the Abron residence on Saturday morning, said he had visited another house on the same street and had seen Jeannine playing with other children around his station wagon, but she had not been in his car that morning. In the presence of the officers, Mrs. Abron began arguing with defendant, who said he was sorry that anything had happened to the little girl, but that he hadn’t seen her.

At the trial, defendant told a different story. He testified that on the Saturday morning in question he had driven Jeannine in his 1954 Ford station wagon from, the Abron house to the Safeway market parking lot about four or five blocks from the Abron residence.

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Bluebook (online)
455 P.2d 377, 71 Cal. 2d 459, 78 Cal. Rptr. 449, 1969 Cal. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-miller-cal-1969.