People v. Mitchell

29 P. 1106, 94 Cal. 550, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 725
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1892
DocketNo. 20900
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 29 P. 1106 (People v. Mitchell) 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. Mitchell, 29 P. 1106, 94 Cal. 550, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 725 (Cal. 1892).

Opinions

Temple, C.

The defendant, having been convicted of murder in the second degree, appeals from the judgment and a refusal of a new trial.

It appears that Oscar Crandall was fatally shot, about midnight, April 23, 1891, near Rathja’s saloon, in the town of Red Bluff. Crandall, who had been in the saloon, went out upon the back porch, where he was engaged for a time imitating Chinese talk. Two or three minutes after he went out, Rathja heard the report of a pistol, and went upon the back porch, but saw no one. The back yard was surrounded by a high fence. The saloon was at the corner of Main and Hickory streets, facing on Main. It was bright moonlight, and except as obstructed by the fence, Rathja could see both streets.

Two witnesses claim to have been eye-witnesses of the affray; Peterson, who testified for the prosecution, was 224 feet away, westerly on Hickory Street. He was positive that he recognized defendant’s voice, but he could distinguish no one by sight. He saw the flash of the [553]*553pistol, and the person who fired ran off south, along the alley back of the yard which incloses Eathja’s back porch.

This is all the direct testimony against defendant, but there was considerable circumstantial evidence.

Defendant claimed and testified, as did several other witnesses in his behalf, that he was at home, about a half-block from Rathja’s 'saloon, administering what he calls a “shot” of morphine to one Boyden, when he heard the report, and was told that some one was shot, and then ran across the street with Boyden, found the wounded man, and he and Boyden took up the body and carried it to the front of the saloon. While they were so carrying the wounded man the people gathered.

Hughes and Boyden both corroborate defendant’s story. Hughes says he was across the street from Eathja’s back yard, at the corner of Hickory and High streets. He heard the altercation, saw the flash of the pistol, and the assassin run off, he thought, down Main Street, and being but a few steps from defendant’s house, informed a woman there that some one was shot; that Mitchell and Boyden ran past him to the saloon, and the body was carried as defendant stated.

To make out the case for the prosecution by the circumstantial evidence" it became important to fix the precise time of the homicide. It was contended on the part of the people that defendant did not go to his house, as he claimed he did, to administer the hypodermic injection of morphine to Boyden; that he came up from the depot on the Tremont hotel bus, after the arrival of the train, which was due at 11:50, p. m.; that the homicide was committed before the departure of the train, the schedule time of which was 12:05.

They had experiments made as to the time it would require to walk where he said he walked after he left the bus, and claimed that he did not have time to go home and do what he said he did before the report of the pistol.

There was much evidence directed to this point on [554]*554both sides. Among other things, the defense introduced evidence showing that the train did not leave on that night until after 12:10.

The prosecution, against the objections of the defendant, were permitted to show, by the local agent of the railroad and the night-operator, that by the rules and regulations of the company, the trains must not arrive before their schedule time, and that the conductor must register the exact time of arrival and departure; that such register was in fact kept at this station. The register was then introduced, defendant objecting, from which it appears that the train arrived and left on the night in question on schedule time. Neither of the witnesses had any actual knowledge of the times, nor was the conductor who made the record called as a witness. The evidence was clearly incompetent, and was immaterial in the highest degree. If we can presume, as suggested, that the conductor was absent or dead, that fact would make no difference. It was hearsay evidence, and should have been excluded.

It seems that one H. K. Long had been tried for this same offense, and had been acquitted. Nevertheless, the defense attempted to prove that Long committed the homicide.

C. A. Boyden, a witness for the defense, testified, without objection, that Long told him that he had killed Crandall, and that he got the gun from Morin. In rebuttal, the prosecution asked Morin if he loaned Long a pistol,-and he was allowed, against the objection of the defendant, to answer that he did not.

This was not competent. It did not tend to show that Long did not kill Crandall, or that Mitchell did, and it did not tend to contradict the witness Boyden, who did not say that Long procured a pistol from Morin. Pie only testified as to what Long had said, and this evidence did not tend to disprove that fact. (See People v. Hurtado, 63 Cal. 289.)

Vance, a carpenter and gunsmith, was called as an expert, and allowed, against objection, to state his opin[555]*555ion that a certain cartridge had never been in a pistol, because he saw no mark on it. He was then allowed to compare a ball shown him, and assumed to have been from a pistol claimed by the defense to have been used, by Long, with the ball taken from the head of deceased, and to state that they were not similar. The balls were there in court, and shown to the jury.

This was not a proper subject for expert testimony. It did not require special skill to determine whether a cartridge had marks upon it which would indicate that it had been once in the chamber of a pistol, nor that it was covered with verdigris, nor that the end of one bullet was feather-edged, and another not so, or was fiat or concave at the end. These are all matters of common knowledge, and the jury was as competent to pass upon them as the witness.

The prosecution, in rebuttal, put in evidence statements made by the defendant while testifying as a witness in the case of People v. Long. Though charged with the same offense for which Long was tried, it is not by the same information. It does not appear that defendant objected to being sworn on that trial, and it seems to be conceded that he did not object to answering the particular questions, the answers to which were given in evidence against him. It is contended simply that the statements are not voluntary, because the defendant was duly sworn to answer questions, and was compelled to answer, or to admit that his answers might crimitate himself. Bishop on Criminal Procedure, sections 1255-1257, cites numerous authorities, and concludes that the testimony voluntarily given as a witness are admissions or confessions, competent against him in a criminal cause to which they are pertinent.

Unless he objected to answering the particular matter complained of, and was forced nevertheless to testify, it is considered voluntary. Some few cases there are which seem to sustain the appellant, but nearly all the authorities are the other way. (See also Wharton on Criminal Law, secs. 664, 669, 1120.)

[556]*556We cannot see that our code, which allows the defendant to testify or not as he may choose, and to limit his testimony to such matters as he pleases, can make any difference.

The prosecution called a witness, Hopper, to impeach and contradict defendant’s witness, 0. D. Boyden, whose brother was accused jointly with defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 P. 1106, 94 Cal. 550, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mitchell-cal-1892.