People v. Mueller

305 P.2d 178, 147 Cal. App. 2d 233, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1267
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1956
DocketCrim. 5668
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 305 P.2d 178 (People v. Mueller) 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. Mueller, 305 P.2d 178, 147 Cal. App. 2d 233, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1267 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

ASHBURN, J.

Defendant, having been charged with assault with a deadly weapon upon one Dene Qualls (Pen. Code, § 245), was convicted and sentenced to serve three months in the county jail. He appeals from the judgment and an order denying his motion for new trial. Prejudicial errors in the *235 matter of instructions and misconduct of the deputy district attorney are asserted.

Assault was immediately followed by a vicious battery which inflicted serious injuries upon Qualls. While no claim is made of insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, the evaluation of the alleged errors requires a brief summarization of the evidence, which is sharply conflicting upon the central question of whether defendant started a fight or acted in self-defense.

On August 11, 1955, a group of five colored laborers were working upon the foundation of a building which was being constructed for Superior Overhead Garage Door Company, in the city of Compton. It had a collective bargaining agreement which covered and included Laborer’s Local Union 507 of Long Beach, and which required that the workmen be union members. A subcontract had been let to Tom Erland, who claimed to the Door Company officials that he was employing union men. He had five colored laborers on the job and they did not belong to the union. About three days before August 11th a union picket was placed in front of the premises; he belonged to Local 507. In the early morning of that day the men were finishing their job when a former workman came to the property, talked with the picket and left. Soon a group of six field representatives of Local 507 arrived, led by defendant Mueller who was business manager of said Local. There were stakes lying on the ground which had been used to support foundation forms. According to the version of the prosecution witnesses defendant and his group picked up stakes as they approached the workmen. Their foreman was Pearson Petty; he met defendant and his group, asked what they wanted, and Mueller replied that it was not any of their business. Petty asked, “What are you doing on this property?” and Mueller started walking away. Petty then said, “Look, we don’t want any trouble here.” Mueller: “Well, I’m going to give you plenty of trouble.” Petty: “I’ll call the police.” Mueller: “You don’t know who I am, I might be the police. I’m going to give you plenty of trouble and put you in jail besides. ’ ’ One Evans was close to Mueller and as they raised their clubs Petty, according to his own version, ran to the truck and got a shovel to use as protection. According to other witnesses he started toward the street as if to telephone the police. WLen he left, Qualls, who was subforeman, started toward defendant. He had been using a trowel but had nothing in his hands and made no *236 threat of any kind. Before he said anything Evans hit him from behind with a two-by-fonr stake, the blow landing on his shoulder. Evans then grabbed him and held his arms behind him. Thereupon defendant beat him across the head with a one-by-three piece of timber, striking him six or seven times, inflicting an open wound above the ear which bled freely. While this was going on other workmen ran to their truck to get shovels or other instruments of protection. Some got shovels, one a mattock, another two hammers. As they returned toward Qualls and Mueller, Petty and Morrah kept saying, “Dene, don’t fight back. Don’t fight back. You fellows please go, we don’t want any trouble.” As the shovel brigade neared them, Evans dropped Qualls who fell to his knees. Mueller and his group ran for his car and departed for the Union hall. In about 20 or 30 minutes they returned with about 15 men but the police were on the scene and no further violence occurred. The prosecution witnesses agreed that none of them had struck a blow or made a threat of any kind before defendant attacked Qualls; that Qualls did not start the fight and had nothing whatever in his hands when approaching Mueller. In substance the foregoing is the testimony of the five laborers, Qualls, Jones, Morrah, Abrams and Petty.

The defense version of the trouble was quite different. Mueller did hit Qualls several times with a stick but only in self-defense after Qualls had hit him with a shovel. According to the defense witnesses Mueller and his associates, though they conversed with the picket, did not know that the colored laborers were not union men. These union representatives were engaged in checking jobs that morning. They went to this one for the purpose of checking the men’s cards and to ask about Jace Marshall’s insurance, if perchance he was there; he was not. Mueller and Evans entered the job first. Mueller identified Petty as foreman, presented his building trades card, said he was there to cheek the job and to talk to Marshall if he was there. Forthwith Petty, the foreman, became violent, ordered Mueller off the job, using many nasty words. “He told me that they wasn’t any so-and-so union man going to cheek that job and for us to get off the job.” Mueller walked away from Petty, who was still calling the union men S. B.’s and ordering them off the property. As he did so, Brimhall yelled to him to watch out. Defendant turned and saw Qualls coming at him with a shovel, swinging it. He tried to dodge the blow but was knocked to the ground *237 on one knee. He grabbed a stake as he went down and came up swinging it. , Qualls was trying to hit him with a shovel but he dodged those blows and hit Qualls several times on the head, “trying to stop his advance on me.” Defendant called to Evans for aid. Evans grabbed Qualls, held his arms and Mueller did not strike Qualls any more. By that time other laborers were approaching with shovels and “were all screaming and hollering to kill them.” Petty hit Evans on the head with a shovel, then ran for the truck saying he had a gun in it and was going to “kill all of us union . . . [S. B.’s] if we didn’t get off the job.” Brimhall then asked the Petty group to please stop using shovels and “that we would get off of the job, and they was one of the colored boys that agreed to that, so everybody dropped everything they had in their hands,” and the union group left. Such was the version of the defense witnesses as furnished by Mueller, Evans, Scharer, McGinnis (four of the six union men who had arrived together at the job), and one O’Malley who was working on adjoining property.

■ Obviously the jurors adopted the version of the facts which had been presented by the prosecution witnesses.

The first claim of error is refusal to give the following instruction which was requested by defendant: “You may find the defendant guilty of any offense, the commission of which is necessarily included in that with which he is charged, [or of an attempt to commit the offense], if in your judgment, the evidence supports such a verdict under my instructions.

“To enable you to apply the foregoing instruction, if your findings of fact require you to do so, I instruct you that the offense of assault with a deadly weapon, of which the defendant is charged in [count......ei] the information, necessarily includes the crime[s] of assault and battery.” The judge in refusing it endorsed the following words: “Assault & battery not included either as a matter of fact or matter of law.”

Appellant argues that the judge was mistakenly relying upon eases such as People v. McCoy, 25

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Bluebook (online)
305 P.2d 178, 147 Cal. App. 2d 233, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mueller-calctapp-1956.