People v. Navarro

169 P.2d 265, 74 Cal. App. 2d 544, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1004
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 20, 1946
DocketCrim. 2384
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 169 P.2d 265 (People v. Navarro) 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. Navarro, 169 P.2d 265, 74 Cal. App. 2d 544, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1004 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

WARD, J.

The defendant, Mary Navarro, appeals from a judgment of conviction of second degree murder and the order denying her motion for new trial. The charge was based upon the death of one Sarah Castrillo as the result of an abortion allegedly performed by defendant. The court denied probation and committed defendant to the California Institution for Women.

Three points are raised on appeal: (1) Sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, including error by the trial court in denying the motion for a new trial; (2) incorrect instructions on circumstantial evidence; and (3) improper procedure in denying defendant’s application for probation.

The facts appear as follows: On the third day of February, 1945, Sarah Castrillo, now deceased, the mother of three children, was pregnant. A few weeks prior to that date she had told her sister, Rita Soto, that she was going to get rid of the baby—that she was “going over to Mary’s.” Rita Soto *547 testified, without objection, that she understood her to mean the defendant Mary Navarro. Over the objection of appellant she also testified she told her she was going to pay about fifty or seventy-five dollars. The husband of deceased testified that his wife was in good health and that on the morning of February 3, 1945, she stated that she was going to get rid of the baby; that she was going over to Mary Navarro’s. Sarah Castrillo left the home of her sister, Bita Soto, about 6:30 of the evening of February 3d. She arrived at the home of Mary Navarro approximately at 7:15. About 8:30 that evening Mary Navarro called Bita Soto on the telephone and said: “Things don’t look so well, I think I will go and look for Baymond,” the husband of the deceased. At approximately 9 o’clock p.m. Sarah Castrillo talked to her husband “through the phone.” About fifteen or twenty minutes after that phone conversation Mary Navarro came after Baymond Castrillo. She arrived in a Pontiac with another couple and told the husband that his wife had fainted. They rode back to Mary Navarro’s place where they found Sarah Castrillo lying on the bed. Baymond Castrillo testified: “Well, she looked to me like she was dead already.” At ten o’clock p.m. Sarah Castrillo was picked up by an ambulance at Mary Navarro’s place and taken to a hospital. William Freeman, the ambulance driver, testified that he found her at the home of Mary Navarro lying on the bed fully dressed, and “I believe she was still alive. ’ ’

An expert pathologist and bacteriologist, Dr. Duval, called on behalf of the People, testified that he performed an autopsy upon the body of Sarah Castrillo; that the autopsy disclosed a pregnant womb or uterus in which an abortion had been attempted. He testified that the placenta had been torn from its attachment to the inner lining of the womb and that the womb was torn and lacerated in many places. Dr. Duval further testified that in his opinion severe hemorrhage followed immediately upon the attempted abortion and that the patient probably became comatose in a very few minutes from lack of blood. The doctor further testified that in his opinion it would have been impossible after the bleeding occurred for the patient to have moved herself from one place to another.

In answer to a question whether the deceased could have performed the abortion on herself, the witness stated: “I can’t answer that very-1 can’t answer it put in that way, except to say that it is hardly likely that she could have herself, with *548 an. instrument, torn that placenta away from its moorings and lacerated it, because of the pain, for one thing, and the tremendous loss of blood before the placenta was disturbed to the extent we find it here, or I find it here, she would have been exsanguinated and couldn’t very well have finished the job as finished as this is. ’ ’ There is some conflict in the record in reference to a girdle found stuffed between mattresses in the Navarro home. The prosecution claimed it was the girdle of the deceased. Appellant’s husband said that it was his girdle. There is also conflicting testimony concerning the identity of persons in the car which the appellant occupied on her trip downtown to find decedent’s husband. The county pathologist testified to certain facts and conclusions in conflict with the testimony of the autopsy surgeon, particularly in reference to the absence of blood on the clothing of the 'decedent and around the vagina.

Appellant submits that all that the record shows is that decedent was pregnant; that she said she was going to get rid of the baby and that she was going over to Mary’s. Appellant suggests that the evidence shows only opportunity to commit rather than an attempt to commit an abortion, and that if a reasonable inference could be drawn that an abortion or an attempt had been committed, it could have been committed by her step father-in-law or two neighbors who came to appellant’s home, or by some other person before she returned to her home, or it might have been performed by the decedent herself. The father-in-law of appellant testified that when decedent was in the Navarro home no one was present except the witness and appellant. Appellant testified that up to the time decedent became ill the father-in-law was resting in the living room. During part of that time appellant and decedent were alone in another room,. The husband testified that shortly after he arrived appellant “was running around, repeating ‘What shall I do! What shall I do?’ ” Whether the autopsy surgeon’s or the city pathologist’s testimony should be accepted was a question for the jury. The witness for the defense testified that it is not necessary, even if the abortion is accidental, that blood should “be emitted through the vagina,” but that “the hemorrhage is dissolved in the uterus,” and that sometimes “in the case of such loosening of the rectal placenta hemorrhage there would be then no external loss of blood.” Therefore it appears that there is ample evidence, if believed, to sustain the verdict against defendant. More than mere opportunity was proved.

*549 The basic legal problem briefed in determining the sufficiency of the evidence in this case, which was based wholly on circumstantial evidence, is the applicability of the statement that “the circumstances proved must not only be wholly consistent with the defendant’s guilt, but they must also be inconsistent with any other rational conclusion. ’ ’ The appellant cites no cases in support of the view that the appellate court will apply this rule to reverse a conviction. The rule that the establishment of guilt on circumstantial evidence alone, which evidence seemingly is equally compatible with innocence, should result in a verdict for the accused is not the test on appeal. Where the jury reaches a conclusion of guilt, and there is evidence to support the verdict, an appellate court is bound by the implied finding of the jury as reflected in the verdict. (People v. Perkins, 8 Cal.2d 502 [66 P.2d 631] ; People v. Bradley, 71 Cal.App.2d 114 [162 P.2d 38]; People v. Harshaw, 71 Cal.App.2d 146 [161 P.2d 978].) In People v. Newland,

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Bluebook (online)
169 P.2d 265, 74 Cal. App. 2d 544, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-navarro-calctapp-1946.