People v. Peete

169 P.2d 924, 28 Cal. 2d 306, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 212
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1946
DocketCrim. 4673
StatusPublished
Cited by345 cases

This text of 169 P.2d 924 (People v. Peete) 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. Peete, 169 P.2d 924, 28 Cal. 2d 306, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 212 (Cal. 1946).

Opinions

TRAYNOR, J.

An information was filed against defendant by the District Attorney of Los Angeles County, charging her with the murder of Margaret R. Logan. The jury found defendant guilty of murder in the first degree and made no recommendation as to punishment. Defendant admitted a charge of a previous conviction of murder and serving a term therefor. The trial court denied her motion for a new trial. This appeal is automatic from the judgment imposing the death penalty.

Defendant was convicted in 1921 of the murder of Jacob C. Denton. On June 2, 1920, approximately two weeks after defendant had leased his residence, Denton disappeared. Defendant answered inquiries as to his whereabouts with various statements: that he had been shot in the arm by an unknown “Spanish woman”; that he was avoiding his residence because he was ashamed of his wound; that his arm had been amputated ; that he had gone to one or another part of the country; that he wanted to conceal his affairs from his family and acquaintances. She also stated that he had given her a bill of sale to his automobile; that he permitted her to open his mail ; that he authorized her to sell his house and accept the first payment. Defendant rented the Denton residence to a third party, forged Jacob Denton’s name to a lease, had dealings for the sale of the residence, drew forged checks against Denton's bank account, attempted to gain entrance to his safety deposit box, went through his papers, pawned his diamond rings, explaining that she gave the proceeds to the “Spanish woman,” gave away some of his clothing and had some made over for her daughter, and attempted to discourage search for him. On September 23, 1920, Denton’s body was. found buried under his residence. A bullet had entered the back of the neck at the fourth cervical vertebra and severed the spinal cord, causing instant death. The decomposed state [309]*309of the body indicated that he was killed about the time of his disappearance. Although defendant did not testify, she made a lengthy explanation to a deputy district attorney of her conduct after Denton’s disappearance, which was discredited.

Following her conviction, defendant spent eighteen years in the state penitentiary. During and following her imprisonment, she told a number of persons that she expected to acquire a valuable estate or “trust fund” in the near future. The evidence shows that these statements were false, and that defendant was impecunious. The evidence also indicates that after her release in 1939 she procured a revolver by theft.

In November, 1943, she was engaged by Mrs. Logan, whom she had known many years, for domestic service and care of Arthur Logan, who was then 73 years of age and in a state of senile dementia. Arthur Logan was committed to an institution for the insane early in November, 1943, on petition filed by his wife. Defendant aided Mrs. Logan in securing this commitment. Mrs. Logan regretted her action and he was paroled later that month to her care. Mrs. Logan gave defendant two letters in November, 1943, for use in connection with her husband’s release, which stated that defendant was her “foster sister.” Defendant retained these letters until they were found on her person at the time of her arrest thirteen months later.

On March 19, 1944, Mrs. Logan placed her husband in a private sanitarium for one week. The records of the sanitarium reveal that Mr. Logan was unruly and noisy on occasions, but was not dangerously violent. Testimony was given that Mrs. Logan’s purpose in placing him in the sanitarium was to have him cared for while she worked at an aircraft factory.

Before Mrs. Logan’s death on May 29, 1944, defendant purported to finance through a trust fund a $50,000 real estate purchase by herself and Mrs. Logan, the property to be held in joint tenancy. She failed to obtain the $2,000 escrow deposit, and the decedent procured the sum by pledging her savings account. After Mrs. Logan’s death, the escrow period expired with the purchase price remaining unpaid, and defendant obtained one-half of the deposit by forging the decedent’s name to an instrument giving defendant the power of attorney for decedent. Earlier, on May 19, 1944, defendant [310]*310forged a check for $200 drawn on Mrs. Logan’s checking account, and deposited the cheek in an account held jointly with her husband. A cashier, however, discovered the forgery and notified Mrs. Logan, who directed him to charge the sum to her account and reassured him that the forger would repay the obligation. Defendant was unable to do so, however, until two days after Mrs. Logan’s death, when she made partial payment with funds appropriated from a refund of money paid for railroad tickets by decedent.

On May 2,1944, defendant secretly married and moved to a nearby hotel. She did not reveal her criminal record to her husband. She told several people during that month that Mr. Logan was having dangerous fits of violence. She stated to' one witness that ‘ ‘ One morning you are going to wake up and read the headlines in the paper of a terrible tragedy,” but repeatedly asked the witness not to mention her statement to Mrs. Logan. Defendant was at the Logan home on May 29, 1944, the date of the decedent’s disappearance and death. Two days later, she and her husband moved into the Logan home. On or about June 1, 1944, on the pretext that Mrs. Logan had been seriously injured in an automobile accident, defendant induced Arthur Logan to accompany her to a probation officer. On the basis of defendant’s statements that she was Mrs. Logan’s “foster sister,” and that in an insane rage, Arthur Logan had attacked his wife, bitten her on the neck and nose, and had bitten defendant on the hand, he was sent to the psychopathic ward of a county hospital, and later to the Patton State Hospital. Defendant did not mention to the probation officer that Mrs. Logan had been shot. Defendant forged Mrs. Logan’s name to subsequent correspondence with the Patton authorities. Arthur Logan became increasingly ill and died on December 6, 1944. At defendant’s direction, his body was given to a medical school for scientific purposes.

In response to inquiries as to Mrs. Logan’s whereabouts, defendant reiterated her statement as to an attack by Arthur Logan, adding that Mrs. Logan had gone to an institution for plastic surgery, and that because she was self-conscious about the disfigurement caused by the attack, she did not want any of her friends to see her. Defendant stated on various occasions that Mrs. Logan had gone to Santa Monica, San Bernardino, Oregon, “inland,” Denver, “back east,” and New York; that defendant was purchasing the Logan home; that Mrs. Logan [311]*311no longer desired the personalty in the home and had told her to do what she wanted with it; that Mrs. Logan did not want her ear and that defendant had but one more paper to sign and it would be hers; and that Mrs. Logan intended never to return to her home.

Defendant lived with her husband in the Logan residence from May 31, 1944, to December 20, 1944, the date of her arrest. During this period, she had some of Mrs. Logan’s clothing made over to fit herself, opened Mrs. Logan’s mail, and when necessary answered it in Mrs. Logan’s name, had the interior of the house repainted and various articles of furniture remodeled, paid incidental bills, gave away and loaned fine articles of personalty, promised her relatives Mrs. Logan’s diamonds, sold an electric mangle, and used the Logan car, gas coupons, and food stamps.

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Bluebook (online)
169 P.2d 924, 28 Cal. 2d 306, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-peete-cal-1946.