People v. Perkins

66 P.2d 631, 8 Cal. 2d 502, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 304
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1937
DocketCrim. 4063
StatusPublished
Cited by122 cases

This text of 66 P.2d 631 (People v. Perkins) 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. Perkins, 66 P.2d 631, 8 Cal. 2d 502, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 304 (Cal. 1937).

Opinions

SEAWELL, J.

Since granting the petition for a hearing herein we have made a re-examination of the points therein urged as grounds for a hearing by this court, as well as all questions raised on the appeal, and we are of the view that the opinion and decision of the District Court of Appeal, Fourth Appellate District, prepared by Turrentine, J., Pro Tempore, fully and correctly disposed of all the questions raised by the appeal. It is hereby adopted by this court as a correct statement of the facts and the law applicable to the case, as amended and corrected in minor respects by said District Court of Appeal upon rehearing granted, and, as so corrected, adopted by said court as a per curiam decision. We have added to said opinion our own observations Avhich we deem pertinent to the issues in view of certain points stressed in the petition for a hearing by this court.

The opinion follows:

“The defendant William Perkins stands convicted of murder in the first degree, upon which conviction a judgment of life imprisonment has been entered. He prosecutes this appeal both from the judgment and from the order denying a lievv trial.
[506]*506“That the deceased, David Philip Kirk, known as ‘Skippy’, was murdered in the city of Ontario on the morning of December 31, 1935, is admitted. The evidence connecting the defendant with the murder is purely circumstantial. The record discloses that Kirk had been living in a small two-room house and that- the defendant had been living with him for about ten or twelve days before the murder. Kirk was about sixty years of age and defendant about twenty-three. Kirk operated a penny ante poker game in partnership with one Clark. A poker game broke up at about one-thirty o’clock on the morning of December 31, 1935. The defendant and Kirk had been in the building substantially all evening and were in the house together when the game broke up. Thereupon the players left and Kirk and defendant remained in the house and went to bed. Kirk slept in the east room and the defendant in the west room. Kirk died at about 5:45 o ’clock that same morning. He had been strangled and his skull was fractured. Defendant testified that he saw Kirk have $7 and other bills on his person the night prior to the murder. Thus far the evidence is without conflict and is conceded by both sides to be substantially correct and to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that Kirk was murdered.
“The evidence connecting defendant with the murder of Kirk may be fairly stated as follows. Several witnesses testified that between twelve, midnight, and 1:20 on the morning in question they saw Kirk have in his possession paper money which they estimated to aggregate about $20 to $25. Other witnesses testified that Kirk had a new dollar bill of the 1935 series on the evening prior to his murder and that he had called their particular attention to this bill and at the same time showed them several of the new issue of twenty-five cent pieces which he also had in his possession at that time.
“After Kirk’s death some of the coins were found on the floor near his body and others were found on his person but the bills were missing and were never found either on his person or in the house. The testimony showed that Kirk ordinarily, and on the night prior to his death, carried his money in one of the pockets of a khaki shirt which he had worn that night and which he wore to bed that night.
“Defendant testified that he and Skippy retired to their respective beds about 1:30 o’clock on the morning of December 31, 1935, and that defendant went to sleep almost immediately ; that he was sleeping between two mattresses; that [507]*507he was awakened shortly before dawn by ‘someone hollering’; that he thought the person from whom the sound issued was Skippy; that the sound was muffled; that shortly after he heard the above-mentioned sound some unknown person jumped on the bed which he was occupying and on top of the upper mattress and held him on the bed in such a manner that he could not escape; that as he continued his struggle to get away and was about to succeed in his effort the intruder left off and ran into the other room and then out of the house; that he began to arise and just as he did so he slipped and fell but recovered himself and jumped up and followed the intruder.
“Defendant further testified that he ran out of the house on the porch and to its east end and about 15 steps therefrom and then saw two men running up the alley, that he thought he shouted at the men to stop, that he discontinued his pursuit of the men and returned to the house where he discovered Skippy lying on the floor, that he spoke to Skippy but received no answer, that he procured a cup of water and sprinkled some of the water over Skippy’s face, that he then left the house and went to another dwelling next door for the purpose of securing assistance. One witness, Elsie Dickey, testified that, a few minutes after 6:15 o ’clock of the specified date, and while it was yet dark, the defendant came to her door and said that he wanted help, that she told the defendant that there was no man in her house who could assist him and the defendant then went away. Mr. Ireton, who lived next door to the house occupied by Skippy, testified that the defendant came to his house about daybreak on December 31, 1935, and requested help and that the defendant then stated that two men had entered Skippy’s house and had beaten ‘Hell out of both of us’. The witness Ireton also testified that he directed the defendant to go to a house on the corner and that shortly thereafter the defendant returned to the Ireton dwelling and again requested assistance that he, Ireton, promised to come but later called across the fence and suggested that the defendant call the police. Ireton further testified that shortly after defendant left his house he looked over at Skippy’s house and saw someone walking in the house and then walk over to the window in the west room, and he then saw someone’s hand moving the bottom of the screen on the window back and forth. This was the window, [508]*508according to defendant’s testimony, through which the two men had entered his room.
‘ ‘ Approximately at 6:30 a, m. defendant went to the ice plant and telephoned the police asking them to come to his assistance but gave them a wrong address for Skippy’s house. Defendant testified that while waiting for the police to come he succeeded in getting Skippy up onto the bed; that he heated some water and took a towel and washed some of the blood off Skippy’s face; that he then put cold water on his forehead in endeavoring to restore him to consciousness.
“Sometime later defendant’s attention was called to the fact that he had given a wrong address to the police and he then called the department, giving a correct address.
“Several witnesses testified that shortly after they arrived at the scene of the murder they discovered defendant had blood on his clothes and that they also saw certain scratches and cuts on his face, neck and body. Defendant said that he had not been in a fight the day or evening before the murder but stated he got the scratches from the mattress while he was being held down and that his assailant did not touch him. The police doctor testified that he found human skin and blood in the debris which he removed from under the finger nails of Kirk.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 P.2d 631, 8 Cal. 2d 502, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-perkins-cal-1937.