People v. Peterson

173 P.2d 11, 29 Cal. 2d 69, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 277
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1946
DocketCrim. 4724
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 173 P.2d 11 (People v. Peterson) 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. Peterson, 173 P.2d 11, 29 Cal. 2d 69, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 277 (Cal. 1946).

Opinion

SCHAUER, J.

Defendant * was charged with the murder of Marion Berger and with three prior convictions of felony. *71 He pleaded not guilty and admitted the prior convictions. A jury found him guilty of murder of the first degree and made no recommendation as to penalty. This is an automatic appeal from the judgment imposing the death sentence and from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial. Defendant offered no evidence. The strong circumstantial case presented by the People shows that defendant murdered Mrs. Berger in the perpetration of a robbery. The murder, therefore, is by force of statute (Pen. Code, § 189) of the first degree. (People v. Valentine (1946), 28 Cal.2d 121, 136 [169 P.2d 1]; People v. Bernard (1946), 28 Cal.2d 207, 211 [169 P.2d 636].) The record discloses certain erroneous and conflicting instructions but after a review of the entire case we are satisfied, for the reasons hereinafter appearing, that the erroneous instructions did not contribute to the verdict and that the judgment and order must be affirmed.

The deceased was the wife of David Berger. In April, 1943, Mr. Berger commenced work as personnel director and head of the welfare department of the manufacturing plant where defendant was employed. He became acquainted with defendant and in his official capacity on various occasions gave defendant advice and assistance concerning defendant’s personal problems. Defendant was an alien and was on parole ; among Berger’s duties as head of the welfare department was the preparation of monthly reports concerning defendant required by federal and state authorities. Twice defendant called on Mr. Berger at the Berger home in Los Angeles to seek advice as to difficulties in which he found himself. Mrs. Berger was present on these two occasions. Mr. and Mrs. Berger, defendant, and Mrs. Ann Straw, a friend of defendant, once went to dinner together at defendant’s suggestion. This was the extent of defendant’s acquaintance with deceased prior to the night of May 10, 1944, when she was killed.

On May 7, 1944, Mr. Berger left Los Angeles for Chicago on a business trip. He planned to be away from Los Angeles for two weeks. His proposed trip had been known to and generally discussed among the employes of the plant. He had arranged for Mrs. Berger to go to San Francisco on the morning of May 11. About 7 p. m. on May 10, 1944, Mrs. Berger was in the yard of her home. She there told the boy of a neighbor ' that she was going to San Francisco. The boy observed *72 nothing unusual in her manner. No witness thereafter saw Mrs. Berger alive. Later in the evening she, accompanied by defendant, left her home. A week later her body was recovered from the Pacific Ocean.

About 7 p. m. on May 10 defendant went to the rooming house where he lived. According to his landlady “he changed his clothes, I guess, and he went out to get some gas and then he came out and said, ‘You might not see me any more.’ ” Defendant then called on his friend Mrs. Straw and her grandmother. He stayed only about 15 minutes and, according to Mrs. Straw, they spoke of “common-place” things. Defendant was next seen by a witness about 11 p. m. on May 10, when he entered a cafe located in Ventura County, on the Coast Highway near the boundary between the counties of. Los Angeles and Ventura. According to the woman who operatéd the cafe defendant purchased a bottle of beer which he drank “hurriedly and nervously.” Defendant did not appear to be under the influence of liquor.

On the night of May 10 one Sneathen, a Coast Guardsman, was on patrol with his dog in the vicinity of Point Mugu, a promontory in Ventura County, about 10 miles northwest of the Los Angeles County line. The Coast Highway runs near the ocean at this point and there is a rather sharp drop of about 20 feet from the highway to a sea wall. About 11:20 p. m. Sneathen saw defendant’s ear parked off the highway near the bank. Sneathen looked in the ear, saw no one, then went to the bank and saw defendant coming up from the ocean. He questioned defendant, who at first did not reply, then “said he was looking for another man and woman there, supposed to be fishing down in there. . . . He said in a nervous way . . . that this man was out with . . . [ajnother man’s wife, and he told me he shouldn’t be. . . . Then after a short spell he wasn’t near as nervous, so I . . . decided to continue on my patrol, and as I turned to go he struck me on the head” with a tire iron (a narrow iron bar), knocked Sneathen down, and continued to beat him. The dog attacked defendant, giving Sneathen an opportunity to get to his feet. Sneathen ran to a nearby telephone and called his camp. Defendant pursued him but halted when Sneathen, who was armed with a pistol, threatened to shoot. Defendant then ran to his car, got in it and drove a short distance in the direction of Santa Monica, turned around and drove a short distance *73 past Sneathen and away from Santa Monica, turned around again, and stopped about 100 yards from Sneathen. He got out of his car and again advanced toward Sneathen, not stopping although Sneathen told him to halt. Other Coast Guardsmen arrived and took defendant to their camp. Deputy sheriffs of Ventura County came to the camp and took defendant iníto cústody. To questions as to “what he did with the woman that he had in the ear,” defendant “wouldn’t say anything . . . , he just stood mute.”- Defendant did not appear to be intoxicated when he was apprehended.

In the back of defendant’s automobile were Mrs. Berger’s open purse (which contained, among other things, papers bearing her name and address and ration tokens), her suit case, packed, and her hat. On the floor in the front of the car were red and blue ration tokens. There were blood and “reddish” human hair on the back of the right front seat (Mrs. Berger’s hair was “auburn”), blood on the inside panel of the right door, and a pool of blood on the floor, flowing out onto the running board. Also found in the car were a pigskin glove of defendant and the tire iron; on both were stains of ■blood. • Defendant’s shirt and trousers were spotted with blood and his trousers were badly torn. Defendant was questioned by the Coast Guardsmen and the deputy sheriffs. He first refused to talk, then stated that “he had had a fight with a man by the name of Harry, and that is how the blood got in the car, and the fight had been over some woman down in Venice, and this Harry had taken the woman away from him. ’ ’

■ Mrs. Berger’s wedding ring was found in the toilet bowl in a cell of the Ventura jail where defendant was held for a time. Further examination of the ground in the vicinity of Point Mugu disclosed spots of blood along the bank leading down to the sea and “a slight ditch or trench [in the loose shale of the bank], as though something might have been drug or thrown through there. ’ ’ A piece of rayon fibre of the sort used in women’s undergarments was caught on the rock embankment. Mrs. Berger’s brooch was found near the spot where defendant’s car was parked at Point Mugu. ' '

On the morning of May 11 police officers of Los Angeles •went to Ventura in connection with the case.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P.2d 11, 29 Cal. 2d 69, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-peterson-cal-1946.