HERNDON, J.
Defendant appeals from the judgment of conviction entered against him following the return of a jury verdict finding him guilty of murder of the second degree.
The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict is not
challenged. Viewed most favorably to the People, it may be summarized as follows; At approximately midnight on August 29, 1962, the victim, Latimore Harvey, Jr., entered the Starlite, a bar and café located at 41st Street and Broadway in Los Angeles. Appellant, Luther Powell, was the cook and operator of the kitchen section of the establishment. This kitchen section was separated from the bar and booths by an open doorway. Several of the patrons who were present testified that after entering the front door, the victim walked toward the rear of the establishment and stopped near a juke box where he could see appellant through the doorway of the kitchen. The victim then pointed his finger at appellant and said:
“You dirty . . . , I am going to call the police this time because I think you are a dirty. . .
.,
The victim then continued further toward the rear of the establishment walking toward a telephone booth. Several witnesses observed that the victim had a dime in his hand. Immediately thereafter, appellant came out of the kitchen doorway and walked to the juke box carrying a revolver in his hand. He leveled his arm, taking aim over the juke box and fired at the victim as the latter walked toward the telephone booth. The victim continued to walk on and he entered the telephone booth. Appellant kept on firing his revolver and the deceased slumped to the floor of the phone booth against the door thereof as it stood at least partially open. Appellant replied to the remark of the deceased during the shooting. He said:
“I am getting tired of you dirty . . . messing with me. . . . You started, you . . . coming in here ruining this business.” Appellant kept pulling the trigger of the revolver after it ceased firing and thereafter it began to click. Appellant then said: “Where the rest of them bad [obscenity].”
A cruising police car received a radio call reporting the shooting. When one of the police officers entered the establishment, he found appellant with the gun in his hand. Appellant handed the officer the gun; it contained six discharged cartridges. The officer asked appellant about the man he had shot and appellant told the officer that he would find him in the phone booth. The officer then asked appellant why he had killed the deceased. Appellant replied: “That nigger [obscenity] has been coming in here and bothering me. I am getting tired of being called a nigger by him, and I just finally decided to shoot him and get rid of him.”
The victim was found slumped down in the telephone booth with his arm extended. A dime lay on the floor of the booth. The autopsy report showed that the victim had been shot four times in the back and twice in the chest. Two of the bullets went through the heart, one through the lung and another through the aorta. Two of the shots not only pierced the body of the deceased but passed through it, making eight wounds in all. Any one of several of the wounds could have been the cause of death.
Appellant gave a statement to the police in which he said that he rented the café portion of the Star lite; that he had been harassed by a group of individuals during the past two months calling him dirty names and he had “run them out.” He said that on the day of the killing he had ordered a prostitute and a group with her to go away; that he had sensed there might be trouble; that he had taken the gun from the cash register in front to the kitchen and put it on a shelf; that there had been trouble with some customers near the front door about 11 p.m., and he had gone up front and put them out; that when he returned to the kitchen he heard the victim making a statement; that he grabbed the gun and fired and then walked around and took one more shot but didn’t remember anything after that.
The officer asked appellant why he shot the deceased, and appellant replied, “Well, he will never call me another black [obscenity].” When asked if this was the only reason he shot him, appellant replied, 1 ‘ That is the only reason I shot him. ’ ’
At the trial it was the theory of the defense that the victim had entered the kitchen in a violent and threatening manner and defendant had fired one or two shots in self-defense. Defendant stoutly maintained that he had shot the victim, not because of anger aroused by the language of the decedent, but because appellant feared for his own life.
By way of his initial assignment of error, appellant argues that the giving of an instruction in the language of Penal Code section 7, subdivision 4, in conjunction with admittedly proper instructions constituted prejudicial error.
However, he recognizes the necessity for his concession that there are no decisions so holding and that, in fact, in all cases in which the question has been considered it has been held that, while the giving of the general definition of malice is unnecessary and perhaps inappropriate in a murder trial, nonetheless any error that might otherwise result therefrom is cured by the full and proper instructions here requested by both parties and given by the court.
(People
v.
Berry,
44 Cal2d 426, 432 [282 P.2d 861];
People
v. Chavez, 37 Cal.2d 656, 666-667 [234 P.2d 632];
People
v.
Dice,
120 Cal. 189, 202 [52 P. 477] ;
People
v.
Miceli,
101 Cal.App.2d 643, 650 [226 P.2d 14] ;
People
v.
Waysman,
1 Cal.App. 246, 248-249 [81 P. 1087].)
Appellant’s second assignment of error, relating to the jury instructions, concerns the court’s decision not to give the following instruction requested by appellant: “You aré instructed that as a matter of law, heat of passion as previously defined can be generated by words of abuse.”
'
In support of the propriety of this instruction, defendant cites
People
v.
Valentine,
28 Cal.2d 121 [169 P.2d 1], The
decision in the
Valentine
ease, however", malíes clear' that .the court was not there considering whether an instruction in the form of such an abstract proposition as proffered by defendant could or should be given-to the jury. Prior to the
Valentine
decision it had been held that it was proper to instruct the jury that “no words of reproach, however grievous, are sufficient provocation to reduce the offense of an intentional homicide from murder to manslaughter.” The court in
Valentine
rejected this instruction and adopted the instruction set forth in
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
HERNDON, J.
Defendant appeals from the judgment of conviction entered against him following the return of a jury verdict finding him guilty of murder of the second degree.
The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict is not
challenged. Viewed most favorably to the People, it may be summarized as follows; At approximately midnight on August 29, 1962, the victim, Latimore Harvey, Jr., entered the Starlite, a bar and café located at 41st Street and Broadway in Los Angeles. Appellant, Luther Powell, was the cook and operator of the kitchen section of the establishment. This kitchen section was separated from the bar and booths by an open doorway. Several of the patrons who were present testified that after entering the front door, the victim walked toward the rear of the establishment and stopped near a juke box where he could see appellant through the doorway of the kitchen. The victim then pointed his finger at appellant and said:
“You dirty . . . , I am going to call the police this time because I think you are a dirty. . .
.,
The victim then continued further toward the rear of the establishment walking toward a telephone booth. Several witnesses observed that the victim had a dime in his hand. Immediately thereafter, appellant came out of the kitchen doorway and walked to the juke box carrying a revolver in his hand. He leveled his arm, taking aim over the juke box and fired at the victim as the latter walked toward the telephone booth. The victim continued to walk on and he entered the telephone booth. Appellant kept on firing his revolver and the deceased slumped to the floor of the phone booth against the door thereof as it stood at least partially open. Appellant replied to the remark of the deceased during the shooting. He said:
“I am getting tired of you dirty . . . messing with me. . . . You started, you . . . coming in here ruining this business.” Appellant kept pulling the trigger of the revolver after it ceased firing and thereafter it began to click. Appellant then said: “Where the rest of them bad [obscenity].”
A cruising police car received a radio call reporting the shooting. When one of the police officers entered the establishment, he found appellant with the gun in his hand. Appellant handed the officer the gun; it contained six discharged cartridges. The officer asked appellant about the man he had shot and appellant told the officer that he would find him in the phone booth. The officer then asked appellant why he had killed the deceased. Appellant replied: “That nigger [obscenity] has been coming in here and bothering me. I am getting tired of being called a nigger by him, and I just finally decided to shoot him and get rid of him.”
The victim was found slumped down in the telephone booth with his arm extended. A dime lay on the floor of the booth. The autopsy report showed that the victim had been shot four times in the back and twice in the chest. Two of the bullets went through the heart, one through the lung and another through the aorta. Two of the shots not only pierced the body of the deceased but passed through it, making eight wounds in all. Any one of several of the wounds could have been the cause of death.
Appellant gave a statement to the police in which he said that he rented the café portion of the Star lite; that he had been harassed by a group of individuals during the past two months calling him dirty names and he had “run them out.” He said that on the day of the killing he had ordered a prostitute and a group with her to go away; that he had sensed there might be trouble; that he had taken the gun from the cash register in front to the kitchen and put it on a shelf; that there had been trouble with some customers near the front door about 11 p.m., and he had gone up front and put them out; that when he returned to the kitchen he heard the victim making a statement; that he grabbed the gun and fired and then walked around and took one more shot but didn’t remember anything after that.
The officer asked appellant why he shot the deceased, and appellant replied, “Well, he will never call me another black [obscenity].” When asked if this was the only reason he shot him, appellant replied, 1 ‘ That is the only reason I shot him. ’ ’
At the trial it was the theory of the defense that the victim had entered the kitchen in a violent and threatening manner and defendant had fired one or two shots in self-defense. Defendant stoutly maintained that he had shot the victim, not because of anger aroused by the language of the decedent, but because appellant feared for his own life.
By way of his initial assignment of error, appellant argues that the giving of an instruction in the language of Penal Code section 7, subdivision 4, in conjunction with admittedly proper instructions constituted prejudicial error.
However, he recognizes the necessity for his concession that there are no decisions so holding and that, in fact, in all cases in which the question has been considered it has been held that, while the giving of the general definition of malice is unnecessary and perhaps inappropriate in a murder trial, nonetheless any error that might otherwise result therefrom is cured by the full and proper instructions here requested by both parties and given by the court.
(People
v.
Berry,
44 Cal2d 426, 432 [282 P.2d 861];
People
v. Chavez, 37 Cal.2d 656, 666-667 [234 P.2d 632];
People
v.
Dice,
120 Cal. 189, 202 [52 P. 477] ;
People
v.
Miceli,
101 Cal.App.2d 643, 650 [226 P.2d 14] ;
People
v.
Waysman,
1 Cal.App. 246, 248-249 [81 P. 1087].)
Appellant’s second assignment of error, relating to the jury instructions, concerns the court’s decision not to give the following instruction requested by appellant: “You aré instructed that as a matter of law, heat of passion as previously defined can be generated by words of abuse.”
'
In support of the propriety of this instruction, defendant cites
People
v.
Valentine,
28 Cal.2d 121 [169 P.2d 1], The
decision in the
Valentine
ease, however", malíes clear' that .the court was not there considering whether an instruction in the form of such an abstract proposition as proffered by defendant could or should be given-to the jury. Prior to the
Valentine
decision it had been held that it was proper to instruct the jury that “no words of reproach, however grievous, are sufficient provocation to reduce the offense of an intentional homicide from murder to manslaughter.” The court in
Valentine
rejected this instruction and adopted the instruction set forth in
People
v.
Logan,
175 Cal. 45, 49-50 [164 P. 1121], which is consistent with those given the jury in the instant case.
It is for the jury in each instance to determine whether the provocation shown by the evidence, including words and actions, was sufficient to create the required degree of pas
sion, and a specific statement of what
“as a matter of law”
may be abstractly true would merely tend to confuse if not mislead the jury as to its duties and prerogatives.
Moreover, in the instant case appellant continually reiterated and emphasized the alleged fact that he did not shoot the deceased because of any anger or passion generated by the gross vulgarities used, but, on the contrary, that he had acted solely in defense of his person. The giving of such an instruction in the circumstances would have been detrimental to appellant’s case, for it would have been contrary to the theory of his defense which, if accepted by the jury, would have resulted in his acquittal. Certainly its rejection was not prejudicial error.
Appellant’s final assignment of error relates to the admission into evidence of a written summary of a statement made by appellant to a police officer shortly after the shooting. Coneededly appellant freely and voluntarily engaged in conversation with the officers for over an hour. One of the officers wrote a summary of the cogent portions of this conversation and asked appellant to read it and sign it. He did sign it, but testified that he had not read it and did not wish to sign it because he knew it was incomplete, i.e., he knew that everything he had said during the conversation could not possibly be contained on two pages.
Although appellant suggests that his actual signing of the document was the result of duress, even his own version of the proceedings totally refutes this contention, and, insofar as his description of the events is at variance with that of the officers, the resolution of this conflict was properly one for the jury, and its “determination will not be disturbed unless it is without evidentiary support.”
(People
v.
Burwell,
44 Cal.2d 16, 30 [279 P.2d 744].)
Actually the true thrust of appellant’s arguments on this point is not that the contents of the statement are completely false, but merely that they are incomplete and, therefore, fail to present a true picture of the events in question. This, however, inevitably is a characteristic of every summary of this type. Certainly no prejudice resulted therefrom, for both appellant and the officer testified concerning other subsidiary matters that were contained in appellant’s oral statements but which were not included in the written summary.
Appellant also comments on the fact that a tape recording was made of his conversation with the officers and later “destroyed.” Actually, the officer testified that the re
cording was completely garbled and totally unintelligible, perhaps because made on a used tape, and that it was subsequently erased. Credibility of witnesses is for the trier of the facts.
(People
v.
Kemp,
55 Cal.2d 458, 471 [11 Cal.Rptr. 361, 359 P.2d 913];
People
v.
Barbera,
50 Cal.2d 688, 692 [328 P.2d 973].)
And, in any event, it has been held that what the officer heard is primary evidence, whether all that the officer heard waá incorporated in a recording or not.
(People
v.
Sweeney,
55 Cal.2d 27, 38 [9 Cal.Rptr. 793, 357 P.2d 1049] ;
People
v.
Sica,
112 Cal.App.2d 574, 588 [247 P.2d 72].)
The judgment is affirmed.
Fox, P. J., and Ashburn, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 9, 1963.