People v. Profumo

138 P. 109, 23 Cal. App. 376, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 135
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 28, 1913
DocketCrim. No. 469.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 138 P. 109 (People v. Profumo) 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. Profumo, 138 P. 109, 23 Cal. App. 376, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 135 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction of the defendant of murder of the second degree and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The first point urged by the appellant is that the court erred in giving to the jury the following instruction upon the subject of dying declarations: “Whether the declaration was in fact made under a sense of impending death is a question of fact which most materially affects the question of its credibility, *378 and the determination of the court thereon is not conclusive upon the jury. They have the right, in considering whether they shall accept the declaration as a correct statement, to determine for themselves whether the declarant was in ex-tremis, and fully convinced of that fact when making the declaration, and are at liberty to disregard it if not satisfied that it was made under a sense of impending death.” The vice which the appellant points out as existing in this instruction is that, while it correctly commits to the jury the final determination as to whether the alleged dying declaration was made while the declarant was in extremis, and was conscious of the fact of his condition, it leaves the jury “at liberty” to regard or disregard the declaration although it has not been proven to their satisfaction that it was made under a sense of impending death.

There would seem to be little doubt as to the correctness of this contention. A dying declaration is only admissible in evidence when, in the first instance, the court is reasonably satisfied by evidence aliunde that it was made under a sense of impending death; and, having been so admitted by the court, is only competent evidence to be considered by the jury when they shall also have first satisfied themselves beyond a reasonable doubt that it was made by the declarant as a dying person and under a sense of impending death. The rule on this subject is clearly set forth by Mr. Justice Angellotti in the case of People v. Thomson, 145 Cal. 717, 725, [79 Pac. 435], in the following words: “Inasmuch as the declaration of the decedent is competent evidence only when made under the sense of impending death and because it is so made, it would seem to logically follow that the jury could give it no consideration whatever unless they are satisfied that it was made by the deceased under such sense of impending death. It is a rule of evidence that such a declaration can be considered only in that event; and while the court must of necessity preliminarily determine the question of fact essential to the admission of the declaration in evidence, the rule of evidence still remains for the guidance of the jury; and as the jury must exercise their power of judgment of the effect of the evidence in subordination to the rules of evidence, it would seem to be proper to inform the jury of such rule and of their duties in regard thereto.”

*379 It is, however, contended by the respondent that the instruction under consideration is to be held to be a correct statement of the law because it was also taken bodily from another portion of the opinion of Mr. Justice Angellotti in the case above cited.

When the case of People v. Thomson is examined it will be found that the language of the decision which the trial court in the case at bar excerpted and adopted as its instruction, was used by the learned justice not in defining the duty of the jury in respect of their consideration of the declaration, but in defining the duty of the court in respect of the admission of the declaration in evidence in the first instance; and that the learned justice followed the general language which was adopted by the trial court in its instruction with a specific statement -of the law governing the ultimate attitude of the jury toward dying declarations which has been above set forth but which the trial court entirely omitted from its instruction; nor was the error of such omission corrected or cured in any other portion of the instructions.

The respondent further contends that, conceding the error in the instructions complained of, the appellant is not entitled to a reversal therefor because it was his duty, if he desired a more specific instruction to the jury upon the subject of dying declarations, to have requested of the trial court the giving of such instruction, and that his failure to request a more specific instruction waives the failure to give it.

The cases relied upon by the respondent to support this contention do not go so far, but merely hold that where a general instruction is given by the court which is correct as far as it goes, but which is merely deficient by reason of its generality, the defendant is bound to request that the charge be made more specific, and in the absence of such request is held to have waived his objection to the instruction; but to hold that an error of an instruction, which merely informs the jury that they are at liberty not to do that which under given conditions they are bound not to do, must be corrected by the defendant at the moment of its commission, under penalty of waiving his right to object to it upon appeal, would be to carry the rule entirely too far. This is well illustrated in the present case, wherein the instructions given by the trial court *380 are sixty-two in number, extending over forty-eight pages of the typewritten transcript on appeal.

It is also contended that the instruction, even though error, is not such prejudicial error as should work a reversal of the judgment, for the reason, as counsel urges, that the dying declaration in question was not essential to the case for the people, and that there is ample evidence without it to support the verdict.

The record does not sustain this contention. The defendant was charged in the information with murder in the first degree. The facts upon proof of which the people depended to sustain this charge were these: The defendant and one Robert Schaffer went to the cabin of the decedent with intent to commit burglary. . While there they were surprised in the act of rifling the cabin by its owner, who first saw Schaffer, and after demanding the reason of his presence there, fired a shot at him, wounding him in the leg; that almost immediately thereafter the decedent was fired upon and fatally wounded by the appellant who, at the time of the first shot, was in another room of the house. The only witnesses to the actual shooting were the decedent, Schaffer, and the defendant; and the only two witnesses as to the purpose for which the defendant and Schaffer went into the cabin of the decedent were themselves. On the "day before the trial Schaffer was permitted to withdraw his plea of not guilty of murder in the first degree, and to enter a plea of guilty of burglary in the second degree. Thereafter and upon the trial Schaffer turned state’s evidence, and testified that the purpose of the defendant and himself in going into the cabin of the decedent was to commit burglary, and that being there it was the defendant who fired the fatal shot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 P. 109, 23 Cal. App. 376, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-profumo-calctapp-1913.