People v. Rogers

141 P.2d 722, 22 Cal. 2d 787, 1943 Cal. LEXIS 224
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1943
DocketCrim. 4442
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 141 P.2d 722 (People v. Rogers) 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. Rogers, 141 P.2d 722, 22 Cal. 2d 787, 1943 Cal. LEXIS 224 (Cal. 1943).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

Courtney Fred Rogers is the son of Courtney Commodore Rogers and Lilly Rogers. His mother died in February, 1941. Ten months later his father was asphyxiated in a fire which destroyed the house'in which they were living. Following a trial upon an information which accused the son in Count I of the murder of his mother, in Count II with the murder of his father, and in Count III with arson, a jury returned verdicts finding him guilty upon each charge. ' The issues raised by his pleas of not guilty by reason" of insanity were' then tried with the result that he was found to have been sane at the time of the commission of each of the offenses named in the information. As the jury determined that each homicide was murder in the first degree and included no recommendation in its verdicts, judgment was pronounced sentencing him to death upon those counts and to the state prison for the term prescribed by law upon the conviction of arson.-

The appellant,' 24 years of age, lived with his mother and father in a modest home on the east side of Los Angeles. An illness had prevented his graduation from high school with his class, but he took a correspondence course and, in Í938, received a diploma. His musical education commenced when he was a young child. He started studying the pipe organ at Polytechnic Evening High.School, and later with a professional organist. " His custom for years had been to practice on. the pipe organ at one of the Los Angeles churches *790 three afternoons each week. His mother usually went with him, and sat in the back of the church; afterward they customarily did the marketing or shopping or sought some entertainment. There is much evidence of a deep bond of affection between them.

Apparently during recent years there was little in common between the mother and father. The principal cause of this estrangement was the drinking habits of the husband, and Mrs. Rogers and the son were drawn closely • together by her unhappiness.

As an unmarried young man within the draft age, for several months before the mother’s death the appellant was expecting to be called for military service and his prospective leaving was evidently a matter of considerable concern to both her and the father. Because of his musical ability, young Rogers expected to serve in a band.

Except for several confessions which, the People assert, were made by the appellant following his arrest, the evidence concerning the deaths of Mr. and Mrs. Rogers shows the following facts:

Early in January, 1941, Mrs. Rogers fainted and fell. Thereafter she complained of an injury to her back and leg. She found walking was painful and avoided doing much of it. Courtney took care of her and did most of the household work. She was treated by a chiropractor, but on February 2d, Dr. Oifenberg, a physician, was called. He advised that an X-ray should be taken and prescribed a sedative, directing that a l1/^ grain capsule of it be taken at bedtime. Such a dose, he testified, is not a sleep producer but it makes an ordinary person feel more comfortable bodily.

Three days later, the appellant called on the physician and told him that his mother still had a good deal of pain. Dr. Oifenberg again advised an X-ray and prescribed another sedative. The prescription called for 1% grain capsules, one to be taken nightly. Dr. Oifenberg testified that up to 20 grains may be taken in any 24 hours without harm.

Two days after the second sedative was obtained, Courtney and his father brought Mrs. Rogers to Dr. Oifenberg’s office and treatment by confinement to bed for the majority of the time during three or four weeks, with traction on the leg, was prescribed. Testifying concerning that visit, Dr. *791 Offenberg said, “She had been ill for a period of three to four weeks prior to this time and she didn’t like the idea very much of being confined to bed . . . but she did agree to it. ’ ’ At this time Mrs. Rogers seems to have indulged in an hysterical outburst and to have talked of taking her own life.

The traction apparatus was apparently constructed with considerable care by the father with the help of Courtney and neighbors. It consisted of a “pulley with a weight attached to the end of a rope . .. and the other attached to the patient’s leg and the rope run over a pulley into the bed.” A mass of gauze and adhesive tape was made into a collar-like device to go around the ankle. To secure the tension, Mrs. Rogers would back herself up in bed so that she was pulling against the weights, and when she secured as much tension as she wanted she would lie there in bed and leave the device on as long as she felt she could stand it. When disengaged from the ankle, the rope remained under the covers of the bed, ready for instant use, and all the while attached to the weight at the base of the bed.

Although the physician instructed Mrs. Rogers to remain in bed except to go to the bathroom; she continued to be up and around the house a good deal. She was able to get in and out of bed unassisted, although she usually had some aid. Mrs. Offredo, who worked in the Rogers house at times, told the jury that Mrs. Rogers “got up from the bed and she sat by the side of me in the kitchen and helped me wash the dish and put it away. . . . She would get up sometimes, not all the time. ’ ’ On the day before her death, Mrs. Rogers was up and about the house and took a bath by herself.

It was about four o’clock in the afternoon of February 10th that the sheriff’s office received a call for assistance. Undoubtedly the telephone message came from Rogers, Sr. An officer responded. He found Mrs. Rogers in bed lying on her side with a wad of cotton “right next to her nose.” The cotton smelled of chloroform. An empty box which had contained the capsules enclosing the sedative last prescribed was on a bedside table. On the same table was an empty chloroform bottle. The odor of chloroform was strong in the room.

Mrs. Gesselman, a neighbor, who came in almost at once, testified that Mr. Rogers told her “he found a piece of cot *792 ton in the mother’s hand. ’ ’ But the officer who first arrived testified that “Mrs. Rogers' was lying on her right side.' She was covered up to her armpits. Her left hand was extended and her' right arm across her breasts,, apparently dead.” He said there was a little gas jet in the corner of the bedroom which he tested, ascertaining that the gas was turned off under the house. According to Dr. Offenberg, who reached the house later than the officer, the odor of chloroform was strong in the bedroom and he also detected the odor of illuminating gas. But when reminded of his own testimony at the preliminary hearing he admitted that he had then said: ■“The only thing I could detect was the chloroform.” To further questions he stated, “The odor of the gas was apparently stronger throughout the house and not in the bedroom.”

Dr. Offenberg made no examination of the body. ’ He said it was partially covered with a blanket but that, the traction apparatus was in place.

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Bluebook (online)
141 P.2d 722, 22 Cal. 2d 787, 1943 Cal. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rogers-cal-1943.