People v. Sanchez

184 P.2d 673, 30 Cal. 2d 560, 1947 Cal. LEXIS 192
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1947
DocketCrim. 4769
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 184 P.2d 673 (People v. Sanchez) 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. Sanchez, 184 P.2d 673, 30 Cal. 2d 560, 1947 Cal. LEXIS 192 (Cal. 1947).

Opinion

SCHAUER, J.

On February 9, 1946, defendant Sanchez admittedly killed Alejandro Garcia, concealed his body, and fled from the United States. Thereafter defendant was ap *563 prehended and prosecuted. A jury found him guilty of murder of the first degree and made no recommendation as to penalty. Defendant appeals from the ensuing judgment imposing the death sentence and from an order denying his motion for new trial.

It is the theory of the People that defendant murdered Garcia in the perpetration of robbery; it is the theory of defendant that he killed justifiably in self-defense or, at least, in such a frenzy of terror that the killing could be no more than murder of the second degree or voluntary manslaughter. No other explanation of, or reason for, the slaying is claimed. It is true that the charge to the jury contains many erroneous and irrelevant instructions which in other circumstances could require a reversal. However, the evidence (hereinafter related) amply justifies a finding that Garcia was murdered by defendant in the perpetration of a robbery; the jury were adequately instructed as to this phase of the case; and it does not appear that they were misled by other instructions or that errors complained of by defendant resulted in a miscarriage of justice. Therefore, the judgment must be affirmed.

Defendant and Garcia were Mexican laborers who had worked on farms in the Imperial Valley. On the evening of Friday, February 8, 1946, they told the farmer by whom they had been employed that “They wanted to lay off . . . to go to Mexicali.” Each received his pay check, defendant’s being for the sum of $52.70 and Garcia’s for $77.80. The two men went to the cabin where they resided. This cabin contained two rooms, a kitchen and a bedroom; its single outside door opened from the kitchen. At about 4 or 5 o’clock on Saturday morning defendant killed Garcia with an axe, dragged his body to an outside toilet and concealed it beneath the toilet seat, washed some of the blood from the cabin, and fled to Mexico. Before he was killed, Garcia had, besides his pay cheek, “a good watch,” a pair of shoes and (according to defendant) a knife. When his body was discovered, about 8 or 9 o’clock on Saturday morning, none of these articles of personal property were on the body or in the cabin or its vicinity. Garcia’s pockets contained only 25 cents. His body bore five deep axe cuts which apparently had been inflicted in rapid succession: one across the small of the back, which went through his belt, through another belt which held a truss, and to the bone; one into the head, from which brain *564 tissue had spilled; one across the mouth, breaking bones and teeth; one which nearly severed the left arm above the wrist; and one which went through the left thigh to the bone. On the throat were marks (not deep cuts) which appeared to have resulted from “stabbing” or “gouging” with a knife or scissors. A pair of sheep shears was found in the cabin.

Defendant cashed his pay cheek in a grocery store on Saturday morning before he left this country. Garcia’s pay check, endorsed “Garría” or perhaps “Garsia,” was also cashed at this store. In the opinion of a handwriting expert, the endorsement thereon was written by defendant. Exemplars of defendant’s handwriting made by him after his arrest similarly misspelled the name of deceased as “Garría” or as “Garsia.” Pay checks made and delivered to Garcia by a former employer and cashed prior to the dates involved herein were endorsed “Alejandro Garcia”; such latter endorsements, in the opinion of the handwriting expert, were not written by defendant. Defendant on cross-examination testified as follows:

“Q. Now, before you put—or at any time after you killed Alejandro Garcia, did you take anything from his clothes or from his body? A. No. I didn’t take anything.
“Q. I am showing you a check which is People’s Exhibit No. 1 [the pay check Garcia received the evening before he was killed], and ask you if you had that check in your possession that morning. A. No, sir. . . .
“Q. Did Garcia carry a watch? A. I don’t know. I never saw it if he did.”

The limited extent of these denials, and the fact that they were adduced only upon cross-examination, should be noted. Defendant did not deny that he endorsed or negotiated Garcia’s pay cheek nor did he claim that he formed the intent to and did take any articles of personal property from Garcia only after the latter’s death.

Defendant’s testimony as to the circumstances of the homicide is as follows: Prior to the day of the killing Garcia “got sore because I had to correct him for poor work . . . [F]rom that time on he did things that were not right, and I paid no attention to him.” On the morning of Saturday, February 9, Garcia, contrary to his custom, arose early and prepared coffee. Defendant wakened but did not arise. “I could see he had some bad intentions. And he turned out the light, and I had a cigarette lighted, and I put it out, and *565 then I pulled the bed clothes up over me. ... I heard him open a knife.” Defendant did not see the knife at this time or during the ensuing struggle but he knew that Garcia carried a pocket “spring knife . . . One of those that the blade jumps.” Deceased leaped upon defendant and struck at his head with the knife but did not cut him. Defendant “slipped out from under him,” ran out the door and attempted to fasten it “to stop him coming out, and then as I was trying to fasten the door was when he jumped on me and tried to cut me in the throat, and that was when, in guarding, I received this cut on my arm. 1 . . . Then he was pursuing me, right behind me, and I was forced to do what I could to defend myself, and the first thing I got hold of was an axe [which was lying about 18 feet from the door of the cabin] . . . and then I struck him a blow, and at that time he—was when he tried to cut me in the stomach, and from the right I struck him another one. I don’t remember any more about it than that. And then he turned half around . . . and he stumbled over there by the door of the house. 2 And then I stood there not knowing what to do, whether to give notice or advise the authorities, or whether to beat it. Then I thought I would put him in the hole, because I would be punished. And therefore then I hauled him over to where the hole was, in order to allow myself a chance to get away. Then I threw him in the hole and I went back into the house and I got the wash basin and took it over to . . . [the] stove, and washed my arm. Then when I got through with the arm I took the basin of water and began to clean up there. I took a sweater . . . and I grabbed my handkerchief and tied it around my arm and took to the road. ’ ’

The testimony of defendant (which was given through an interpreter) corresponds closely to defendant’s answers to questions of the district attorney given through another interpreter shortly after defendant was apprehended.

The physical condition of the scene of the homicide on the morning Garcia was killed and after defendant had fled, *566 was as follows: In the bedroom was a bed and also a pallet on the floor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 P.2d 673, 30 Cal. 2d 560, 1947 Cal. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sanchez-cal-1947.