People v. Schmidt

165 P.2d 555, 165 P. 555, 33 Cal. App. 426, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 290
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 16, 1917
DocketCrim. No. 475.
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 165 P.2d 555 (People v. Schmidt) 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. Schmidt, 165 P.2d 555, 165 P. 555, 33 Cal. App. 426, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 290 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Appeal from a judgment directing the imprisonment of the defendant in the state penitentiary for the period of his natural life, and also from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

*429 The defendant was accused hy an indictment of a grand jury of the county of Los Angeles, in which several other defendants were named, of having on the first day of October, 1910, feloniously and with malice aforethought murdered one Charles Hagerty. The indictment was filed on the fifth day of May, 1911. Defendant not being apprehended until the year 1915, he was then placed upon trial, which after a lengthy hearing, resulted in a verdict of guilty being returned against him. It will be necessary to make a somewhat extended statement of the evidence heard at the trial, in order to give proper illustration to the argument of appellant, and to the propositions which he advances, and which he claims entitle him to have the judgment reversed. In this statement we shall refer most particularly to the testimony introduced on behalf of the prosecution. The attempt will be only to first furnish in narrative a history of the alleged crime, as the evidence for the people tended to prove it, and we will later consider the competency of the testimony as it is met by objections urged on behalf of the appellant.

In the year 1905 there existed in the United States an organization designated as the International Association of Bridge and Structural Ironworkers. It was an organization, as its name implies, made up of various suborganizations or labor unions scattered throughout the country. The objects as declared by its constitution were “to cultivate feelings of friendship among the craft, to assist each other to secure employment, to reduce the hours of labor, to secure adequate pay for work, . . . and to elevate the moral, intellectual and social condition of all members, and to improve the trade.” The offices of the association were in Indiana, and a system was provided by which funds should be collected and disbursed. J. J. McNamara was the secretary and treasurer of the association during the time herein mentioned. The association in 1905 declared a general strike against the American Bridge Company, which was a large contracting concern engaged in the erection of structures of iron and steel. One of the objects desired by the association was to compel all employers who were using nonunion labor to unionize their plants and employ only members of the recognized union. The American Bridge Company was one of the chief employers of nonunion labor, but was not the only concern carrying on business on the open-shop plan in the structural *430 iron and steel line. J. J. McNamara, apparently without any authority given him by the constitution or members of the organization, unless that authority is deemed to be an implied one, encouraged persons to destroy various work being constructed under the open-shop plan. In 1908 and 1909, bridges, viaducts, and other structural work being done by nonunion employers, to the number of perhaps twenty, were destroyed by dynamite or nitroglycerin. Most of these explosions were produced with the knowledge and active encouragement of J. J. McNamara, and funds of the association were used to pay the persons who destroyed the work. The evidence was sufficient to show that the purpose of J. J. McNamara and fellow-officers of the association was to compel the employers of nonunion labor to accept the dictates of the association, and, in order to do this, the means apparently most ready and acceptable to their hands was the use of dynamite and other high explosives for the purpose of ruining work under construction and destroying the results of the labor of the nonunion employees. It was customary for the heads of local unions scattered about the country, when they desired assistance in protecting their cause in the particular locality, to request of the International Association funds and assistance. In 1910, the attention of J. J. McNamara and his fellow officers was directed to the state of California and particularly to the city of Los Angeles, which was known to be to a considerable extent an “open-shop” city. One Clancy, a leader of an ironworkers’ union in San Francisco, wrote to J. J. McNamara several times, asking that a certain man be sent to the west (this man being one Hoekin, who had produced several explosions theretofore in the east). J. J. McNamara did not send Hoekin, but did send his brother, J. B. McNamara. J. B. McNamara reached Seattle and was there visited by Clancy, and he then proceeded to San Francisco. The McNamaras had themselves concocted an infernal machine which had been used to produce the explosions on the nonunion work. This machine consisted of a “tattoo” clock attached tó a board,' to which board was also attached a dry battery. By a system of wiring, the clocks on the alarm dials could be set at any chosen hour, and when that hour arrived and the bell-hammer commenced to vibrate, electrical connection would be made from the battery to a fulminating cap attached to dynamite, or whatever explosive was used, and *431 thus the results planned for would be accomplished. J. B. McNamara, in the office of the association in Indianapolis just before he left there for the coast, said, in the presence of his brother and one McManigal, that he was going out and give them “a damned good cleaning up.” At the time J. B. McNamara arrived in San Francisco a great effort was being made to unionize the city of Los Angeles in the iron-working trades, and a great deal of money was spent in that endeavor. The “Los Angeles Times” and the Merchants & Manufacturers’ Association of Los Angeles had both advocated the open-shop plan of labor employment, and had been most active in work in opposition to the efforts of the unions to stamp out the open-shop policy. One Zehandelaar was the secretary of the Merchants & Manufacturers’ Association, and Harrison Gray Otis was president and manager of the “Los Angeles Times.” The defendant was a union worker who resided in San Francisco at and before the occurrence of the explosion which caused the death of Hagerty. He had been active in the work of attempting to unionize the city of Los Angeles, and had visited that city immediately before meeting McNamara, in the interests of the unionist work. Immediately upon the arrival of J. B. McNamara in the city of San Francisco he was visited by defendant frequently. On the seventeenth day of September, 1910, defendant wrote out (the evidence proved his handwriting), an advertisement which was published in two San Francisco newspapers, in the following form:

“Wanted—By party of men, 16-24 foot launch for ten days; cruise around Bay and tributaries. Best of references.”

Soon thereafter a launch was rented from a boat furnishing concern. This launch was a power launch and was called the “Pastime.” About the same time a man appeared at the office of a company manufacturing high explosives, which office was located in the city of San Francisco. This man desired to' purchase a very high explosive, asking for “90 per cent nitroglycerin.” Upon inquiry being made as to what work was to be done with it, the manufacturing company’s representative was informed that it was desired to be used in blowing out stumps. The applicant was expostulated with by the manufacturer’s agent and told that such a high percentage of explosive was not needed, but that a forty per cent grade would be sufficient.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 P.2d 555, 165 P. 555, 33 Cal. App. 426, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-schmidt-calctapp-1917.