People v. Shimonaka

116 P. 327, 16 Cal. App. 117, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 169
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 1911
DocketCrim. No. 147.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 116 P. 327 (People v. Shimonaka) 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. Shimonaka, 116 P. 327, 16 Cal. App. 117, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 169 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Defendant was accused of the crime of murder and was found guilty of manslaughter, the jury recommending him to the mercy of the court. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was denied by the court and it thereupon sentenced him to be imprisoned for the term of four years.

1. Defendant and deceased, Hikotaro Tenouye, Japanese laborers, were working on a ranch near the city of Stockton, being farmed by another Japanese, named Tos aka Noguchi. About 8 o ’clock on the evening of June 8, 1910, they were in a so-called bunk-house where, with some other Japanese, they lodged. They got into a verbal controversy over the trifling' question as to how many pounds constituted a load of hay, which led to an encounter but neither being injured. The bystanders separated them and defendant left the bunk-house. So far as appears, nothing had occurred, before this affray, to arouse a feeling of hostility toward each other. They had been acquainted only about three weeks. After defendant left the room, Tenouye sat down for a minute or two and then got up and followed after defendant, remarking, as he left, that he was going to “hit” defendant, but this was not said in defendant’s hearing. Tenouye had no clothing on his person at the time except an overshirt and defendant wore only an overshirt and undershirt. There was evidence that neither *120 of them had any weapon at the time they left the bunk-house. Defendant went toward a shed where there were arrangements for bathing, passing through a building used as a dining-room and kitchen on his way. Tenouye followed after defendant and witness Matsuyama followed Tanouye not far behind him. Defendant passed out of the kitchen at the door opposite to the door where the three entered the kitchen. Matsuyama testified that as Tenouye passed out of the kitchen door toward the bath-house he saw defendant strike Tenouye with an ax, felling him to the ground, and while lying on the ground he struck him with the ax on the head and ran away. The first blow was in the lower part of the abdomen, cutting a wide and deep gash, though not necessarily fatal, as testified by the medical witnesses. The second blow crushed the skull and inflicted a mortal wound. Matsuyama, who was the only eye-witness to the homicide, called for help and Noguchi, the tenant of the farm, and others came at once and carried Tenouye into the house, where he died the next morning from the effects of the blow on his head, as testified to by the medical witnesses. Defendant fled on striking the second blow and was arrested the next day several miles from the scene of the homicide. Defendant testified that he had reached the bathhouse and was preparing to take a bath when Tenouye came at him in a threatening manner with a club or stick and said, “I am going to kill you,” or, “I am going to kill you one strike,” and that he thereupon struck him in self-defense. Matsuyama testified that Tenouye had no club or stick, or other means of injuring defendant, in his hands; that he was only a few feet from Tenouye when the blow was struck and heard no words between them. It appeared that the body of Tenouye was found a few feet from the kitchen; that the bath-house was fifteen or twenty feet farther away. Defendant’s account of the homicide cannot be reconciled with Matsuyama’s. The jury must have accepted Matsuyama’s testimony and they might well have found defendant guilty of a higher degree of crime than manslaughter.

Defendant’s counsel advance the rather singular contention that the verdict is not supported because the evidence does not bring the ease within the definition of manslaughter—first, because the killing was not involuntary; and, second, it was not voluntary manslaughter, which consists of the unlawful *121 killing of a human being without malice upon a sudden quarrel or in the heat of passion. “If, then,” says the brief, “there does not appear to have been a sudden quarrel, and the defendant did not act in the heat of passion, the verdict would be unsupported by the evidence.” Just what impelled defendant to kill Tenouye can only be surmised. The evidence justified the jury in finding that he killed him without apparent cause; that the killing was unlawful and under circumstances implying criminal intent. It would be a strange condition of the law that would acquit defendant because the jury found him guilty of a lesser crime than the one charged and proved. It is settled that the crime of murder necessarily includes the crime of manslaughter. (People v. McFarlane, 138 Cal. 481, [72 Pac. 48, 61 L. R A. 245].)

Upon the issue of self-defense the verdict of the jury was against defendant and is conclusive upon this court, there having been some evidence from which the jury might have concluded that defendant did not kill his adversary under circumstances such as the law would have justified under the plea of self-defense.

Defendant complains of error in giving certain instructions for the people; in refusing certain instructions requested by him and in modifying certain others before giving them.

2. The instructions principally made the subject of objection relate to the law of self-defense. Instruction marked XII, requested by defendant, was as follows: “You are instructed that where one reasonably believes that another intends, and is about to commit some great bodily injury upon him, he may, in his defense, pursue and slay his adversary. But his pursuit must not be revenge, but must be prosecuted in good faith to the sole end of winning his safety and securing his life.” To which the court added: “ [and must be carried no further than is reasonably necessary to free oneself from danger].”

Instruction marked XXIII, given at the request of the prosecution, is referred to by defendant in this connection as being likewise objectionable, as shown in clause in brackets. It is as follows: “On the subject of self-defense, or justifiable homicide, the court further charges the jury that one of the prime objects of the law is the preservation of human life. That no human life shall be taken unnecessarily, is the policy *122 of the law. Every individual is entitled to his life, unless forfeited thereunder. He may forfeit the right to his life by the commission of a crime, or by such conduct toward another individual as will justify that individual in taking his life then and there. A person taking the life of another, under such circumstances, must be justified in doing it by the law of necessity. This necessity must be real, or apparently real. A person so taking life must believe that he is in danger of losing his own, or receiving great bodily 'injury. This belief must be founded on reason and entertained in good faith. In the effort to save his own life, or to avoid the infliction of great bodily injury upon him, the person in danger, real or apparently real [may use so much force as is necessary to meet such danger, and no more. If he goes beyond this limit, he transcends the law of self-defense, and becomes himself a wrongdoer]. He would not be justified under the law in taking life unless such taking of life was really or apparently necessary to save his own, or to avoid the infliction of great bodily injury upon him.

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Bluebook (online)
116 P. 327, 16 Cal. App. 117, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-shimonaka-calctapp-1911.