People v. Singh

188 P. 987, 182 Cal. 457, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 534
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1920
DocketCrim. No. 2270.
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 188 P. 987 (People v. Singh) 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. Singh, 188 P. 987, 182 Cal. 457, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 534 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

LAWLOR, J.

—This is an appeal taken by the defendant from a judgment of conviction of murder of the first degree after a verdict fixing the punishment at imprisonment for life. The defendant also appeals from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

It was charged in the information that on November 21, 1918, in the county of Imperial, the defendant killed and murdered one Albert Joe. The defendant and the deceased were Hindus. The deceased was sometimes called “Joe Albert” and “Alberto,” and the defendant is also referred to by the Christian name of “Raoul.” The deceased was the husband of Alejandrina Cardenaz and the defendant of *461 Valentina Alvarez, her mother. The wives are Mexicans. At the time of the marriage of Alejandrina Cardenaz to the deceased in November, 1917, Valentina Alvarez had three other daughters, Romana, Andria, and Anna Maria, who made their home with her and the defendant on a ranch some six or seven miles northwest of the town of Holtville. The deceased lived with his wife and their baby on a ranch about the same distance in a southeasterly direction from the said town. Gajan Singh was the brother of the deceased and lived in a house about one mile from the latter’s ranch. Following the marriage between the deceased and Alejandrina, sometimes known as “Mrs. Albert Joe,” trouble arose between the defendant and his wife. The latter, explaining why she left him, said: “I had good reasons to separate from him. . . . First, he didn’t give me enough for my family. . . . Secondary, he was very quarrelsome, always mad at me all the time. . . . He saw when I was telephoning, and he told me to stop and not to telephone any more, that he would send me to ‘Chingada,’ . . . and then he grabbed me by the hair and threw me on the floor. . . . The main reason of the quarrel was that I wouldn’t give my consent for his partner to marry my daughter, Romana. ... He told me that bye and bye we would remember him, that he was going to kill Alberto. . . . He did drive me away, he drove me away. ... I went because he drove me from the house, he said he didn’t want me in the house any more.”

According to the evidence, in the month of May, 1918, the wife telephoned Mrs. Albert Joe to come out to the ranch and take her away. The deceased and Ms wife went out to the Rulia Singh place and, after some loud words in Hindustani had passed between the men, and the defendant had said to Ms wife, “You go with your daughter,. and some day your daughter will think of me,” they brought Valentina Alvarez and her three daughters in Albert Joe’s automobile to the latter’s ranch. Two weeks later, Valentina, Romana, Andria, and Anna Maria went to San Diego, where they remained until the death of Albert Joe, the defendant making two visits to that city with the object of inducing his wife to return to him, which she declined to do. The separation of the defendant and his wife, and her refusal to return to him, apparently caused bad feeling on *462 the part of the defendant toward the deceased and his wife, for several Hindus and the Mexican women testified to threats made by Rulia Singh against the life of Albert Joe on various occasions. These threats, according to the prosecution, culminated in the assassination of the deceased. It is conceded that the deceased died from the effects of a 38-caliber bullet fired into his body, but whether from a revolver or a rifle does not appear.

In order more fully to understand the points urged as grounds for reversal we shall set forth the evidence somewhat in detail. On the afternoon of November 21, 1918, the deceased and his wife were in the town of Holtville on business. The evidence is not clear as to the exact hour, but it was late in the afternoon when they returned to their ranch in their automobile. When they arrived they stopped for a little while, put some provisions in the automobile, and then went on to the house of his brother, Gajan Singh, where they milked the cows. They then returned home and he and his wife sat down to supper.

The deceased and his wife lived in two “tent-houses,” each containing only one room. One was used as a “parlor” and the other as a “kitchen.” About 150 feet south of the “kitchen” and about eighty or ninety feet from the highway was a small milk-house containing a cream separator. This was a frame building about ten feet square, and excepting for three feet at the base the walls were made of wire screen.

The wife testified that while they were eating their dog commenced a loud barking very close to the kitchen and that, “My husband came out and called him and he came in and I gave him his supper and then he went off again. . . . He barked a great deal. I was in the house and did not notice .which way he went. . . . He barked all around there by the milk-house.”

After supper the deceased went out to operate the cream separator. At the same time his wife started to fill and light the oil lamps in the tents. According to her testimony the dog’s barking was still audible at a distance. The night was dark; there was no moon; a lighted lantern hung in the milk-house. Prom the spot where the deceased was found in the milk-house immediately after the shot was fired, the location of the cream separator, a hole made by *463 the bullet in the screen four and one-half feet from the floor, a scar made by the bullet on the wooden handle of the separator, and minor wounds in the thumb and finger of one of Albert Joe’s hands, it may be assumed that at the time he was shot he was standing, facing south, turning the machine. The bullet came through the wire screen on the south side of the milk-house, and footprints were found the night of the shooting leading to and away from a point about eight or ten feet south of the house, in a direct line with the bullet hole in the screen and the scar on the handle of the separator.

About fifteen minutes after the deceased had gone out to the milk-house, as his wife was re-entering the kitchen carrying the second lamp, which she had just filled, she heard the only shot that was fired. She immediately rushed into the kitchen, lighted the lamp, and then ran over to the milk-house, where she found her husband on the floor, suffering from a gunshot wound in his abdomen. She testified that while she was running toward the milk-house she heard her husband cry out, “Raoul has killed me, Raoul has killed me.” On cross-examination she said that his exclamation was, “Raoul is killing me, Raoul is killing me.” She testified further that when she reached her husband she asked him if he had seen Raoul Singh, and that he replied, “Yes,” and that Raoul Singh had said, “Now, you son-of-a-b-h, you remember what I told you. You would not let Valentina come with me, and now see what you got.” Questioned further, her version of this latter statement of the deceased was, “You son-of-a-b-h, why didn’t you let Valentina come to my house?”

The wife placed the deceased in a small milk-cart and wheeled him over to the ranch-house. She testified that as she was crossing the fifty yards between the milk-house and the kitchen she heard the dog barbing to the north of the tent-houses, and, from the same direction, the sound of buggy wheels on the Holtville road.

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Bluebook (online)
188 P. 987, 182 Cal. 457, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-singh-cal-1920.