People v. Smith

203 P. 816, 55 Cal. App. 324, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 31
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 25, 1921
DocketCrim. No. 822.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 203 P. 816 (People v. Smith) 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. Smith, 203 P. 816, 55 Cal. App. 324, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 31 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

Defendant, who was charged with the murder of his wife, Mary Edla Smith, was convicted of murder in the first degree, was sentenced to life imprisonment, and now appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

' The evidence is entirely circumstantial. The theory adopted by the prosecution at the trial was that the alleged homicide was perpetrated by means of cyanide administered by defendant to his wife on or about March 14, 1921, at their home at Bell Station, a suburb of Los Angeles. The principal points made for a reversal are that the court erred (1) in permitting the prosecution to give evidence of the contents of a certain stomach in the absence of legal evidence to identify it as the stomach of defendant’s deceased wife; and (2) in permitting the people to put in evidence a certain can of cyanide found in a part of the establishment where defendant was employed.

On the afternoon of Monday, March 14, 1921, the body of defendant’s wife was found in a sitting position in a chair in the living-room of her home at Bell Station. The remains were immediately removed to an undertaking establishment conducted by one G. G. Wheat at Huntington Park, a small town near Los Angeles, where the body was embalmed and prepared for burial. The following day defendant and the mother of the deceased requested that the body be taken to an undertaking establishment in Los Angeles conducted by a man of the name of Brown. Wheat testified that the body was “removed by Mr. Brown,” supposedly the Los Angeles undertaker. What became of it after it was “removed by Mr. Brown” is a matter that is left by the evidence in the airy regions of *327 speculation. Dr. Wagner, the county autopsy surgeon, who had not. known Mrs. Smith in her lifetime and probably had never heard of her before her death, called as a witness for the prosecution, was permitted to testify, over defendant’s strenuous objection, that he had performed an autopsy "upon the body of Mary Edia Smith” at "the morgue of W. A. Brown, Los Angeles,” on'March 15, 1921. This witness further testified that, from the body of the person whom he referred to as "Mary Edia Smith,” he had removed the stomach, a part of the liver, the spleen, and the left kidney. The doctor testified that he placed these organs, unwrapped, in a pasteboard box and delivered the box and its contents to Professor Arthur R. Maas, a chemist and toxicologist, who, for five years or more, had been doing work for the county coroner’s office. Professor Maas testified that he received from Dr. Wagner, on March 15, 1921, a pasteboard box which Dr. Wagner told him contained the stomach of Mary Edia Smith, which name the witness wrote upon the box. Professor Maas then took the box to his office, where he subsequently opened it, discovering therein a stomach only, wrapped in paper. The contents of this stomach he subsequently analyzed, finding in it a mixture of sodium cyanide with possibly some potassium cyanide, together with pieces of potato and bread, some vegetable matter which the witness decided was pickle, and some seeds which he decided were tomato seeds.

[1] It was upon the contents of this stomach that the entire case for the prosecution rested. It was the sole basis for Dr. Wagner’s opinion that the person from whose body it was taken had died of cyanide poisoning. It was the sole basis for the evidence given by Professor Maas and the other experts who testified as to the character of the stomach contents. Defendant's counsel repeatedly, but ineffectively, objected to the introduction of any evidence respecting the contents of this stomach upon the ground that no evidence had been introduced to identify it as that of Mary Edia Smith, of whose murder defendant was accused. If there was no legal evidence to identify it as the stomach of defendant’s deceased wife, then, manifestly, to permit the prosecution, over defendant’s timely objections, to introduce evidence of its contents was not only error but highly prejudicial error. That there was no such *328 identifying evidence is made clear by the testimony given by Dr. Wagner and others, as the following will show.

[2] There was no direct evidence that the body of defendant’s wife ever reached Brown’s undertaking establishment. Wheat testified, as we have seen, that the body was removed “by Mr. Brown.” That is the sole evidence as to what became of the body after it was taken by Wheat to his establishment. But aside from this manifest hiatus in the identifying testimony, there is no legal evidence that the body upon which Dr. Wagner performed the autopsy was that which had been removed from Wheat’s place. Though Dr. Wagner had not known Mrs. Smith in her lifetime, the only evidence as to the identity of the body from which he removed the stomach, spleen, a part of the liver and the left kidney is that given by Dr. Wagner himself, to whom, on direct examination, this question was propounded by the district attorney: “I will ask you whether you performed an autopsy upon the body of Mary Edla Smith.” Counsel for defendant immediately objected to the question upon the ground that it called for the conclusion of the witness, in that there was no evidence that the witness ever knew Mary Edla Smith. The objection should have been sustained. At the time when the question was propounded to Dr. Wagner, no evidence whatever, hearsay or otherwise, had been adduced to show that the body was in fact that of Mary Edla Smith. In the course of the doctor’s cross-examination, that witness, as we presently shall show, did give hearsay evidence to the effect that the person from whose body he removed the stomach was Mary Edla Smith. But, as we have just stated, at the time when the district attorney propounded' to Dr. Wagner, on his direct examination, the question to which defendant’s counsel made the objection last noted, no evidence of any kind whatever had been given or suggested to show that the witness had any knowledge of the identity of the person concerning whose stomach he was asked to testify. This notwithstanding, defendant’s objection was overruled, and the witness answered the question in the affirmative, saying, in effect, that he had performed an autopsy on the body of Mary Edla Smith at the morgue of W. A. Brown on March 15, 1921. On his cross-examination Dr. Wagner testified as follows: “Q. Now, all you know as to this being the body *329 of Mrs, Smith was what somebody told you, was it? A. Certainly. Q. Who told you ? A. The undertaker—yes, the undertaker. Q. The undertaker? A. Yes. Q. You have no knowledge on earth except what was told you by the undertaker. A. No, sir. Q. Which undertaker told you? A. It was not the undertaker himself either. It was one of the attendants. Q. Who was he? A. Mr. Taylor, I think it was, at the time. Q. And so far as you know, that is you never had seen her before? A. I had not. Q. And you have never seen the body since? A. No, sir. Q. And never talked with any other person, except this undertaker, who knew the identity of that particular body? A. I did not.” Neither the “Mr. Brown” nor the “Mr. Taylor” referred to by the witness was called to the stand. The sole evidence, therefore, tending to identify the stomach whose contents were examined by the experts was this testimony of Dr. Wagner that one Taylor, an attendant in Brown’s undertaking establishment, had told him that the body upon which he operated was that of Mrs. Smith.

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Bluebook (online)
203 P. 816, 55 Cal. App. 324, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-smith-calctapp-1921.