People v. Spencer

208 P. 380, 58 Cal. App. 197, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 312
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 20, 1922
DocketCrim. No. 599.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 208 P. 380 (People v. Spencer) 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. Spencer, 208 P. 380, 58 Cal. App. 197, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 312 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HART, J.

Convicted of murder of the first degree, with the penalty fixed by the jury at imprisonment for life (Pen. Code, see. 190), the defendant has appealed to this court from the judgment of conviction. The defendant did not move for a new trial.

The assault upon the verdict is predicated upon the following grounds, generally stated: First. That the evidence wholly failed to establish the corpus delicti. Second. That hearsay evidence prejudicial to the rights of the accused was, over objection by the latter, admitted. Third. That “a certain demonstration was carried out by the prosecuting officers during the trial” to the manifest detriment of the rights of the defendant. Fourth. That the people were allowed to impeach one of their own witnesses “without having first laid the foundation for the same.”

The conviction of the defendant was obtained entirely by means of circumstantial evidence and the circumstances brought before the jury for the purpose of bringing home to the defendant the commission of the alleged crime were multifarious. A consideration of the errors assigned by the defendant will require an extended examination and review of the evidence herein for the purpose of determining, first, whether the corpus delicti has been sufficiently shown, and, if so, second, whether, assuming that the other points urged as in impeachment of the validity of the result reached by the jury are sound as legal propositions, we are required to declare that a miscarriage of justice has followed from the errors thus assigned.

*199 As above suggested, the evidence consisted of a concatenation of varying facts and circumstances which, it is vigorously claimed by the people, irresistibly led to the conclusion that the accused was guilty of the crime charged beyond all reasonable doubt, and, therefore, in stating the facts and the circumstances adduced before the jury we shall assume, as we are authorized to do, that the jury, having evidently accepted as verity the evidence by which they were shown, by their verdict found said facts and circumstances or such of them as are indispensably essential to the support of the verdict, if the same be supportable at all, to be true.

The defendant, although an ordained minister of the gospel, was, for many years immediately prior to the date of the commission of the crime with which he was charged, actively engaged in the business of a real estate dealer or broker in the city of Santa Rosa, this state. The person whose life he is alleged in the indictment to have taken was Mrs. Emma Spencer, the wife of the accused, it being alleged in the accusatory pleading that on the twenty-sixth day of July, 1921, in the county of Lake, he killed and murdered his said wife. The defendant owned a small tract of land situated and bordering upon what is known as Konocti Bay, an arm of Clear Lake, in the said county of Lake. On this land there was a cabin which he and the deceased had used for a number of years prior to the death of Mrs. Spencer as a summer home. This cabin was situated near a wharf, known as the “Holt & Gray” wharf, and also, at some time, as the “Jimmy Ford”- wharf, but for convenience it will hereafter be referred to as the “Holt wharf.” At this wharf the small boats owned by persons living on that side of the bay or lake and which were used for pleasure and perhaps business purposes were customarily moored when not in use. A short distance from the Holt wharf there was an Indian camp, which, as we understand the record, was located on what is known as the “Wheeler Ranch.” On practically the opposite side of Konocti Bay from the Spencer cabin and Holt wharf there resided a number of families, among whom were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Siddell. A wharf, known as the “Siddell” wharf, which was about five feet by one hundred and eighty feet in dimensions, was maintained in Konocti Bay on the *200 Siddell side thereof. This wharf was situated a little less than two hundred feet from the dwelling-house of the Siddells, but the distance between the water line and the sleeping-porch connected with the Siddell house was approximately one hundred and twenty feet. A “well-beaten” path extended from the Siddell wharf to the Sid-dell residence. The approximate distance between the Holt wharf and the Siddell wharf was two thousand five hundred foot.

The defendant was the owner of a small boat in which he and the deceased frequently made pleasure cruises on the lake and in which they also now and then visited friends living on the opposite side of the bay from their home.

On the night of July 26, 1921, near the hour of half-past 9 o’clock, the Siddells, who had retired for the night on their sleeping-porch (the husband at approximately half-past 8 and his wife at an hour later), were awakened by loud calls addressed to Mr. Siddell by some man whose identity was then unknown to the Siddells. Mrs. Siddell had hardly passed into sleep, or, as she described it, she was “just dozing” when she heard a man call twice in quick succession for her husband. She immediately awakened her husband, who was at the time in “a sound sleep,” and told him that “Someone wants you.” Siddell, on thus being aroused from his sleep, asked in a loud voice who it was that wanted him, to which the defendant replied: “Siddell, Siddell, a rope! My wife is in the lake! This is Mr. Spencer calling.” Both Siddell and his wife hastily arose from their bed and started toward the front door. They saw the defendant standing inside the house a short distance from the front door, near where the piano stood in the front room, it being their custom to leave the door of the house open at night during the summer season. Spencer, who was drenched with water, then started hastily toward the Siddell wharf, Mr. and Mrs. Siddell, the latter with a lighted lantern, rapidly following. Mrs. Siddell, as they were proceeding toward the wharf, passed the lantern to her husband, and then ran to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Renfro, near neighbors, and told them of the occurrence. Mr. Renfro immediately rushed to the wharf, followed by his wife and Mrs. "Siddell.

*201 The defendant reached the wharf a little ahead of Mr. Siddell, and, just as the latter got there, the defendant, pointing to the water near where his boat was fastened to the wharf, exclaimed: “There she is now.” Siddell then observed the body, face downward, floating on the surface of the water between the defendant’s boat and the wharf, the boat lying almost at a right angle with the wharf. There was considerable of the body exposed above the surface of the water and which with the aid of the lantern was plainly visible. The deceased had no hat on her head and her hair was “down or torn loose.” The defendant jumped into the boat and reaching out got hold of the body and steered it toward and near enough to the wharf to enable Siddell, in a kneeling position, to get hold of it and draw it from the water to the wharf. While all this was going on the defendant exhibited no signs of emotion. Indeed, his manner was rather that of complacency of mind than an indicium of excitement or sorrow or grief as he gazed into the face of the deceased and remarked to Sid-dell: “She does not look as though she suffered any.”

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Bluebook (online)
208 P. 380, 58 Cal. App. 197, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-spencer-calctapp-1922.