People v. Studer

211 P. 233, 59 Cal. App. 547, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 194
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 2, 1922
DocketCrim. No. 903.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 P. 233 (People v. Studer) 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. Studer, 211 P. 233, 59 Cal. App. 547, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 194 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

*548 CONREY, P. J.

The defendant was charged with the crime of murder and convicted of the crime of manslaughter. He appeals from the judgment of imprisonment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

Appellant does not claim that the evidence is legally insufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury. But he claims that it is barely sufficient, and that errors occurred which seriously prejudiced him in relation to his right to a fair trial.

On September 25, 1921, appellant was living at 514 South Concord Street, in the city of Los Angeles, with his brother John and their mother Elizabeth Studer. She was eighty-six years old and for some years had been suffering from chronic nephritis, commonly known as Bright’s disease. She was also suffering from an enlarged left ventricle of the heart, accompanied by arterial sclerosis and high blood pressure. The evidence received by the court described certain conduct of appellant on the day mentioned, culminating at a point where, according to one witness, Mrs. Studer was pushed out of the house by appellant. She then walked toward the house of a neighbor, Mrs. Birch, who lived in the second house north of the Studer residence. Mrs. Studer was assisted into this house by Mrs. Waddell, who lived next north of. the Studer house, and by Mrs. Henderson, who lived across the street. There she sat in a chair for about half an hour and then became unconscious. During that half hour she talked naturally but complained of suffering some pain. Shortly after 6 o’clock in the evening, which was two hours or a little more after her arrival at the Birch house, Mrs. Studer was taken to a hospital, where she died that night. The evidence shows, and the fact is not contested, that her death was directly caused by a hemorrhage in the fourth ventricle of the brain.

The only testimony of eye-witnesses claiming to have observed any acts of violence of appellant toward Mrs. Studer was given by Mrs. Henderson and by a thirteen year old girl named Daisy Sherbondy. The back porch of the Henderson house is located about 150 feet from the front door of the Studer house, and there are no intervening obstacles to the view. According to the testimony of Mrs. Henderson, soon after 3 o’clock on the afternoon of Sunday, September 25, 1921, she heard loud talking by male voices, *549 and looked through the screen of her porch and across toward the Studer house. She saw John Studer on the street opposite the Waddell house, Mrs. Studer on her front porch, and Joseph directly behind her. John walked up the street northward, Joseph backed into the house, Mrs. Studer walked in and closed and latched the screen door. “She stood right in front of the screen and he directly in front of her, and he shook her this way and this way (indicating), and then he pitched her to the side—that is, this way (indicating) ; pitched her over that way.” He had hold of her apparently by the arms. He kicked the door shut. About two minutes later Mrs. Henderson started across the street and at that time saw Mrs. Studer on the lawn near her house. Mrs. Waddell also came out from her own house, and the two helped Mrs. Studer walk up the street to the Birch house, where Mrs. Birch came out and took the place of Mrs. Henderson.

Daisy Sherbondy lived in the third house south of the Studer house. Her testimony is that at some time after 3 o’clock, on the same afternoon heretofore mentioned, she went to visit a friend at a house located at the rear of her home and facing on Bernal Avenue. Her attention was attracted by loud talking, and she walked across lots a distance of about 103 feet to a gate at the back of the Studer lot, and stood at a point where she could see the steps at the rear of the Studer house, where there was a back porch with a screen door from which there were steps leading down to the yard. She saw Joseph Studer open the door with his foot. His mother was standing beside him. His left arm extended back of her and his right hand was on her right arm. He then pushed her and she fell on the steps. “Q. Now, .did you hear Joseph Studer say anything as he stood in the doorway there ? A. I think he said ‘Beat it.’ ” The witness then turned and ran home, Mrs. Studer being still on the steps.

Taking the testimony of these two witnesses together, and assuming its truth, it is reasonably probable that the incident described by Miss Sherbondy immediately followed the incident at the front door as described by Mrs. Henderson, and that immediately following these two transactions, Mrs. Studer walked around toward the front of the house, *550 where she was assisted to the Birch house as before described.

There is evidence legally sufficient to prove that the actions of the defendant were the cause of the death of his mother. For instance, Doctor Louis Weber, who qualified as a specialist on diseases of the brain and nervous diseases, answered in response to a hypothetical question that the acts of the defendant (being- substantially those to which we have referred), together with the attendant circumstances of excitement and commotion, also assumed in the question, superinduced the hemorrhage whereby the death was caused. We do not overlook the fact that there were other and different expert opinions about this matter; but that does not concern us at this time, since it is at least made clear that there is a chain of evidence here which is sufficient to sustain the verdict.

Appellant claims that the court committed certain errors in the reception of evidence. Mrs. Waddell testified that during the morning of said day she saw Mrs. Studer on Mrs. Studer’s front porch and around her premises; that at about noon she heard loud talking and swearing at the Studer house; that Joseph was “hollering after his brother John” using such phrases as “Jesus Christ,” “God damn it to hell,” “To hell with your church.” The witness testified that at about the same time she heard sounds from the Studer house, such as sounds of dishes being broken. At about a quarter past 12, and after the witness heard the said loud talking, John Studer went up the street. The sounds as of objects being thrown in the house did not occur until after John left. Mr. Louis Waddell testified to some of these same facts about what occurred at noon. He also testified that at about noon, while he was standing on a ladder in his own yard, appellant came out into the Studer back yard and there called witness a “God damn coward,” and dared him to come down and fight. The evidence shows that John Studer had returned home before 3 o’clock. Mrs. Waddell testified that at some time between 2 and 3 o’clock she again heard loud talking over there. The voices were both John’s and Joseph’s, who talked like they were quarreling. Again John left the house and went up the street. There is no evidence that he came back again during that day.

*551 Appellant contends that all of this testimony relating to what occurred between John and Joseph, and between Joseph and Mr. Waddell, should have been excluded, and that the court erred in overruling his objections thereto. He claims that there is no evidence that the decedent was present while the loud talking or quarreling and noises described were going on, or that the defendant swore at or quarreled with his mother. Although the witness did not testify to the presence of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
211 P. 233, 59 Cal. App. 547, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-studer-calctapp-1922.