People v. Sullivan

62 P. 101, 129 Cal. 557, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1023
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 23, 1900
DocketCrim. No. 594.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 62 P. 101 (People v. Sullivan) 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. Sullivan, 62 P. 101, 129 Cal. 557, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1023 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, J.

The defendant was indicted by the grand jury of the county of Tuolumne for the crime of murder, in the killing of one William Spencer Gilliard, and was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree. The appeal is taken from the judgment entered upon said verdict and from the order overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The appellant presents and urges three grounds of error for a reversal: 1. That the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict; 2. Eulings of the court on the admission of evidence; 3. Misconduct of the jury.

1. The evidence is circumstantial. The following is a synopsis of the same: The deceased, Gilliard,.in April, 1897, was employed as a watchman on the night shift at the Jumper mine in Tuloumne county, and the defendant at the same time was employed at the same mine as a miner. On the 16th of April, 1897, Kelly, the foreman of the mine, discharged the defend *559 ant from employ at the mine, between 6 and 7 o’clock in the evening. The defendant blamed the deceased, Gilliard, for his discharge, and made threats regarding him. The deceased went to work on the night shift at about 7 o’clock. The defendant on the night of his discharge remarked that he, the deceased, might work that shift, but that he would not work the next. Immediately after his discharge the defendant went home to his boarding-house and told his landlady that he had been discharged and that he would “fix Mr. Gilliard.” On the afternoon of the killing the defendant said in the presence of two witnesses that Gilliard should “bite the dust,” and that he would kill Gilliard. On the evening of the killing, between 7 and 9 o’clock, defendant borrowed a 44-caliber ’73 model Winchester rifle from E. S. Schaffner, tolling Schaffner that he was taking a few days lay-off and was going prospecting next day. On that same night he went to the room occupied by himself and one Corcoran before 9 o’clock, and had with him a Winchester rifle which he loaded then and there, and while in Corcoran’s room he berated both Boone and Gilliard, and said he would make them both “bite the dust” before morning. He said he would kill them both for getting him discharged. About half-past 9 o’clock on the same night defendant was seen by one Frank Hill going in the direction of the Jumper mine and carrying a rifle at the time. It took ten or fifteen minutes to walk from where Hill was down to the Jumper mine. On the evening of the 17th of April, the next evening after the defendant was discharged, the deceased, together with F. W. Greiner and E. G. Boone, was sitting in the building at the shaft of the Jumper mine between half-past 9 and a quarter to; 10 o’clock, when a gunshot was fired through a crack in the building and a bullet struck deceased in the back, on the right side, from the effects of which he died next day. Defendant disappeared immediately from the neighborhood, and was not seen there again until brought back under arrest from Silver City, Hew Mexico, in April, 1899, two years after the homicide. Soon after the homicide he was seen at Peoria Flat, some eleven miles by road from the Jumper mine, where he tried to sell the rifle he had borrowed to one John Darrow. The rifle was subsequently recovered by constable Leland from *560 an old man named McCullum or McLean, who lived at Peoria Flat, with whom the defendant had left it with a request that it he returned to Mr. Sehaffner, from whom it had been borrowed.

Appellant’s counsel devotes considerable space in his argument to the fact that the ball found in the body of the deceased was of less weight than that of a 44-caliber ’73 model Winchester rifle, the one borrowed by the defendant. Mr. Bowell, a gunsmith, after examining the ball found in the body, testified: “Bullets of that kind are determined by weight. They, are given in all the catalogues of cartridges such a weight bullet for such cartridges. A ball distorted you can’t tell by the size; the only way is to tell by the heft, and a portion of that lead is gone, because it can’t penetrate any substance and be distorted as much as that is without losing some weight. .... This is four grains lighter than a ball intact, 44-’73 model Winchester. From the battered condition of that ball my best opinion is that it is a 44-caliber. .... I compared this with an intact bullet, 44-caliber, by weighing that, and I found that this exhibit here is four grains lighter. I can give you the weight of the ball offered in evidence. It is one hundred and ninety-three grains. The bullet of the model of ’73 Winchester rifle is four grains heavier than this one.” Notwithstanding the slight difference in weight in the bullet, under the circumstances it cannot be said that the jury were not justified in finding that it was the one shot from the gun borrowed by defendant, nor can it be said that the chain of circumstantial evidence was not sufficient to support the verdict of the jury. “It is the peculiar province of the jury to weigh the evidence and decide upon the credibility of witnesses; and it is not our practice to disturb verdicts on this ground unless there is either a total deficiency in the evidence or it preponderates so greatly against the verdict as to render it clear that the jury, must have been under the influence of passion or prejudice.” (People v. Manning, 48 Cal. 335. See, also, People v. Mayes, 66 Cal. 597 1 ; People v. Ah Jake, 91 Cal. 98; People v. Freeman, 92 Cal. 359.)

2. Objection was made to the question as to how many arms a Mr. Coffin had, and the answer, over the objection, was that *561 he was a one-armed man. The question was probably, asked for the purpose of identifying Hr. Coffin, or testing the witness in reference to his acquaintance with Coffin. At any rate it is not shown, nor can it be seen, how the answer to the question could prejudice the defendant. The question, “Who did return the gun to you,” was properly permitted. It was competent for the prosecution to trace the gun from the time it came into the hands of the defendant until finally located in the possession of the party producing it at the trial. It was proper also to show what disposition defendant made of the gun after the homicide, as a circumstance tending to show flight and guilty, knowledge; and it was also proper to admit the gun in evidence. The case of People v. Hill, 123 Cal. 571, relied upon by appellant’s counsel, is altogether different from this. In that case a large club was admitted in evidence, and this court in its opinion said: “There was no- evidence identifying the stick as the one with which the defendant struck the deceased, or in any way connecting the defendant with it.” Here it was shown the defendant borrowed the gun in question, and with this rifle in his hand he told his room-mate that he would kill the deceased, and he was seen going toward the place where the homicide was committed, with this gun. The court properly overruled the objections of defendant to questions relative to identifying the rifle.

3. The alleged misconduct of the jury was the drinking of intoxicating liquors by one of the jurors during a recess of the court just before the close of the trial, so that at the time the charge of the court was delivered he was too drunk to understand the instructions, and continued too drunk to properly consider the case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 P. 101, 129 Cal. 557, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sullivan-cal-1900.