People v. Turpin

102 P. 680, 10 Cal. App. 526, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 199
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1909
DocketCrim. No. 161.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 102 P. 680 (People v. Turpin) 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. Turpin, 102 P. 680, 10 Cal. App. 526, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 199 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

HALL, J.

Defendant was charged by information with the crime of murder for the killing of Frederick Roetzscher on the sixteenth day of June, 1908, in the county of Fresno. He was convicted of murder in the first degree, and his punishment fixed at imprisonment for life. This appeal is from the judgment and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The killing of Roetzscher by defendant was admitted, the only defense attempted being that the killing was done in necessary self-defense.

*528 Deceased and his partner, Otto Trehse, were farmers, and resided on their farm, situated near Fowler, in Fresno county. The homicide occurred on this farm. There also resided on this farm one Carl Leyman, an employee of the partners, and one Mrs. Stella Crane and her three young children. Mrs. Crane was employed to do the cooking and housework on the place, and had been so employed for about six weeks prior to the day of the tragedy. Defendant was acquainted with all the persons living on the Roetzscher place, and since the employment of Mrs. Crane had frequently called on her there. Evidence was given that he had sometimes visited her clandestinely and late at night; that prior to the day of the homicide both the deceased and his partner Otto Trehse had told defendant that he was not wanted at their home, and had forbidden him to come there. Upon two occasions at least he had been so forbidden by deceased. On Monday afternoon, June 15, 1909, defendant borrowed a six-shooter revolver, loaded in five chambers, of one David "Wright, in the town of Fowler, saying at that time that he “just wanted to carry it this evening.” Shortly after getting the pistol, and at about 7 o’clock of the same evening, defendant appeared at the Roetzscher house while the inmates were at supper. Deceased stepped out of the house to the back porch-and met defendant, who said he had a letter for Mrs. Crane, and insisted on giving it to her in person. Deceased informed Mrs. Crane of this, and she came out and received the letter, which was written by defendant. Defendant came on a wheel, and after four or five minutes left, and returned to Fowler. Apparently nothing unpleasant occurred at this visit. After supper the three men members of the household also left the premises, but before doing so deceased, according to evidence given by Mrs. Crane, had a talk with her about defendant, in which he said that he thought defendant would come to the house again that night, and stated that he (deceased) would kill defendant if he came on the place again. Deceased returned home about 10 o’clock, while his partner stopped for a short while at a neighbor’s immediately across the road from the Roetzscher place. Deceased, according to the testimony of Mrs. Crane, immediately went to her room, where she was lying on the bed with her three sleeping children, and engaged her in conversation about defendant. As he started to leave her room he looked out of the *529 window, and then quickly left the room, went to his own room, and then passed out onto the porch, slamming the door as he did so. (In deceased’s room a shotgun was usually kept, and had been placed there this particular afternoon upon being returned by a neighbor who had borrowed it. It had been put away unloaded.) Mrs. Crane testified that she next heard a person, whom she believed by his voice to be deceased, say, “I’ll shoot you, you son of a bitch,” and a person whom she believed from his voice to be defendant, say, “Don’t you move, don’t you move, don’t you move.” This was followed by some shots. She then heard someone run by her window. On going out of the house she found deceased lying at the bottom of the steps leading from the back porch. Subsequent examination ■ disclosed that he had about his face three contused wounds, one gunshot wound near the left eye, and two gunshot wounds entering the chest, either of which was fatal. He died shortly after midnight. Deceased’s shotgun was found under the window of Mrs. Crane’s room, where defendant testified that he had dropped it as he fled from the premises after shooting deceased. This shotgun was unloaded by Mrs. Crane, and the cartridges afterward taken possession of by the sheriff. No testimony was given as to whether they bore any evidence or marks showing that the gun had been snapped. Defendant fled from the premises to Fowler, where he got a coat and changed his hat for one belonging to a friend, borrowed some money, took a horse from his father’s barn, and on the horse continued his flight to Fresno, where he bought a ticket to Stockton, but was arrested about 1 o’clock as he attempted to board the train. On being arrested he gave his name as Baker, but later admitted that he had shot deceased, and on learning he was dead said he was “damn glad of it.”

Mrs. Crane was not examined as a witness for the prosecution, but was a witness for defendant, with whom she was evidently very friendly. The defendant was a witness on his own behalf. He gave no reason for borrowing the pistol on this occasion, saying simply that he did not know why he borrowed it this particular evening. He testified that he left a saloon at Fowler about 10 o’clock and went to the Roetzscher house to call on Mrs. Crane. He testified that deceased had never told him not to come to the place, but that on the *530 contrary on that afternoon, he, defendant, had told deceased that he was coming back that night, and that deceased said “All right.” That as he passed Mrs. Crane’s window he tapped on the screen and walked on toward the porch steps; that, as he reached the steps, deceased came out with a shotgun in his hand, and closed the door and walked toward defendant, and asked “ ‘Who is it?’ and I says, ‘It’s me,’ but he says, ‘Is that you, Ted?’ I says ‘Yes’; and he says, ‘You son of a bitch, I’ll kill you.’ As he did he rushed off the porch, came down off the steps and threw his shotgun up at me. Whether the shotgun snapped or whether it breeched I don’t know, and as he did I grabbed, that is, I got it with my hands, caught the barrel and throwed my gun up, pulled my gun and told him not to move—I think three different times, but he kept fighting all the time, and he grabbed hold of my gun, and as he grabbed it I jerked the gun loose from him and struck him with. it along the face, and then he grabbed hold of his gun with both hands and jerked back, and I had right hold of the muzzle of his gun, the muzzle of the gun was right in my hands, small grip on it, he grabbed his gun with both hands, when I shot him three times. I ain’t sure I shot him three times. When I hit, struck him with this gun, the gun went off, one shot, I ain’t sure.”

It is not contended that the evidence is not sufficient to justify the verdict, except in that it is claimed that the jury was not warranted in finding premeditation and deliberation necessary to constitute murder of the first degree. With this claim we cannot agree. From the evidence the jury might well believe that defendant armed himself in full expectation of an encounter, and with the deliberate purpose to take advantage of the occasion to kill his rival; that the claim of self-defense was but a pretense; that the encounter was deliberately sought for the purpose of killing the deceased, and that the killing was but the accomplishment of such deliberately formed purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 P. 680, 10 Cal. App. 526, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-turpin-calctapp-1909.