People v. Tyren

178 P. 132, 179 Cal. 575, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 563
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1919
DocketCrim. No. 2201.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 178 P. 132 (People v. Tyren) 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. Tyren, 178 P. 132, 179 Cal. 575, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 563 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

The defendant was convicted of murder of the first degree and sentenced to death. He appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The only defense sought to be made at the trial was that of insanity. No question is, or could be, made of the sufficiency of the evidence to establish the commission of the homicide by the defendant. It is conceded, as well, that the jury was warranted in finding against the plea of insanity. The appeal is rested upon the claim of error in the conduct of the trial. Por a proper understanding of the points made, a brief outline of the facts may be given.

The defendant, Tyren, lived at Sacramento with his wife and two children, one a boy of about twelve years, who had been adopted-in infancy by the Tyrens, the other a girl of seven years. The murder charged was that of the boy, Holland Tyren. The family had been living in a house on J Street, in Sacramento. Early in May, 1918, differences arose between Tyren and his wife, and the latter left the family home, taking the children with her. She instituted an action *577 for divorce, praying in her complaint for alimony, an award of community property, and the custody of the children. Summons in this action was served on the defendant on the 6th of May, 1918. On the following day, May 7th, the children, who were attending school, went to the home on J Street during the noon recess, and there had their midday meal with the defendant. They attended the afternoon session of school, which closed about 3 o’clock. They did not return to their mother’s new abode, and in the evening of the same day, alarmed by their absence, she caused search for them to be made. Two police officers, together with her attorney, went to the defendant’s house on J Street. They entered, made their way to a bathroom on the Second floor, and there found the bathtub half filled with water strongly tinged with the color of blood. In an adjoining room, lying upon a bed, were the dead bodies of the two children, and kneeling by the side of the bed was the defendant, with a gash, apparently self-inflicted, in his throat. Testimony of physicians tended to show that the boy, Holland, had been strangled to death, and that his body had been immersed in the water of the tub while he was being strangled, or shortly thereafter.

The appellant’s first contention is that the court erred in sustaining objections of the district attorney to various questions asked of talesmen on their examination on voir dire. Nearly all of these questions were improper, and if, in one or two instances, the ruling may have been somewhat strict, it must be held that the defendant was not prejudiced thereby. The defendant exercised only thirteen of the twenty peremptory challenges allowed him by law. Objections were sustained in the examination of but three of the talesmen who ultimately found places on the jury. The defendant had it in his power to remove from the box any or all of the three, if he had any doubt regarding their desirability as jurors. The ensuing situation was, therefore, the result of his own acquiescence, and he cannot complain of it. This is the settled rule where a challenge for cause has been erroneously overruled. (People v. Durrant, 116 Cal. 179, 196, [48 Pac. 75]; People v. Winthrop, 118 Cal. 85, 88, [50 Pac. 390]; People v. Schafer, 161 Cal. 573, 577, [119 Pac. 920].) And the reasons on which it is based apply equally to a case like the present, where it is claimed that the court erred in limiting the exam *578 ination of talesmen. (People v. Freeman, 92 Cal. 359, 365, [28 Pac. 261].)

The appellant makes a number of assignments of error in the admission or rejection of evidence. Taken singly or collectively they have little substantial merit. The gravity of the case requires, however, that those which are argued be given brief notice.

One Gray was called by the defendant as a witness to support the plea of insanity. He testified that the defendant, Tyren, had been in his employ some ten years before the trial, and that he had at that time complained of ailments. He was then asked: “Q. Well now, you may state what he complained of,” and to this question the court sustained an objection. The ruling, if erroneous, was harmless. In the first place, the matter sought to be elicited was not excluded absolutely. In making its ruling, the court directed counsel for the defendant to take up one complaint at a time, and thus afforded ample opportunity to go on with the inquiry. Furthermore, other questions were put, and in answer to them, the witness did testify fully on the subject. The same witness," after testifying that on one occasion the defendant “was nervous, trembly, and kind of as if he was spitting a little from his mouth,” added, “I thought" he had an apoplectic fit.” The court ordered the last statement stricken out. The ruling was obviously correct. The witness was not qualified to give an opinion of the nature of Tyren’s ailment.

The defendant undertook to show that he had always manifested a deep affection for his children, and was allowed to develop the point in considerable detail. The appellant urges that the court erred in sustaining objections to one or two questions put to the witness Ford on this line. The witness was, however, permitted to describe Tyren’s conduct and demeanor toward his children, his testimony being to the effect that he appeared “very affectionate towards the children.” The defendant had the benefit of everything of substantial importance that he desired to prove by this witness.

Objections to questions asked of defendant’s witnesses, Weaver and Barrett, were properly sustained on the ground that the questions were leading and suggestive. Furthermore, in the case of the latter witness, the subject was fully covered by the answer to a question put after the ruling- complained of,

*579 The court sustained an objection to defendant’s offer in evidence of two photographs of himself, taken about a week aiter the homicide. It is claimed that they tended to support the appellant’s claims regarding his mental condition. But this does not appear. The photographs are not incorporated in the record, and there is nothing before us to show that they had any relevancy whatever. Error must be shown affirmatively, and the action of the court below in rejecting evidence will be presumed to be correct, unless the record is made to show the character and the admissibility of such evidence. (4 C. J. 760; Barrell v. Lake View Land Co., 122 Cal. 129, [54 Pac. 594]; In re Angle, 148 Cal. 102, [82 Pac. 668].)

Any error that may have been committed in excluding testimony of the defendant regarding the effect upon his mind of the Avar, and of the war pictures which he had seen displayed in theaters, was fully cured by the action of the court in permitting him to testify fully on this subject at a later stage.

The defendant took the stand as a witness in his oavu behalf.

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Bluebook (online)
178 P. 132, 179 Cal. 575, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-tyren-cal-1919.