People v. Verodi

309 P.2d 568, 150 Cal. App. 2d 137, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2138
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 15, 1957
DocketCrim. 5772
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 309 P.2d 568 (People v. Verodi) 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. Verodi, 309 P.2d 568, 150 Cal. App. 2d 137, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2138 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

FOURT, J.

In an information filed March 9, 1956, in the county of Los Angeles, it was charged that the defendant did on or about February 4, 1956, murder Marie Yvonne Verodi. The defendant pleaded not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. A trial by a jury was had on the not guilty plea which resulted in the defendant being found guilty of murder in the first degree, with a recommendation that the punishment therefor be life imprisonment. Thereafter, there was a trial by the court without a jury on the not guilty by reason of insanity plea and the court found the defendant to be sane. A motion for a new trial was made and denied and the defendant was sentenced to the state prison for life. This appeal is from the judgment of conviction.

The facts are substantially as follows: The defendant had been married to Carmen Verodi for about 10 years before the episode in question, and as the issue of the marriage, Marie *139 Yvonne Yerodi was bom about 9 years ago. The marriage had many unpleasantries and shortly before the Christmas season in 1955, the defendant told his wife that he could not go on living the way they were. He threatened to take the life of the daughter and to commit suicide; that he was not going to leave the daughter for the mother. On other occasions he made similar threats. On Christmas Day, in 1955, when the defendant was apparently drunk, he attempted to Mil himself by using a pistol but Mrs. Yerodi took the gun away from him. The incident was reported to the officers at the police department, but an officer thought it better to let him “sleep it off.” On that date Mrs. Yerodi left the defendant and with her daughter, Marie Yvonne, lived at 817 East Central Street in San Gabriel. The defendant resided with Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Powers at 811 South Bronson Avenue in Los Angeles. A few days later the defendant came to the house where Mrs. Yerodi was staying and told the sister of Mrs. Yerodi that if Mrs. Yerodi “didn’t come home and bring the gun with her he would make our home look like a roman candle. ’ ’ The wife stated that the defendant had never threatened her personally.

On February 1, 1956, between 1 and 2 o’clock p. m., the defendant went to the Paehmayr Gun Works, 1220 South Grand Street, Los Angeles, where he purchased a Smith and Wesson Chief Special .38 caliber revolver, paying therefor the sum of $61.39. He was told that he would have to wait a certain time and would have to secure what amounts to a police release before he could pick up the gun. The defendant came back to the gun store on Friday, the third day of February, 1956, with the proper documents from the police department and picked up the gun. The defendant told the clerk who sold him the gun that he wanted it to “shoot sharks off his fishing boat. ’ ’ The clerk stated that the defendant did not appear to him to be under the influence of liquor on February 1st, and that he appeared perfectly sober. The clerk who delivered the gun to the defendant along late in the afternoon on the day of the shooting observed the defendant at that time and stated that the defendant did not appear to be under the influence of intoxicating liquor.

The defendant called Mrs. Yerodi during the day of February 3, 1956, and stated to her that he wanted to see the daughter because he was ill and was going to the hospital. Sometime shortly after 7 o’clock p. m. on February 3, 1956, the defendant did go to the house where his wife and daughter *140 were living ostensibly for the purposes of a visit. The daughter admitted the defendant into the house. Mrs. Verodi, who was in the kitchen washing dishes at the time, heard the defendant say to the daughter, “Put the latch on the door, baby.” The latch was put on the door and the defendant called to Mrs. Verodi and asked her to come into the living room. He was told by Mrs. Verodi that she would be there in a minute as she was fixing some soup for the daughter, and the defendant called again and told her to come to the living room. Mrs. Verodi went into the living room and saw the defendant sitting on the right side of the divan. Mrs. Verodi inquired of the defendant if he was going to the hospital and the defendant answered that it was none of her business. The wife then asked him if he was ill, and she was told by him that it was none of her business. The wife put several other questions and to each the reply was, “It is none of your business” or “You will find out.” Mrs. Verodi stated that the defendant “looked very sick,” and she “knew something was wrong, and we just weren’t getting anywhere talking.” The wife became frightened and wanted to open the door, and seeing that the latch was on or that the “door was bolted down,” she picked up the cat and opened the latch, put the cat out, closed the door, but left the latch off. The defendant insisted that the latch be put back on. Mrs. Verodi explained to the defendant that there was no reason to put the latch on, whereupon the defendant said “Baby, put the latch on the door,” and Mrs. Verodi said, “Yvonne, you just leave it off; there is no reason for it to be on.” The defendant then directed Mrs. Verodi to put the latch on, and she refused, and thereupon he stated that he would if she did not. Mrs. Verodi had wanted the daughter to go to the kitchen to eat her soup and the defendant would not let her and asked the daughter to bring it into the living room. The daughter was eating from the coffee table and when the defendant started toward the door, apparently to fix the latch, the daughter jumped up and ran toward the kitchen. The defendant followed her and Mrs. Verodi started toward them, saying, “Joe, don’t scare the baby.” The defendant then grabbed the daughter around the shoulder, as they were in the kitchen doorway, pulled the gun from his right hand coat pocket and held it against the daughter and shot her in the chest. Mrs. Verodi grabbed the hand of the defendant that held the gun, and at about the same time the daughter fell to the floor. The mother called to the daughter and told her to run next door, but there was no response from the daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Verodi struggled *141 while she was attempting to get the gun away from him. He was trying to point the gun at himself and she was trying to point it toward the ceiling. While they were so struggling, and he was attempting to put the latch on the door, Mrs. Yerodi got the gun from him and he thereupon tried to get it back. She ran through the hallway, a bedroom, and out of a window to the house next door, where her parents and brother-in-law and sister lived. The brother-in-law, Harley Potts, took the gun from Mrs. Yerodi and told her to stay in the house of the parents. Potts then returned to the house of Mrs. Yerodi where the defendant was. When Potts entered the house he saw the defendant standing in the front room close by the front door and his eyes had a “glassy look.” Potts went to the child and observed where the bullet had entered her chest. The defendant then came toward Potts, who told him to sit down on the couch, at which time the defendant said, “Shoot me”—“Shoot me, I want you to shoot me, Harley. ’ ’ The speech and manner of speech of the defendant were very plain. The father of Mrs. Yerodi came into the house and Potts told him to call an ambulance and the police. Potts did not remember noticing alcohol on the breath of the defendant, but he did notice that the speech of the defendant was not at all thick.

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Bluebook (online)
309 P.2d 568, 150 Cal. App. 2d 137, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-verodi-calctapp-1957.