People v. Wells

76 P.2d 493, 10 Cal. 2d 610, 10 Cal. 610, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 239
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1938
DocketCrim. 4140
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 76 P.2d 493 (People v. Wells) 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. Wells, 76 P.2d 493, 10 Cal. 2d 610, 10 Cal. 610, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 239 (Cal. 1938).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

Although not in complete harmony with the testimony that was given by each of the several “eye-witnesses ’ ’ to the important incidents which preceded and led to the death of one Price at the hands of defendant, an examination of the transcript of the evidence that was adduced on the trial of the action warrants the conclusion that the jury was justified in its implied belief that the following facts had been established, to wit:

So-called “Negro Quarters” are situated in a “clearing” that lies about three-fourths of a mile from the town of Quincy. Apparently the “quarters” consist of two rows of small houses or cabins, in size about fifteen by twenty feet, one row being opposite the other. Number 13, of one of such rows, was occupied by defendant and his wife. A man named Bullock with his wife, lived in number 11, which was separated from number 13 by a distance of about sixty-eight and one-half feet, within which intervening space one other cabin, number 12, was located. At approximately 7:30 o’clock P. M. on a day in the latter part of June, while it was “first dusk”, at a point near the rear of Bullock’s cabin (number 11), defendant accosted Price in a friendly manner and then and there in the presence of Bullock asked Price to repay to defendant the sum of one dollar which he asserted that Price owed to him. To that suggestion, Price responded that theretofore he had paid that amount to the defendant and *614 urged defendant to go with him to see a Mrs. Smith, by whom Price declared that he could “prove” the correctness of that statement. Defendant declined and refused to be thus convinced of his asserted error with reference to his claim on Price. Although aside from the fact that each told the other that he was “crazy”, neither defendant nor Price “spoke a cross word”. Immediately following that “quarrel” defendant went to his cabin (number 13) and Price accompanied Bullock to the front of the cabin that was occupied by the latter (number 11), where they found Mrs. Bullock seated upon a bench and upon which both Price and Bullock also thereupon sat. Within two or three minutes (or possibly three or four minutes) next ensuing, Price arose and went to one comer of the cabin that was occupied by defendant, where in a listening attitude he remained for a space of three or four minutes; thereupon he entered defendant’s cabin. A few minutes later, upon emerging therefrom he carried an unloaded rifle that was the property of defendant. Thereupon he returned to the seat that theretofore had been occupied by him on the bench that was located in front of Bullock’s cabin. At that time and place Bullock, his wife and another woman (Price’s housekeeper) were present. Within “quite a few minutes” thereafter, defendant’s wife joined those who were thus assembled and then and there asked Price to give to her not only the dollar which defendant had asserted that Price owed to him, but also defendant’s rifle whielj Price had retained in his possession. To that request Price replied, “I don’t owe Wells (defendant) no dollar; I paid the dollar. I ain’t going to give you the gun; I will keep the gun”. And as further was stated by the witness who gave that testimony, “While she was prevailing with Price for the gun Mr. Wells (defendant) come out and yelled ‘Look out!’ The gun (in the hands of defendant) went off when I got off the bench . . . By the time I got three or four feet from the back end of the house he made the second shot . . . By the time she (Bullock’s wife) got in (the rear door of the cabin) and I fastened the door the third shot went off”.

With reference to the circumstances which resulted in the fact that Price had possession of a rifle that was the property of defendant, Price’s housekeeper testified in substance that after Price had left the front of Bullock’s cabin, she joined Price and as they were about to pass in front of that cabin *615 "they” saw defendant inside his cabin with the rifle in his hand, apparently on his way through the front door entrance of his cabin to the outside thereof; that thereupon Price said "he couldn’t out run that” and went into defendant’s cabin, "grabbed hold” of the rifle that defendant held in his hands, and after a struggle with defendant, succeeded in wresting it from his possession; that in the course of that struggle, Price said to defendant "Why do you want to hurt me. I don’t want to hurt you”; that thereupon Price "come on out and told Wells ‘Why act like that?' ”; and that after Price had gone back to the front of Bullock’s cabin, in substance he said to Mrs. Bullock, "Don't run home, girl. I am not going to hurt anybody.” He said, "I am not going to hurt nobody and I don’t want nobody to hurt me”. And that in answer to the request made of Price by Mrs. Wells two or three minutes afterward, that he give defendant’s rifle to her, Price said, "I will not give it to you; I want no trouble; I don’t want to hurt Wells. I don’t want Wells to hurt me; I am not going to hurt him.”

Defendant was not sworn as a witness; but in his behalf, with reference to the incident in which it appeared that Price wrested the rifle from defendant, the wife of defendant testified:

"When Wells walked in (after the quarrel) Stella Vaughn (Price’s housekeeper) and myself was sitting in the kitchen talking and he went on through to the bedroom; so after he was in there awhile I got up and went in—while talking to Estella. When I was in there talking to Wells Stella says ‘Net, I’m going, I will be back', and shortly after that Price walked in the back door. Someone knocked at the back door; I said ‘who is that’. He didn’t say anything, so Wells said ‘don’t come in here Price, don’t come in here.’ Then Price went on around to the front door and I heard him and then I pulled the door open and I said ‘Price, don’t come in here, don’t come in here Price’. Wells said ‘don't come in here’. When he got to the middle door to come into the bedroom Wells said ‘didn’t I tell you not to come in here’. When he did that he jumped and Wells got the gun. Shoved Wells on the bed and they were fussing in there about five minutes before Stella came in. When he taken the gun he walked out and Stella walked out behind him and I was behind Estella. I walked out and told Wells ‘I will get the gun’ and while I went out to get the gun and while talking to Price *616 to give me the gun, while standing in front of him, and Price said ‘No, Home girl, I will not give it to you.’ I said ‘give me the gun’; he said: ‘I will not give it to you.' I said ‘don’t you owe Wells a dollar’; he says ‘no’, and at that time Wells said ‘look out’. Q. Then there was a shot fired? A. Then there was a shot fired.”

It also appears that after defendant had fired the first shot from his shotgun, and all the persons, including Price, that immediately theretofore had been in front of Bullock’s cabin, in an attempt to escape injury, had run each in a direction different from that which was taken by either of the others, defendant followed Price and fired two additional shots from the shotgun. Within a few minutes thereafter Price was found dead, with defendant’s unloaded riñe clutched in his right hand. It is unquestioned that his death was the result of his having been shot by defendant.

On such evidence, without making any recommendation regarding the punishment that should be inflicted upon the defendant, the jury returned its verdict of ‘ ‘ guilty of murder in the first degree”.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 P.2d 493, 10 Cal. 2d 610, 10 Cal. 610, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wells-cal-1938.