People v. Westlake

289 P. 212, 106 Cal. App. 247, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 538
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 1930
DocketDocket No. 1896.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 289 P. 212 (People v. Westlake) 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. Westlake, 289 P. 212, 106 Cal. App. 247, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 538 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

CONREY, P. J.

By Rule VIII, governing appellate court practice, it is provided that briefs “must present each point separately, under an appropriate heading, showing the nature of the question to be presented.” In this ease if we had been informed that the last paragraph of the closing brief contains a summary of the grounds upon which the appellant relies, we would have been saved the time wasted in hunting for them in the text of the opening brief.

The grounds of appeal are that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict; that the corpus delicti is not established by the evidence; that the district attorney was guilty of misconduct prejudicial to the rights of the defendant; that the court erred in relation to instructions given and in its refusal to give requested instructions.

The information charges that the defendant, on the twenty-eighth day of March, 1929, did wilfully, etc., kill and murder one Laura B. Sutton. The evidence shows that on and prior to March 28, 1929, Mrs. Sutton was living at 2012 West Thirtieth Street, in the city of Los Angeles. In the late afternoon of March 29th she visited the office of her attorney, who had been representing her in a divorce action. They left the office together, and he left her on Seventh Street. So far as the evidence shows, that is the last time that she was seen alive. On the fourth day of April a schoolboy found in the Los Angeles river-bed a headless body, from which the arms and legs had been cut off. This body, or torso, was turned over to officers, and later was examined by the county autopsy surgeon, Dr. Wagner.

On the eighteenth day of April a group of schoolboys found in the Los Angeles river-bed, some distance below the place where the torso had been found, a human skull. This skull was delivered to officers and it also in due course came to Dr. Wagner for examination. In the testimony of Dr. Wagner we find abundant evidence that the head and the torso above mentioned were parts of the same person. There were articular surfaces of the vertebrae which joined thoroughly and were of the same size and general appearance. There were overlapping knife cuts on the head and *250 torso which appeared to have been made in a straight line and were opposed to each other. Without making a statement in further detail, it is sufficient to say that according to the evidence it is abundantly established that these remains of a human being were one and the same person, and belonged to a woman of the same general appearance and age as Mrs. Sutton. There is also very conclusive evidence that this deceased person was Mrs. Sutton. Without extended review of the evidence, it is sufficient to refer to the testimony of Dr. Hyde, a dentist who had rendered professional services to Mrs. Sutton at various times during a dozen or more years. He examined the jaws and teeth attached to the skull and identified them as belonging to Mrs. Sutton. For example, referring to the crown of a tooth, he positively recognized it as being his own work. He further recognized the shape of the mouth, the condition of the processes of the roots of the teeth, the prominence of the front teeth, the unusual spaces between them, and the location of certain fillings which corresponded with a chart on which they were shown and which he had made during the lifetime of Mrs. Sutton.

Concerning the cause of death, the evidence goes definitely further than the mere finding of the dismembered and severed body which someone must have endeavored to hide away in the sands of the river-bed. Dr. Wagner testified that he found a fracture on the left side of the skull behind the ear, and that in his opinion this fracture of the skull was the cause of death; also, that in his opinion the fracture had been caused by a hammer or an instrument shaped like a hammer. There are numerous other details of facts shown in the evidence, bearing upon the question of identity and the question of cause of death. All of this evidence has been carefully examined. We are satisfied that the evidence is amply sufficient to prove the corpus delicti, that is to say, that Mrs. Sutton is dead and that she was the victim of a murder.

But it is further contended by the defendant that even if Mrs. Sutton was murdered by somebody, the evidence is insufficient to prove that the murder was done by him. The evidence contains a long story concerning the relations of Mrs. Sutton to various persons during the last years of her life, including her relations with the defendant. *251 It appears that for some time there had been considerable intimacy between her and the defendant, and that she had trusted him very fully in her business affairs. Having purchased for $3,000 a parcel of real property, she caused the deed to be made to her brother, who' afterward, at her request, conveyed this property to the defendant, and the defendant caused the deed to himself to be recorded on the third day of April, 1929. A joint bank account of Mrs. Sutton and the defendant had been created by her, consisting wholly of her money, and money was withdrawn from that account by him at various times. Mrs. Sutton had four shares of stock of the Southern California Edison Company. During the month of April, after her disappearance, the defendant used the certificate of this stock by pledging it as security for a loan which he obtained at a bank. When he applied for the loan and exhibited the certificate at the bank, her signature had not been indorsed thereon. Later he brought it back with her name indorsed. The evidence indicates that he imitated her signature. When this loan was made the defendant was given a deposit credit of $98. This was on the twenty-fourth day of April, 1929. On the twenty-eighth day of May, in making a statement at the sheriff’s office, in the presence of several persons there present, and in response to a question about this $98, the defendant said that he got some of it from his son. In a later statement he said that he had borrowed the $98 from the bank. After some further questioning he admitted that he had used the Edison stock as security. It further appears that in obtaining the loan Mrs. Sutton’s name was signed with that of the defendant as a comaker of the note. At the trial of this case the defendant admitted that he signed her name to the note and indorsed her name on the back of the stock, but claimed that she had given him authority to use her name in that way.

The foregoing items are only a part of the facts and circumstances showing that after the disappearance of Mrs. Sutton, and probably after the time of her death, defendant appropriated to his own use substantially all of her property, and that at the time of her disappearance her affairs had been so arranged that her property, was in his possession or in a situation to easily come into his possession and under his control. His conduct in relation to her property, *252 his evasions and misrepresentations, and his attempts to falsely make it appear that Mrs. Sutton was still alive, are facts which strongly support and sustain the inference of guilt.

Appellant claims that in two instances the district attorney was guilty of misconduct at the trial. It appeared in the evidence that at some time in the spring of 1929 the defendant had received an injury to his right hand, so that the hand was bandaged for a time.

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People v. Meyers
46 P.2d 282 (California Court of Appeal, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
289 P. 212, 106 Cal. App. 247, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-westlake-calctapp-1930.