People v. Will

248 P. 1078, 79 Cal. App. 101, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 180
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 4, 1926
DocketDocket No. 887.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 248 P. 1078 (People v. Will) 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. Will, 248 P. 1078, 79 Cal. App. 101, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 180 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

FINCH, P. J.

The defendants were jointly charged with the crime of murder and were jointly tried. Will and Worth were convicted of murder of the first degree and Andrews of manslaughter. Will and Worth have appealed from the judgments and the orders denying their motions for new trials. Andrews did not appeal.

March 11, 1924, Will received a deed to the west half of the southeast quarter and the east half of the southwest quarter of a certain section of land, the first parcel being patented land and the other unpatented. He thereafter resided in a house on the east eighty near the west boundary line thereof. In the year 1922 W. C. King located a mining claim which was partly at least on the west eighty, but a part of which Will contended, after the execution of said deed, was on the east eighty. In April, 1923, King relocated the mining claim with the same boundaries as the original location, and built a cabin on it a short distance west of the boundary line between the two eighties, in which he and his wife thereafter resided until September 8, 1924. King and his wife then departed from the premises, leaving *105 Thomas W. Carl in possession thereof under an oral agreement to purchase the property from King. There was a dispute as to whether a part of King’s mining claim was on Will’s patented land. The ‘King cabin was about three« hundred feet from the house in which Will resided. In July, 1924; Will posted and recorded a notice of location of a mining claim which, in part at least, overlapped the King claim. Will thereafter served notice on King to vacate the latter’s claim and the relations between them became unfriendly.' Carl appears to have participated in the controversy between the rival claimants, taking King’s side therein. Before the Bungs left the premises, Carl and Will engaged in a fist fight and the latter caused the arrest of the former. In the year 1901 Carl was convicted of the crime of manslaughter in Indian Territory and thereafter served a term of imprisonment therefor. The three defendants frequently discussed the matter of dispossessing Carl.and they sought the advice of attorneys as to the means to be employed to that end. On January 9, 1925, the attorneys signed and delivered to Will a letter directed to Carl, stating that they were advised by Will that Carl was trespassing on Will’s said mining claim, describing it, and notifying him “to immediately refrain from all further trespassing upon said property’’ and that “David S. Will intends to enter upon said property and perform work and labor thereon, and will hold you personally responsible for all interference therewith, and for any further trespass upon said property. ’ ’ During the evening of that day Will requested Clarence Burner, a deputy sheriff residing at Forest Hill, a few miles from Will’s home, to go with him to the King cabin and serve the letter on Carl. Burner stated that he would do so during the forenoon of the following day. Burner thereafter discussed the matter with the sheriff, who advised him that the letter was not from the court and that he “had not the right to go and put him in possession of the property with a paper of that kind. ’ ’ In the meantime Will had made arrangements with the other defendants to go with him and Burner to serve the letter upon Carl. Will testified that he desired to have them along as witnesses. Upon Burner’s failure to appear at the appointed time, Will drove to Forest Hill to ascertain the reason for his nonappearanee. Burner informed Will of the advice he had received from the sheriff *106 and declined to serve the letter. Will then “stated that he had an order from his attorney to take possession and that he was going to take possession. . . . He said he had ‘waited five months for a decision and that ‘son of a bitch’ had pestered him as long as he was going to let him, and it was either him or Carl.” In one of the conversations with Burner, Will said that “he was going to have possession of his property or die in the attempt.” Burner testified that Will said that “either him or Carl would go out of the cabin feet first, or something to that effect. . . . He said that Mr. Andrews and Mr. Worth were going with him. ... I explained to him I thought it would mean trouble for him to go there and he said he was not afraid of trouble as they were all going armed.” After Burner refused to go with him, Will left and in about one and a half or two hours he returned to Forest Hill and said: “Well, Burner, it ended bad, I killed him.” The uncontradicted evidence shows that upon Will’s return home from Forest Hill January 10th, he armed himself with a 38-caliber revolver, the barrel of which is seven inches long, and started with the other defendants to Carl’s cabin for the purpose of taking possession of the property. He inserted the barrel of the gun inside one of the lace-top boots he was wearing, the handle being above the top of the boot. Worth was armed with a 45-caliber automatic pistol, which he habitually carried. Andrews carried an ax and a saw. As they approached Carl’s cabin an altercation between Carl and Will took place, which terminated in the death of Carl from gunshot wounds inflicted by Will and Worth, each of them firing six shots. A witness for the prosecution testified that, a few hours after the homicide, Will said that as the defendants approached the cabin Carl “leveled a rifle on them” and said he would kill them if they “took another step”; that Will then informed Carl that Worth had a letter to read to him; that Carl set the gun down, but held it in one hand, while Worth walked up to the cabin and read the letter and handed it to Carl; that Will then walked up to the porch on which Carl was standing, waving his (Will’s) hands and saying not to have any trouble; that when Will got on top of the porch “he made one leap and grabbed him and they had a scuffle . ■. . and in the tussle the rifle dropped out of Carl’s hand and wrestled until they got over to the *107 stove and the stove was knocked over. . . . Then he said they let go and kind of peaceable . . . and he said after talking a little bit Carl made a move and he naturally thought he ivas reaching for his gun, . . . back towards the little partition with a curtain. . . . He (Will) was sitting on a chair by the table, and when he saw Carl reach what he thought for a gun, he reached for his gun, he said he had it in his . . . high-topped boots and had it in loose purposely to get his gun and he, while he reached for that gun Mr. Carl had shot the first shot; that he pulled out his gun and shot,—-while firing one of his shots he heard Mr: Carl groan, . . . and he knew he had hit him, and . . . Mr. Will said he stood up and kept shooting.” January 12, 1925, Will made a statement in the sheriff’s office, which was taken down by a stenographer and was admitted in evidence at the trial. In this statement Will said that, after his return home from his second trip to Forest Hill, “I was afraid that I might say something that would aggravate Carl, so I asked Mr. Worth to read the letter to him. ... I walked over there from my house. It is only possibly 300 feet across. . . . Mr. Andrews took a saw and an ax. Mr. Worth read the letter for me to take possession and start doing work, and I said we would cut a tree down and block the road (leading to the King cabin) after he took his stuff out. . . . When Mr. Worth went ahead to read the letter, but Carl stopped Andrews and me on the bridge with a rifle, . . . maybe 25 or 30 feet (from Carl’s cabin), something like that. . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 P. 1078, 79 Cal. App. 101, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-will-calctapp-1926.