People v. Wilson

138 P. 971, 23 Cal. App. 513, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 240
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 17, 1913
DocketCrim. No. 299.
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 138 P. 971 (People v. Wilson) 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. Wilson, 138 P. 971, 23 Cal. App. 513, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 240 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

CONREY, P. J.

The defendant having been convicted of the crime of manslaughter, appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial."

The information in this case charged the defendant with the crime of murder committed on the twenty-second day of October, 1912, in the killing of one Thomas Wilson. The defendant and the deceased were brothers, aged respectively about fifty-four and sixty years. In October, 1912, and for about one year prior thereto, they had been living together on a ranch known as the Hopkins place, located nearly two miles southeast of the town of Oreutt in the county of Santa Barbara. During October, 1912, these two were the only occupants of the ranch and of the house thereon where they were living. In the afternoon of October twenty-first they went together to Oreutt, and after attending to some business there, they drove back to the ranch. On the morning of October 22nd, between eight and nine o’clock, the defendant came to Oreutt and gave information that his brother was dead, and asked the justice of the peace, who was also acting coroner, to come to the ranch. The defendant then returned to the ranch, being immediately followed by the acting coroner and several other men, most of whom were summoned as members of a coroner’s jury. The evidence upon which the defendant has been convicted is entirely of a circumstantial nature, and consists largely of testimony of these men who visited the ranch on that morning as to the facts which they discovered on inspection of the premises at the Hopkins place.

There was a front porch of the Hopkins house, with a door opening into a middle front room, known as the sitting room, and in which there was a fireplace. On the right side of the *517 sitting room as one enters through the front door there was a door opening into defendant’s bedroom. Immediately opposite this on the other side of the sitting room was a door opening into the bedroom of Thomas Wilson. These witnesses found Thomas Wilson lying on his back on the front porch, with a pillow under his head, his right arm extended by the side, and his left arm across the breast. The right arm was broken at the elbow and the third finger of the left hand was mashed as by some severe blow. Two cuts made by the blows of some blunt instrument had laid open the scalp on top of the head; and the evidence shows that one or both of these blows was the cause of death. There was a considerable amount of blood on the pillow and on the floor near the head and along the side where the arm lay. The testimony shows that blood was found in the sitting room on the casing of the door leading into the deceased’s bedroom, and on the wall of the sitting room on each side of that door, and on the floor between the deceased’s bedroom door and the front door and on the inner knob of the front door. Some effort had been made to wash the floor immediately; in front of the deceased’s bedroom door. Prom that place to the front door the blood was only in isolated drops, except that at one place in the sitting room and near the front door the blood marks approximated the shape that would be left by the pressure of a bloody hand.

Some of the witnesses found floating in the well near the barn a piece of an old buggy shaft. Some of the witnesses found behind a box on the front porch near the body of deceased a sliver of wood, which fitted into a recently broken place on the piece of buggy shaft found in the well. They also found in the ashes of the fire place a broken end of a buggy shaft, but this was not shown to fit into or be a part of the piece of buggy shaft found in the well. There is some evidence of human blood stains upon the sliver of wood found on the porch and upon the piece of buggy shaft found in the well. There is no evidence showing where these pieces of buggy shaft came from, nor that they were ever seen on the Hopkins place before the 22nd day of October, 1912, nor that any person ever saw them in the possession of the defendant. One witness also stated, with respect to the piece taken from *518 the fire place, “I think it had blood spots on it, or what was apparently blood spots.”

Defendant testified that when he returned with the deceased to the Hopkins place on the evening of October 21st the defendant unhitched the team and the deceased went up to the house; that when the defendant came up to the house his brother was lying on his (the deceased’s) bed; that at about seven o’clock the defendant went to bed and read a newspaper until nearly ten o’clock, at which time he heard his brother go out; that the defendant went to sleep without hearing his brother return to the house; and the defendant then slept until six o’clock in the morning; that at about six o’clock in the morning the defendant, after making some preparations for breakfast, looked into- his brother’s room and then looked out through the window and saw him lying on the porch; that he went out and found that his brother was dead, and thereupon he put the left arm up over the breast, went into the house and got a pillow which he brought out and placed under his brother’s head; that he then went to his brother’s bed and obtained a bedspread with which he covered the body, as it was found by the men who came later; that he then hitched up the team, drove to'a neighbor’s, where he reported his brother’s death, and then went to Orcutt, where he reported the fact of his brother’s death.

There is testimony by several witnesses relating to a number of occasions when quarrels are said to have occurred between defendant and Thomas Wilson. These occurrences are placed at various times extending from two weeks to two years prior to October 22, 1912. For the most part they are isolated instances supported separately by single witnesses and denied in whole or in part by the defendant.

There are many assignments of error set forth in the briefs of defendant’s counsel. After eliminating those which are of slight importance or not justified by the record, the following items appear to require more particular discussion or statement of the opinion of this court.

The court did not err in admitting in evidence the pieces of buggy shaft. It was necessary for the prosecution to show as accurately as possible the means by which and manner in which Thomas Wilson came to his death. The facts with respect to those pieces of wood having been shown as herein- *519 above stated, their presence upon those premises at the places where they were found and under the circumstancs then existing, had a direct tendency to show that the blows received by Thomas Wilson had been administered by the use of said buggy shaft. In People v. Hill, 123 Cal. 571, [56 Pac. 443], it was held to have been error for the court to permit to be received in evidence and exhibited to the jury a club found in the corral where the defendant and the deceased had the encounter in which the murder was alleged to have been committed. There was in that case no evidence tending to show that the stick was the one with which the deceased had been hit, or that the defendant was connected with it in any manner. The presence of blood marks or other signs connecting it with said encounter would have made the exhibit admissible in evidence. In People v. Sampo, 17 Cal. App. 149, [118 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 P. 971, 23 Cal. App. 513, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wilson-calctapp-1913.