People v. Woodcock

199 P. 565, 52 Cal. App. 412, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 249
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1921
DocketCrim. No. 930.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 199 P. 565 (People v. Woodcock) 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. Woodcock, 199 P. 565, 52 Cal. App. 412, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 249 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinions

NOURSE, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction upon nine separate counts charging her with perjury alleged to have been committed by her in the course of her testimony in the trial of her husband upon a charge of murder. The facts of the case are: On the eighteenth day of September, 1919, the defendant and her husband, Edgar Woodcock,- and a friend named Cooper, were walking along Market Street, in the city and county of San Francisco, in a westerly direction, the defendant walking about twenty feet in advance of her companions. After they had crossed Van Ness Avenue, still going west, the defendant was approached by one Kelly, who, she testified, rattled some money in his pocket and endeavored to make her acquaintance, whereupon she turned to her companions, who rushed up to her, and in the altercation which ensued Edgar Woodcock shot and killed Kelly. Edgar Woodcock was thereupon arrested and charged with murder. Defendant immediately went to her home, which was across the street from the place where the shooting occurred. Shortly thereafter three police officers called at her apartment and obtained an oral statement from her. She was thereupon taken to the Hall of Justice and in the presence of one of these officers signed a written statement which was prepared by him. From these statements the prosecution, in the case of her husband charged with the murder of Kelly, developed the theory that in accordance with a prearranged plan between the defendant, her husband, and Cooper, the three set out on the streets of San Francisco with the understanding that the defendant should precede her two companions and that, if she were approached by any strange man, she was to signal to her companions and they would *414 thereupon come to her assistance and chastise the offending party.

In the course of her examination in the murder case the defendant testified that on the Tuesday preceding the Thursday when the shooting occurred she had told her husband that she had been annoyed by different men as she went to the public library for boohs in the evening; that her husband scoffed at the idea and said that if she would go out with him that evening he would satisfy her that such things would not occur; that on the evening of September 18th her husband came home and told her that it would be necessary for him to work that night at the State Mining Bureau in the Ferry building, in the city and county of San Francisco, where he was employed, and that Cooper was going there with him to help him pack an exhibit; that at about 8 o’clock that evening Cooper called at their home at the Crockett apartments on the south side of Market Street, and after some conversation about books and authors defendant’s husband asked her to get a certain book from the public library at Larkin and McAllister Streets; that she objected to going out that evening because, as she said, she was not feeling well, and that her husband urged her to go to the library, saying that he and Cooper would walk over as far as the library with her on the way to the Mining Bureau; that the three left the apartment, walked across Market Street to the north side and thence easterly along Market Street to Larkin, and thence up Larkin Street to the public library; that during their walk that evening she went on ahead of her husband and Cooper, who walked together a short distance behind her; that as she passed along Larkin Street toward the library a strange man drove an automobile to the curb and invited her to ride.with him; that when she got to the intersection of Fulton and Larkin Streets he turned his automobile into Fulton Street close to the sidewalk and again asked her to take a ride; that thereupon she turned around to her husband and on his approaching her she told him that the stranger had spoken to her; that the husband thereupon went to the automobile and slapped the stranger, while she continued on to the library and obtained the book; that on coming out she was surprised to find her husband and Cooper waiting for her, and after some *415 conversation they started home, she preceding her two companions as before and continuing out Market Street to the juncture of Market, Haight, and Gough Streets, a point about opposite the place where she lived; that she there gave the book which she had procured at the library to her husband and purchased a magazine at the news-stand, and after some conversation relative to the absence of a policeman upon the beat the three determined to walk, down Market Street again as far as Larkin to see if by any chance any policeman might be upon that beat. This same question had been discussed between the defendant and her husband in their conversation on the Tuesday preceding the day of the shooting, at which time, as the defendant testified, she had told her husband that in all her walks to the library she had never seen a policeman on that beat. The defendant further testified that the three walked down Market Street in an easterly direction to Larkin Street, where she stopped to look in the window of a store, and when she saw the reflection of her companions she turned and walked back on Market Street toward her home; that in the middle of the block between Van Ness Avenue and Franklin Street the deceased, who was a stranger to her, approached the second time that evening and spoke to her, and that she turned and called to her husband, whereupon he and Cooper ran up to Kelly and in the encounter between her husband and Kelly the shooting occurred.

The trial of Edgar Woodcock on the charge of murder resulted in a verdict of “not guilty” on December 19, 1919. On the 31st of October, 1919, the defendant, Alice Woodcock, was also accused of the crime-of murder growing out of the same state of facts, but was not brought to trial upon that charge. The trial of Edgar Woodcock was followed by indictments charging both E'dgar Woodcock and the defendant with perjury committed in the course of the murder trial. Cooper, the other party to the occurrence of September 18th, having left the state immediately after the shooting, was indicted for murder and returned to the state for the purpose of testifying in an investigation concerning the alleged perjury of the two Woodcocks. He was the principal witness before the grand jury on this investigation and, with a few exceptions which will be hereafter noted, was the only witness at the trial of the defendant on whose *416 testimony the prosecution depended to prove the perjury of the defendant.

As in the murder case, the prosecution in the perjury case proceeded upon the theory that the two Woodcocks and Cooper had entered into a conspiracy whereby they should walk upon the streets of San Francisco, the defendant to precede her two companions so that if she were accosted by any stranger they would take the law in their own hands and chastise the offending party. In support of this theory of conspiracy it was alleged in the indictment that during the course of the trial of Edgar Woodcock for murder it became material to know whether on the evening of the 18th of September, 1919, or prior thereto, there was an arrangement, agreement, or understanding between the defendant and her husband or between the defendant, her husband, and Cooper, or between defendant’s husband arid Cooper, to the effect that the three should go upon the streets of San Francisco walking in the manner in which they walked that evening in order that the defendant’s companions might chastise any stranger who should accost or offend her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 P. 565, 52 Cal. App. 412, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-woodcock-calctapp-1921.