People v. Woods

81 P. 652, 147 Cal. 265, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 391
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1905
DocketCrim. No. 1196.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 81 P. 652 (People v. Woods) 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. Woods, 81 P. 652, 147 Cal. 265, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 391 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

BEATTY, C. J.

The appellant, jointly with five others, was indicted for the murder of Eugene C. Robinson, a police *267 officer of San Francisco. Upon a separate, trial he was convicted of murder of the first degree and sentenced to death. His appeal is from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The principal direct evidence against the appellant was the testimony of William Henderson, one of the six defendants charged with the murder, who stated that he, Goueher, Kauffman, Kennedy, Courtney, and the appellant had formed a plan to rob the safe at Cypress Lawn Cemetery; that they had provided themselves with burglars’ tools, dynamite, etc., for the purpose of breaking into the safe, and on the night of the 20th of January, 1902, had gone to Cypress Lawn, where, finding the place occupied and guarded, they had abandoned the enterprise and started back to the city about midnight. All but one of the. party were armed with pistols, that of appellant being of .44 caliber, the others smaller. Henderson, the witness, was carrying the tools and dynamite. In returning to the city they rode on electric ears to a point near the. junction of Mission and Valencia streets, where the last car was put in the barn, and from there they started to walk down into the city. They divided themselves into two parties, Woods, Henderson, and Kauffman going in front, and Kennedy, Goueher, and Courtney following at some distance behind. While proceeding in this way, those in front were called back by those behind to consider a proposition to break into the office of a coal-yard and rob it. This enterprise was vetoed by Woods, Kauffman, and Henderson, and their tramp to the city was resumed in the same order as before. When the three who were in advance got to Seventeenth Street, on Valencia, they heard a loud yell of alarm coming from the direction of Eighteenth and Valencia streets, and directly Goueher and Kennedy came running up. Kennedy turned and fired a shot from his pistol in the direction from which they had come, jumped over a fence, and disappeared. Goueher joined those in front, remarking that he was not going to run. When the four had proceeded to a point between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets on Valencia, the deceased, in plain clothes, ran up behind them and asked “Who has got that gun?” Henderson, the witness, started to get away, and had gone about twenty-five feet when two shots rang out, and were shortly followed by a whole fusillade. *268 Henderson continued, his retreat, and only saw, or thought he saw, as he was leaving, that the appellant and Goucher were shooting the man Avho ran up—officer Eobinson. He also heard the command, “Throw up your hands,” and thought it was the voice of appellant. He. continued running along Valencia to Sixteenth Street, down Sixteenth Street to Julian Avenue, and along Julian Avenue to Fifteenth Street. In his flight he, was followed closely by Goucher and appellant, and he heard the latter say to Goucher as they ran, “He got me twice.” At the corner of Julian Avenue and Sixteenth Street some one came up and commanded them to stop, but they continued to retreat, and some shooting occurred as they were passing along Julian Avenue from Sixteenth to Fifteenth streets. One shot struck the witness as he Avas retreating, and he fired three shots in return. At Fifteenth Street he was overtaken and arrested by officer Taylor.

The testimony of this witness was supplemented by ample proof that officer Eobinson was shot and killed at the spot on Valencia Street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth, where the fusillade occurred, and it was corroborated in almost every detail by the testimony of other witnesses and by circumstantial evidence of a very persuasive character. Officer Taylor Avas at the corner of Mission and Fifteenth streets; AArhen he heard the shooting on Valencia. He ran to Six-teeth and up Sixteenth to the. corner of Julian Avenue in time to encounter Goucher and appellant, whom he ordered to halt, stating that he was an officer. They continued to run along Julian Avenue, as related by Henderson, and some one fired at the officer. He dreAv his pistol and fired at them. One of his shots Avould account for the wound received by Henderson at this point. The appellant, when subsequently arrested, was found to be wounded in two places, but his wounds were probably inflicted by officer Eobinson, for officer Taylor noticed that he was limping when he turned into Julian Avenue, and he saw his companion (Goucher) take him by the arm, saying at the same time, ‘ ‘ Come on, you son of a bitch,” and Henderson heard him say just before that, “He [meaning officer Eobinson] got me twice.” Officer Taylor at the trial positively identified appellant as the larger of the two men he encountered at the corner of Julian Avenue *269 and Sixteenth Street, and the one who had the heavier-sounding pistol. Two overcoats resembling those worn by appellant and Goueher previous to the shooting were found the next morning in a vacant lot near by, and one. of them had bullet-holes corresponding to the wounds found on appellant’s body when he was arrested some weeks after the murder at Portland, Oregon. The fatal wounds received by officer Robinson were caused by .44-caliber bullets, and two witnesses testified that a few days before the murder a man resembling appellant and wearing an overcoat like that found with the bullet-holes in it had been inquiring at their shops for short .44 cartridges.

A number of other circumstances corroborative of Henderson’s statement were proved. Appellant was identified as a visitor at the place where three of his co-defendants lived. The conductors and gripmen on three or four different electric cars remembered the. party of six men who went out to Cypress Lawn on the 20th of January and returned shortly after midnight to the car-barn near the junction of Mission and Valencia streets and started to walk from that point along Valencia Street to the city. They did not positively identify appellant as one of the party, but, aside from the testimony of officer Taylor as to his identity with the man he encountered at the corner of Julian Avenue, and Sixteenth Street, the circumstances proved—especially the correspondence of the wounds on his body with the bullet-holes in the overcoat found near the spot where he eluded officer Taylor— were sufficient to justify the jury in concluding that appellant was the man who was hit twice by officer Robinson in the encounter on Valencia Street. In short, there was evidence sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the six defendants named in the indictment went to Cypress Lawn for the purpose of committing burglary,—that before they started five of the six armed themselves with loaded pistols; that on their return to the city so armed, and with burglars’ tools and dynamite in their possession, Goueher, Kennedy, and Courtney, who were following at some distance behind the others, attempted to hold up a Japanese, near the corner -of Eighteenth and Valencia streets; that his loud outcry attracted the attention of a number of people and caused the trio to run; that Kennedy fired a shot as he ran to intimidate any *270

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 P. 652, 147 Cal. 265, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-woods-cal-1905.