People v. Worden

45 P. 844, 113 Cal. 569, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 827
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1896
DocketCrim. No. 110
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 45 P. 844 (People v. Worden) 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. Worden, 45 P. 844, 113 Cal. 569, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 827 (Cal. 1896).

Opinion

McFarland, J.

The information charges the defendant, together with several other persons, with the murder of one Samuel 0. Clark; and he was convicted of murder in the first degree, with the death penalty attached. ITe appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The bill of exceptions, which forms part of the transcript, contains a full statement of the evidence given at the trial; but the evidence seems to have been brought here mainly for the purpose of pointing certain exceptions taken to instructions given the jury by the trial judge, for the point is not made that the evidence does not sustain the verdict. Moreover, the record shows that only three exceptions were taken to rulings of the [571]*571court on the admissibility of evidence; and only one of these exceptions is presented or mentioned in appellant’s briefs. The whole strength and stress of appellant’s argument is upon asserted errors committed by the judge of the court below in charging the jury.

We have carefully examined all the instructions given; and, considering them as a whole, we see nothing in them erroneous or prejudicial to the appellant. The appellant presented eleven written instructions, and they were all given except the second, in lieu of which an instruction was given substantially the same as the one asked; and these instructions presented appellant’s side of the case very fully and as favorably as he could reasonably have expected. No other instructions were asked by appellant. The only hostile criticism with which the charge can be justly assailed is that, upon some points, it is perhaps too lengthy and elaborate; but we think that' it presents a fair and correct statement of the law applicable to the case. But counsel for appellant, in a brief exceedingly well constructed, endeavor with great acuteness and ability to separate the charge into detached fragments, and to attack each singly and unaided by the context. Of course, if any one independent instruction contains an absolute error upon a particular point of law, such error is not always cured by the fact that the law upon such point is correctly given in another instruction; but, as a general rule, dividing a long charge into minute parts, and analyzing and criticising each part as though it stood independent of all the others, is not a proper method of arriving at the correctness or incorrectness of the whole charge. All the features and modifications of a principle of law cannot usually be stated in one sentence. As was said by Mr. Justice McKinstry, when delivering the opinion of the court in People v. Doyell, 48 Cal. 93: “We must take the charge together, and if, without straining any portion of the language, it harmonizes as a whole, and fairly and correctly presents the law hearing on the issues tried, we will not disturb the [572]*572judgment because a separate instruction does not contain all the conditions and limitations which are to be gathered from the entire text.”

The briefs of counsel for appellant have many divisions and subdivisions; but we deem it necessary to notice only the leading objections which th.ey make to the correctness of the charge.

We see no error in the language: “You should receive the law as I state it to be, notwithstanding you may firmly believe that I am wrong, and that the law is or should be otherwise.” The latter part of the sentence was unnecessary, but it in no way affects the correctness of the proposition that the jury must take the law from the court as declared in section 1126 of the Penal Code, which provides that although the jury have the power to return a general verdict, “ they are bound, nevertheless, to receive as law what is laid down as such by the court.”

The statement by the judge of the theory of the prosecution was not, as contended by appellant, a statement of facts. The jury were carefully informed, both at the commencement and close of said statement, that the judge was only stating the “theory” of the prosecution —what the prosecution claimed. There was no error in this; for instructions should be made, as far as possible, applicable to the particular features of the case on trial—to the issues and contentions developed by the evidence and arguments of counsel. And it appears from the record that the theory of the prosecution was correctly stated. Neither was there any error in the statement of the judge of the defenses of the appellant. The deceased, Clark, was -killed in this way: He was a locomotive engineer on a train moving westerly on a railroad track from the city of Sacramento toward Davisville; about two and a half miles west of Sacramento there is a trestle or bridge over a slough on which the track runs; and when the train reached that trestle the locomotive and several of the cars were thrown from the track over the trestle on the north side, and [573]*573down into the water, and Clark and several other persons on the train were killed. As stated in the bill of exceptions: “ The people introduced a large amount' of testimony to the effect and tending to prove that the first rail on the east end of the trestle, toward Sacramento, the direction from which said train of cars was coming, and on the north side of said track, had been removed by human agency, and that the trestlework beneath the rails on the north hand side had been weakened or destroyed by explosives in the form of giant powder applied by human' agency also, and that the weakening of said track was caused by the above-mentioned facts.” The'people also introduced a great amount of evidence directly to the point that the appellant, with others, on the day of the catastrophe, and a short time before the approach of said train, did the acts above described which caused the wreck, and the death of Clark. Now, the judge said, in his charge, that appellant had introduced evidence tending to establish two defenses, namely: 1. That the misplaced rail was caused by climatic influences—that is, by expansion by heat; and 2. “That he was not engaged in the wrecking of the train, but was in the city of Sacramento for some hours both before and after the wrecking occurred.” He also said: “ This second defense is called in law an alibi.” We see nothing in this erroneous or prejudicial to appellant. In the first place, it was not said that no evidence was introduced as to other points, and the statement was properly introductory to instructions upon the two defenses named. In the second place, the récord shows that the two matters mentioned by the judge as defenses were in fact the only two involved. Appellant introduced eighteen witnesses, and of these the testimony of six—Marston, Creamer, Griffith, Forsythe, Bradshaw and Sims,—^was entirely confined to the condition of the tracks of roads operated by the company owning the road on which the killing of Clark took place, the general purpose being to show that the rails were too close together at the ends to allow [574]*574of expansion by heat; the testimony of nine—Gastello, Hinby, De Biso, Curry, Conrad, Hafer, ICnox, Fickett, and Thompson—was confined entirely to the subject of an alibi;

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Bluebook (online)
45 P. 844, 113 Cal. 569, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-worden-cal-1896.