People v. Ybarra

228 P. 868, 68 Cal. App. 259, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 185
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 29, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 1073.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 228 P. 868 (People v. Ybarra) 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. Ybarra, 228 P. 868, 68 Cal. App. 259, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 185 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

CRAIG, J.

Appellant was convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree and the penalty fixed at life imprisonment. This appeal is based principally upon alleged insufficiency of the evidence to establish the corpus delicti; also upon an alibi, and asserted errors in ruling upon the admissibility of evidence, and in the instructions to the jury.

In attempting to establish the corpus delicti it was sought to introduce statements of the deceased, and much evidence was offered for the purpose of showing that he was impressed with a consciousness of impending death at the time they were made. The first point of appellant is that this foundation was not sufficient to permit of the introduction of the decedent’s declarations as to his injuries and concerning the person or persons who had inflicted them upon him.

On Sunday, August 26, 1923, at about 9:30 in the evening, a police officer first saw Gordon McCutcheon, the decedent, in *262 an alleyway, in the city of Los Angeles, in a stooping position, as if arising to his feet; when the policeman approached he observed that McCutcheon had apparently been beaten about the face, and that there was blood on his face and on the front of his clothing. Eleven days later McCutcheon died from the injuries received at that time. The facts upon which the people relied for a foundation upon which to introduce his declarations were substantially as follows: McCutcheon arrived at his home at about 10:30 at night; members of his family testified that his face was badly swollen, one eye was entirely closed, and his clothing was soiled with blood. He had previously been in good health, but on this occasion he complained of his body paining him, and went to bed, where he remained until the following Wednesday; physicians were called in and visited him each day, and on Thursday, August 30th, he was up and dressed and attended court; on Sunday evening, September 2d, he returned to his bed, and was ordered to the hospital by his physician, who concluded it was a surgery case, though McCutcheon’s temperature had been normal, pulse slightly elevated, his abdomen showed tenderness and his bowels were inactive. A surgeon who examined him at the hospital described his condition as “very bad,” stating that he found evidences of strangulated bowel, and decided to operate, but that he and his consultants did not believe the man could live. On Thursday, September 6th, an operation was performed, which revealed a ruptured intestine, general peritonitis an inflamed condition of the intestines and surrounding structures and pronounced inflation. Immediately following the operation McCutcheon died. The surgeon who performed the autopsy found a gangrenous condition at the junction of the large and small bowels, and a rupture of the left side of the diaphragm through which a large portion of the great omentum was protruding, and which had not been disclosed by the operation because it was above and not within the region then explored. It was testified that these conditions would result only from the force of great pressure, or a blow, from without.

When McCutcheon first arrived home on the night of August 26th he told his wife that he felt very badly, and then and on subsequent occasions he said: “I don't think I will be here with you long”; “I believe I am done for.” *263 He told his brother on the 27th that he did not think he would live; about three days before his death he said to his daughter: “Mary, don’t go to work; I won’t ever pull through with this”; for her to be a good girl, and to pray for him, that he was “going to die.” She testified that on two occasions thereafter her father told her that he was not going to live, though she admitted that on one occasion he asked her to pray for him to get well.

It is contended on behalf of the appellant that the interval between the time of the injury and the death of McCutcheon, his apparent improvement after the third day, his attendance at court and request that his daughter pray that he might get well, all support the conclusion that at the time of any declarations he may have made he was not in a dying" condition, and entertained such a degree of hope for recovery that he could not have believed that he was not going to recover. Statements- made by a mortally wounded person, who repeatedly says that he does not expect to recover, followed by death from the identical injuries which he had in mind, after being committed to a hospital by a physician who swears that he believed the patient would die, furnish sufficient ground for the conclusion that such statements emanated from a mind impressed with -the solemnity of the occasion as though under the binding force of a legal oath. This is essentially so when such facts are supported by the conditions revealed by the operation and the autopsy. According to the authorities it is the condition of the mind that governs, rather than the construction to be placed upon peculiar circumstances such as the degree of possibility that the person might, with the symptoms described, have recovered. That McCuteheon was beaten and ruptured internally, and that experienced physicians and surgeons recognized his condition as being fatal, that he repeatedly stated that he believed he must die, and that he did die from such rupture, though some days later, are facts which present as strong a ease for the application of the rule admitting the statements in question as dying declarations as we have been able to find since People v. Ybarra, 17 Cal. 166, and People v. Lee, 17 Cal. 76, which are somewhat analogous to the case at bar, and are in harmony with the more recent case of People v. Cord, 157 Cal. 562 [108 Pac. 511]. In the latter case it was said:

*264 “We have no decision in this state declaring the meaning of the phrase ‘a dying person,’ in section 1870 of the Code of Civil Procedure. It does not mean that in order to make such declaration admissible the person making it must be at the time in the act of expiring or in the final death struggle. It is seldom that a human being in that stage of dissolution is capable of making any statement whatsoever in the nature of a connected or reliable narrative or account of a past transaction. To admit such declarations only when made by a person in that condition would practically exclude them altogether, or render them useless for any purpose. We think the intention of the codifiers was to express, as clearly and comprehensively as was compatible with the necessary brevity, the rule on the subject of the admissibility of dying declarations as it had previously existed. By this rule it was not necessary that the person should be at the time in the throes of death, or that he should die immediately, or within any specified time thereafter, in order to give the declaration probative force. ... It was considered that the belief that a fatal wound had been received and that death was about to ensue therefrom would deter such person from uttering a willful untruth about its cause, if not as effectively as would the sanction of an oath reinforced by the earthly penalty for its violation, at least sufficiently to justify its admission as evidence of the facts recounted.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Azbill v. State
440 P.2d 1014 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1968)
People v. Meyers
46 P.2d 282 (California Court of Appeal, 1935)
People v. Murieta
37 P.2d 158 (California Court of Appeal, 1934)
People v. Robinson
290 P. 470 (California Court of Appeal, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P. 868, 68 Cal. App. 259, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ybarra-calctapp-1924.