People v. Yeager

229 P. 40, 194 Cal. 452, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 251
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 2647.
StatusPublished
Cited by184 cases

This text of 229 P. 40 (People v. Yeager) 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. Yeager, 229 P. 40, 194 Cal. 452, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 251 (Cal. 1924).

Opinion

LAWLOR, J.

On the afternoon of November 10, 1923, near the town of Berenda, in Madera County, on the state highway, while Clarence Pickett, a -traffic officer, was engaged in the performance of his duties, two shots from a .45 automatic revolver were fired into his body without provocation or justification and from the effects of one of *458 which he shortly expired. The defendants herein, Walter Yeager and H. B. Terry, were .present when the shooting occurred and they were jointly charged by the information of the district attorney of Madera County with having killed and murdered the traffic officer. When arraigned .the defendants separately pleaded not guilty and the court ruled that they be jointly tried upon the said charge after it had denied a motion for -severance on -behalf of Walter Yeager. The jury found the defendants guilty of murder in the first degree, the verdicts carrying the death penalty for Walter Yeager and life imprisonment for H. B. Terry.

Upon being arraigned for judgment, separate motions for a new trial were interposed and denied. Judgments decreeing the said penalties were pronounced -and the defend- . ant Walter Yeager has appealed .to this court from the judgment rendered against him and from the order denying his motion for a new trial. H. B. Terry did not appeal.

According to the evidence the movements of the defendants were traced from about 8 o’clock on the morning of that day until the officer met his death. They traveled along the San Joaquin Valley in a Dodge coupe, which Terry was driving. About 4 P. M. the officer caught sight of the machine going at a rapid rate of speed and observed that it narrowly escaped collision with another car. He followed the coupe on his Henderson motorcycle for some distance, and, catching up with it, directed Terry to stop the car, which was. accordingly done. In the machine with the defendants at the time were two youths from Chicago, Louis Feldman and Sam Lambert, who, upon the invitation of appellant, accepted a ride while the car was standing at an oil station near the town of Chowchilla. When the coupe came to a stop Terry was sitting on the extreme left, appellant was next to him, and then Feldman, with Lambert on his lap. The officer questioned Terry principally and searched the car, revealing several weapons, including a .32 W. C. F. revolver, which he took from the seat and placed in the .pocket of his coat, two bottles of wine and some material which Terry represented was used on a hunting trip.

In the course of the conversation the officer declared Terry was in no condition to drive a machine and that he would take them into custody, having refused to accede *459 to Terry’s request to issue a citation. He dismissed the two youths and they started in the direction of Madera. They had only gone about twenty feet when they heard three shots, and upon returning to the officer found he was wounded. Terry removed two revolvers from the officer’s coat; he and appellant hurriedly entered the machine, taking the same positions as before, and drove rapidly away. The stricken officer was removed to a sanitarium in Madera, where he died. A posse started in pursuit of the fleeing defendants and late that night they were captured on the Dixieland road, a distance of eleven or twelve miles from Merced. Appellant, preceding his actual capture, received a wound in the back, evidently from a rifle ball.

It appears that after Feldman and Lambert boarded the ear, upon appellant’s request Lambert handed him the .32 revolver, which was in the flap or pocket of the coupe, and that the automatic .45, with which the shooting was done, had been stolen by Terry that morning in Madera. While the officer was engaged in searching the machine Terry took the .45 automatic from the seat in the car and put it in his pocket. He later passed it to appellant. Other facts and circumstances leading up to, attending, and following the killing will appear somewhat in detail in the review of the evidence by way of furnishing a background for a discussion of the points urged for reversal.

1. It is contended “that the verdict and judgment finding Walter Yeager guilty of murder in the first degree is a plain and clear miscarriage of justice.”

We will consider under this head three questions: (a) The sufficiency of the evidence to establish the guilt of appellant; (b) If he did the killing, was Terry an accomplice therein, and, if so, was his testimony sufficiently corroborated? And (c) was appellant so much under the influence of liquor that a case of murder in the first degree would not lie against him, even if it were proved he fired the shots?

(a) It is earnestly argued on behalf of appellant that there was no evidence to sustain the claim that he fired the Colt’s automatic .45, one of the shots from which, according to the autopsy, caused the death of the officer, but that the evidence pointed to Terry alone as the slayer. Terry admitted that the automatic .45 was stolen by him from a second-hand store in Madera, but he has insisted throughout *460 that he did not fire the shots or pass the revolver to appellant in order that he might use it on the officer.

It is proper to suggest at this point that in view of the evidence as to what occurred prior and subsequent to the murder, including the removal of the weapons' from the person of the officer by Terry and the precipitate flight of the pair, it may not be strictly necessary to determine whether appellant or Terry fired the shots. Whether it was done by the one or iby the other would make no legal difference, for from the evidence the jury might well have concluded that both were guilty participants in the murder (secs. 30 and 31, Pen. Code; 7 Cal. Jur., sec. 39, p. 888, and People v. Bringhurst, 192 Cal. 748 [221 Pac. 897]), and that they fled to avoid the consequences. We will, however, discuss the evidence with reference to that point.

On November 16, 1923, in the office of the sheriff, Terry made an extrajudicial statement to the district attorney of Madera County. This statement was taken down in shorthand, transcribed, and received in evidence on the trial. In addition, Terry appeared as a witness in his own behalf. Appellant also made an extrajudicial statement at the same time, but it was not offered in evidence at the trial and he did not elect to testify. However, such statement was incorporated in an affidavit of A. P. Harris, Esq., attorney for appellant, in support of the motion for a new trial. Appellant disclaimed any knowledge of the murder, as is shown by the following quotation from the statement: “Q. You would not say then you did not kill him? A. If I knew I would say, but I don’t know. Mr. Bailey: Q. Terry, did you shoot that officer? Mr. Terry: No. Mr. Bailey: Terry said he did not shoot that officer. Walter Yeager: Well, I know absolutely nothing about it; you cannot prove it by me.”

i In addition to Terry, Louis Feldman, Sam Lambert, Mrs. Anona Jett, Joseph R. Weldy, Bert Herrington, and Pete Pistoresi gave testimony bearing on the res gestae.

Louis Feldman testified that while he and Sam Lambert were “flagging” passing automobiles to get a ride, and the defendants had halted at an oil station, appellant, “the elderly man,” asked him if they wanted a lift.

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Bluebook (online)
229 P. 40, 194 Cal. 452, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-yeager-cal-1924.