People v. Zankich

189 Cal. App. 2d 54, 11 Cal. Rptr. 115, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2147
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 9, 1961
DocketCrim. 7326
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 189 Cal. App. 2d 54 (People v. Zankich) 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. Zankich, 189 Cal. App. 2d 54, 11 Cal. Rptr. 115, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2147 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

ASHBURN, J.

Appeal from conviction of second degree murder. Appellant does not claim insufficiency of the evidence but relies upon errors in rulings upon evidence and in giving or refusing instructions.

About 11 p. m., on January 24, 1960, deceased, Dr. Quattelbaum, with three companions (Mrs. Beverly Burton, Mr. Burton and Virginia Patridge), was at the Baby Doll Bar in San Pedro, drinking some beer and playing a bowling machine. An employee of the bar, Jane Morrison, noticed defendant and Quattelbaum facing each other, about two feet apart, with the *57 doctor’s back to the wall; he was then standing in a narrow space between the bowling machine and a juke box. She called out, “There will be no damned fighting in here,” turned her back for a moment and then looked again at the doctor who was sinking to the floor; Zankich had walked away and was standing in front of the juke box.

Mrs. Burton’s attention was attracted by some sound she was unable to identify and, looking in decedent’s direction, she saw him standing about 5 feet from her, back to the wall, with a very surprised, dazed look on his face. Then he slowly sank to the floor without putting out a hand to protect himself and ended in a sitting position, then slowly he went over onto his left side without striking his head. Eyes and mouth were wide open.

Mr. Burton gave substantially the same story and added that he heard no angry words spoken, the juke box was playing. He also said the doctor was unconscious as he sank to the floor.

Virginia Patridge heard decedent say in a surprised voice something like “What’s this?” just before slumping to the floor. Defendant was then closer to decedent than any other person and was facing him, 2 to 3 feet away.

Something attracted the attention of Jesse Martinez to the vicinity of the juke box where the doctor was. He heard a thud which sounded like a person getting hit, a loud smack such as he had heard in street fights when a person got hit in the face. He illustrated it by striking his right fist into the open palm of the other hand. Defendant, as the doctor slumped to the floor, was standing right in front of him 3 or 4 feet away and was “kind of leaned over looking at the doctor” with his arms at his sides and head bent over, illustrating. “The Court: Bending forward a little with his arms apparently down to his sides and his head bowed a little.” “Q. But his arms were down as you illustrated to us? A. Maybe a little bit higher. They was not down at his sides, but they was not up either. Q. They were below his waist, weren’t they? A. Yes. Q. And were his fists clenched or were his hands open ? A. I really didn’t notice. ’ ’ Martinez grabbed him by the waist, said “What the hell is wrong?” and spun him around facing in the opposite direction. Defendant then left, saying he would see Martinez in the morning.

Defendant did not testify. His counsel relied principally upon the testimony of one Gaddis, a mail carrier, who said he saw Martinez and Zankich facing toward the juke box and *58 that the doctor had both hands to his head, illustrating. The court interpreted his demonstration as follows: “In the first instance, his hands were somewhat away from his forehead, and in the last instance the tips of his fingers were apparently touching his forehead, but the heels of his hands were somewhat away, leading out from the face. Is that correct, Mr. Gaddis? The Witness: That is correct.” Gaddis on cross-examination also told about a statement he made to Police Lieutenant Case: “Q. Did you tell him in effect, ‘I was in the Baby Doll and I saw the fellow that got hurt standing up against the wall. Zankich and Jesse were standing in front of him and it appeared that he got hit. The fellow then slumped to the floor’? A. Well, I said something like that, but I don’t believe I said those exact words. Q. Did you make any statement- The Court : Is that the substance of what you told the officer, without regard to the exact words? The Witness: That is the substance.” On redirect he testified he did not see the doctor get hit. Also: “Q. Well, when you talked to Lieutenant Case, were you just assuming that the doctor had been hit? A. Well, I probably was, yes, sir. Q. There was some talk about it around the bar, wasn’t there, after it happened? A. Yes, there was quite a bit of talk. ’ ’

Dr. Quattelbaum apparently died on the way to the hospital. The autopsy revealed that decedent had an abnormally thin skull which had been fractured, the fracture being about three inches long, involving the left temporal bone and extending into the floor of the frontal fossa. This fracture had been induced by trauma but there was no displacement. The immediate cause of death, according to the autopsy surgeon, Dr. Don H. Mills, was acute subarachnoid hemorrhage, due to subarachnoid arterial rupture, stress induced. This involved an area at the base of the brain described as the “Circle of Willis,” where blood vessels spread out in a fan-shaped distribution on the under-surfaces of the brain. The fracture itself did not cause the hemorrhage. The hemorrhage resulted because of a rupture of some defect within one of the blood vessels. This was due to internal pressure which could be caused by emotional tension, stress, shock, etc. A rupture of the blood vessel, such as occurred in this ease, can happen during normal activity, even during sleep. A blood-alcohol reading was taken from Quattelbaum’s blood and Avas found to be .16 per cent, indicating that Quattelbaum Avas probably under the influence of alcohol at the time of his *59 death. The presence of alcohol in the blood stream causes fluctuations in blood pressure.

Dr. Cyril B. Courville, a neurologist and neuropathologist, testified that in his opinion the blow which caused the fracture was apparently the cause of the stress, which in turn caused the vessel’s rupture.

The defense relied upon testimony of Dr. Frank Polmeteer, specialist in neurology and neurological surgery, who expressed the opinion that trauma had nothing to do with the man’s death. But he also said that the cause probably was a rupture in the posterior fossa which a rise in blood pressure could cause; that the difficulty started when the doctor held his head, thus indicating a headache; that a blow, like emotional stress and strain, would increase the blood pressure. “Q. Now, supposing somebody took a swing at you and missed but came real close out of a clear blue sky (demonstrating). . . . Would that raise a person’s blood pressure? A. Yes. Q. Could that raise the blood pressure sufficient to burst a weak point in the blood carrying system? A. I think it could. Q. Particularly as it is unexpected and uncalled for? A. I think so. ... I think it was like you described earlier, the apprehension and the stress was the thing that caused the rupture of the vessel. . . . Q. Well, suppose that the traumatic episode was, as you say, ‘incidental’A. Is what? Q. Incidental—I’m quoting you now—but the fact that he was attacked in that manner, would that have raised the blood pressure, in your opinion, to a sufficient point to burst this anomalous blood vessel? A. I think it could. Q. And do you think with a reasonable medical certainty that is the cause of the bursting of the blood vessel ? A. It might very well have been.”

As previously pointed out appellant makes no claim of insufficiency of evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
189 Cal. App. 2d 54, 11 Cal. Rptr. 115, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-zankich-calctapp-1961.