Zamora v. United States

112 F.2d 631, 9 Alaska 680, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4383
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 1940
DocketNo. 9344
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 112 F.2d 631 (Zamora v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zamora v. United States, 112 F.2d 631, 9 Alaska 680, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4383 (9th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

GARRECHT, Circuit Judge.

In the District Court for the Territory of Alaska, First Division, appellant Miguel Zamora was indicted for having, on or before the 8th day of April 1938, wilfully, feloniously, and maliciously burned the dwelling house of John Silva. He was tried by a jury, found guilty, and sentenced by the court to a term in prison. From the judgment and sentence appellant has appealed.

Appellant Zamora had been married to Silva’s adopted daughter for more than two years prior to the time of the fire. For a time he and his wife had lived with Silva and later by themselves. About three weeks before the fire they separated, and Mrs. Zamora went to live at the home of her father. Appellant frequently came to the house, and often on these occasions quarreled with his wife, which generally caused her mother to have a heart attack. Mrs. Silva did not want him to come to the house any more.

On April 7, 1938, the day preceding the fire, 'Zamora again came to the house. He first knocked at the front door; 'no attention being paid to him, he went around to the back of the house, where Silva was fixing his boat.

Silva testified: “I told him he could not come any more, because he had made a lot of trouble when he came to the house, and he said that so long as I kept his wife there, he would never stop coming. When I told him he could not come there any more he said he was going to kill someone in the house. He said he would make my house suffer, and everyone in it. After he crossed the street, he said: ‘You are very proud because you got a house. You will never see your house some day.’ He said I was not going to have any more house somé day, and I would find out what he [683]*683was going to do to the house some day. And then the house caught on fire that same night — half past one.”

William Granier, in corroboration of Silva, testified: “I saw the defendant Zamora on the afternoon preceding the fire at Silva’s house. He was in the alley between the house where I live, and the Silva house. He was within eighteen feet of my house, and it was about four o’clock in the afternoon. He was arguing with Silva. When they got under my window I could hear what they were saying. I heard Zamora tell Silva he was mighty proud of his house. Then he said ‘Some day you won’t have no home, then you won’t be so proud’. I did not hear anything about killing, but he said he would get some one in the house. They were angry.”

The fire started about 1:30 a. m., April 8, 1938. It originated in the bathroom, the only entrance to which was through a small bedroom, which, on the night of the fire, was occupied by Mabel Jackson, Alice Bassford, Mrs. Zamora and her baby. There was a window in this bathroom, about two by three feet, the lower part of which was about four feet from the floor. The window opened inward from the top, back into the room about one and one-half feet. Mrs. Bassford opened this window a day or two before the fife, and it had remained open.

There was no stove or chimney in the bathroom. The only chimney in the house was one made of cement blocks, located in the middle of' the partition between the kitchen and the living room. It was so constructed that it would take two pipes, one from the kitchen and one from the living room. The cooking stove in the kitchen was two and one-half feet from the bathroom partition and connected with the chimney by means of a pipe. The heater in the living room was about three feet from the wall and also connected with the chimney by means of a pipe.

Alice Bassford testified that the first warning she had of the fire was the smell of - gas; that she wakened Mrs. Zamora and called her attention to this odor. ' They both got [684]*684up, went into the kitchen and looked into the stove, but there was no fire there. She returned to the bedroom and then saw flames coming from the bathroom. She woke Mr. Silva up and ran from the house.

In this connection Silva further testified: “After I went to bed, I heard someone calling me. ' It was Alice, and she said the house was on fire. ' I got up quick, and put on my shirt and pants and ran out. I put no shoes on. I ran downstairs and looked in both stoves, and there was no fire in them. I thought the fire was in the roof so I ran outside and looked, there was no fire on the roof, so I ran back and asked where the fire was, and Alice told me it was in the bathroom. Then I went to the door and looked and the whole bathroom was on fire. * * * After I saw the fire in the bathroom, I ran back to the sink, and took a water bucket and filed it and threw it on the fire, and it seemed to splash all over like gasoline. And as soon as I threw the water, I smelled gasoline. The smoke was black, and as soon as I filled the bucket again, and threw it again, and the whole fire came outside in the bedroom and burned all my' hair off, and my face. Then I threw the bucket and ran outside for help. My wife was upstairs. After I called for help, I ran upstairs, and found her half way down. She only got half way down. She was choking. I packed her down on my shoulder and into the street. Alice had gone to call the fire department, Helen and Mabel were already out. I was the last one out. I just stood and looked at the fire. My house burned down. It did not take very long until it was all gone. All I had on was my pants and shirt; my wife and Helen had the clothes on they'were sleeping in. I did not have any insurance on the house. And I did not owe any money on the house. I paid the mortgage off. After I got out, I told White, one of the firemen, what Zamora had said to me. Afterwards I told the policeman, Clifford Fenn. Afterwards Fenn and White and I went to Zamora’s room. The door was locked. He knocked — no answer — then he tried the lock again— [685]*685then he knocked again, hit the door hard and no answer. Then he broke the lock, and there was Miguel, just like he was sleeping. He had a blanket over his face. I saw him at the fire. He was there when the building next door started to burn, about half an hour before we went to his room.”

Mrs. Zamora testified on behalf of appellant. Among other things, she said that after being aroused by Mrs. Bass-ford she got up and looked in the stove in the kitchen and also in the heater in the living room, that there was no fire in either; that on returning to the bedroom she saw that the fire was in the bathroom. She further testified that the paper behind the stove in the kitchen and back of the heater in the living room was supposed to be fireproof.

Mabel Jackson, a witness for the government, testified that on the night of the fire she was sleeping in the downstairs bedroom, next to the bathroom; that Alice Bassford and Mrs. Zamora were occupying the same room. She was awakened by Alice, who asked her if she smelled gas. She got up and went into the hall; she saw Zamora running along a narrow passageway between the Silva house and the adjoining cabinet shop. On the same morning of the fire she told John Silva that she had seen appellant between the houses.

Clifford Fenn, the night patrolman of the city, testified that the beer parlors of the city close at 1 a. m.; that within a minute of that hour, on the morning of the fire, he looked in at a place known as Charley Mann’s Beer Parlor. Those in charge were just closing. Immediately afterward, and within a few feet of the place, he saw appellant; apparently, he was coming from one of the beer parlors. He was going in the direction of Silva’s house, which was also in the direction of the place where he roomed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 F.2d 631, 9 Alaska 680, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zamora-v-united-states-ca9-1940.