Court Opinion

ID: 5446533
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:11:43.092135+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:11.580314
License: Public Domain

Pateksow, J.
The defendant was convicted of the crime of murder of the second degree, and was sentenced to serve a term of fifty years in the state prison.
The first point made by counsel for appellant is that the court below erred in allowing Dr. Wright, one of the witnesses on behalf of the prosecution, to testify as an expert with respect to the distance at which the pistol carried- by the defendant at *651the time of the homicide would produce powder marks on the skin. It is claimed that he was not shown to be an expert. The doctor testified that he had been a physician and surgeon for about seventeen years, and had had such experience as would enable him to say at what distance powder marks would be noticeable on the flesh from the firing of a pistol of 38 caliber, Smith and Wesson; that he had seen a great many gunshot wounds, powder marks; and powder burns in connection therewith, and knew of his own knowledge the distance between the discharged weapons and the bodies fired upon. Upon this showing we cannot say that the court erred in allowing the witness to speak. If the defendant desired to test the knowledge of the witness and the correctness of his statement as to his al|lity to give an opinion, he ought to have cross-examined him before he was called upon to express such opinion. We entertain no doubt that the subject was a proper one for expert testimony, and cannot be classed with such matters as were discussed in People v. Smith, 93 Cal. 445. In People v. Lemperle, 94 Cal. 45, the witness was not shown to be an expert.
It is claimed that the evidence was immaterial because the evidence shows without conflict that at the time the deceased received the wound he wore an undershirt, a white shirt, and a oat and vest, while the statement of the witness “plainly presupposes that the powder was not interrupted between the muzzle of the pistol and the abdomen of the deceased.” In this we agree with counsel: it was certainly a waste of time to prove at what distance the pistol with which the wound was made would cause powder marks upon bare flesh, because the evidence, as stated above, shows that between the pistol and the flesh of the deceased, at the time the shot was fired, there were several thicknesses of cloth. But as stated by counsel in his brief, “it is too plain a proposition to require argument, that any powder escaping from the pistol would have lodged in the vest of the deceased, and the skin over the abdomen would have been left unmarked,” and we are unable to see how the jury could have been misled by the testimony. The jury knew that no one claimed there were powder marks upon the flesh of the deceased, and all the evidence there is upon the subject tends to show that there were no such marks upon the vest or shirts.
*652Appellant contends that the court erred in admitting in evidence the dying declaration of the deceased. It is said that no sufficient predicate had been laid for its introduction. Dr. Wright testified that he had a conversation with Wagner, the deceased, and informed him that the wound was fatal; that in speaking of the character of the wound the deceased used a variety of expressions. At one time he said, “I can’t stand this.” He said to the doctor, “Can I get well?” The doctor said, “No, Mr. Wagner, you can’t; you cannot recover.” Very shortly after that he said, “ I can’t stand this, it will kill me; I am going to die,” and a number of expressions of that import. He said to his brother, just before the statement was made, “Julius, I think I am going to die.” About a half an hour before the dying declaration was made he said to Dr. Smith, “ Doctor, I know enough of anatomy to know I have received my death blow.” The doctor said he hoped not. Wagner said, “Oh, I am badly hurt; I am shot in the bowels; I know it is all up.” His statement was taken three or four words at a time, while he was gasping for breath. We think this testimony shows that the declaration was made under a sense of impending death, and there is nothing to show a revival or subsequent hope of recovery.
It is claimed that the court committed error in admitting in evidence the vest taken from Wagner’s body after the same had lain in the grave for over five months; but Mr. Moore, the druggist, testified that he saw the vest at the graveyard when it was taken from the body, and it was then in the same condition as when he had examined it and brushed it just after the death of Wagner; The credibility of this witness, and the question whether the appearance of powder marks had been destroyed by lapse of time, and other circumstances, were matters for the jury to determine.
We do not think the court erred in allowing the witness Bradford to testify as to what the defendant said with reference to the shooting immediately after it occurred. The statement by the defendant that Wagner “did it himself,” appears to have been entirely voluntary, and is consistent with the defense set up at the trial.
The court did not err in refusing to allow the witnesses *653Merritt and Wyatt to state what Davis had told them in Coy’s saloon. An attempt was made by the defendant to impeach his own witness, Davis, by evidence produced at the first trial, but, judging from the language of the court, the people and the defendant had stipulated to use only the testimony of Davis as taken at the last trial.
The court read to the jury section 1105 of the Penal Code, and it is claimed that in doing so the court erred. People v. Bushton, 80 Cal. 160, is the basis of this contention. We do not think the contention is sound, because coupled with this instruction were others which fully and clearly insisted upon the right of the defendant to have in every step of the case all reasonable doubts as to his guilt, or as to any fact essential , to show guilt, resolved in his favor.
We do not find any error in the instruction of the court admonishing the jury as to their duties. It simply called their attention to the importance to the public of having the laws properly executed, and the importance as well to the defendant of a careful and a dispassionate consideration of the evidence and the law, so that they might reach a result which would be “just to both sides, regardless of what may be the consequences.” We see nothing in any portion of the charge which indicates hostility on the part of the court towards the defendant, i It was shown in the course of the trial that the case had been previously tried three times, the jury having disagreed in each instance. The court instructed the jury as follows:—■
“ Something has been said about the number of trials there has been in this case. You must in no sense consider that fact. You are sworn to try this case, and a true verdict render according to the evidence you have heard in the case, and you will consider no other matters in your deliberations except the evidence and the instructions of the court. There is no limit to the number of times a case may be tried. When trials do not result in a verdict a case - may be tried until a verdict is obtained.” It is said that the jury had as much right to consider the fact that the case had been tried several times without a verdict as any other fact in evidence before them. We cannot assent to this proposition. It did not concern the jury in determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant what other *654juries had thought of the evidence before them. The jury-engaged in trying a case have no more right to receive or consider the opinions of other juries than they have the opinions of any other persons, and, besides this, the disagreement of former juries may not have been due to a difference of opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, but to a difference of opinion as to the degree of the crime which he has committed.
The court did not err in refusing to give instructions set forth in' the brief. The right of the defendant as a reasonable man, under the circumstances, to act upon appearances was fairly presented to the jury. The instruction asked with respect to the suppression of evidence was entirely unwarranted by the testimony in the case. It was not claimed by any one that the bullet pierced the coat of the deceased. The fifteenth instruction refused was not warranted by the evidence, and was objectionable because it singled out and gave prominence to certain portions of the evidence.
The charge as a whole is full and fair.
■'Other points are made which in our opinion do not require special consideration.
Judgment and order affirmed.
Harrison, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.