Court Opinion

ID: 3279643
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:53:14.143506+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:36:49.342425
License: Public Domain

I concur in the judgment. The contention of appellant that the venue of the crime was not proved to be within the county of Orange, seems to be entirely without merit. Not only was the body of the deceased found at a place well within the county limits, but the condition of the body, together with the surrounding circumstances, were strongly convincing of the fact that the murder had taken place on the same premises and within a few feet from the spot where the body was found. (People v. Watts,198 Cal. 776, 789 [247 P. 884].)
Almost equally without merit is the contention that the evidence is not sufficient to justify the verdict or to prove that appellant participated in the commission of the crime. The disappearance of Patterson and the probable date of his death was March 15, 1926. Four days before that time, in the city of Los Angeles, appellant opened a bank account by using a forged check of Patterson, drawn to an assumed name used by appellant in that transaction. Next we find that on March 13th appellant and Gaines (who was separately tried and convicted of this murder) went to San Diego in an automobile hired by appellant, and, according to some testimony, a third man was with them. Mrs. Rockett, in whose house Patterson was a roomer, testified that on that day Patterson, carrying his suitcase, went away with two men. All are agreed that Patterson and *Page 167 
Gaines and Goodwin were seen together in San Diego. It was at some time during Patterson's attempted return to Los Angeles that he was murdered. Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to prove that Patterson was with appellant and Gaines when they left San Diego on their own drive back to Los Angeles, or that appellant had any share in the planning or action of the murder. No witness at this trial testified to the presence of Patterson with appellant and Gaines on their return trip. Gaines was brought down from the penitentiary and offered by the state as a witness, but he refused to testify. It is an established fact, that, a few days after the murder, appellant sold valuable securities which had belonged to Patterson; that such sale was accomplished by forging Patterson's signature; and that the proceeds were divided between Gaines and appellant. The foregoing statements are by no means a complete history of the case, but they indicate some of the circumstances of the transactions described at the trial.
The suggestion made by counsel for appellant that the supreme court, when it reversed the judgment after the first trial (People v. Goodwin, 202 Cal. 527 [261 P. 1009], held that the evidence at that trial was insufficient to sustain the verdict, and the further suggestion that the evidence produced at the second trial was weaker than at the first trial, and that, therefore, the case is really settled in appellant's favor by the supreme court decision, is all based upon a misconception of the intention and effect of the former decision on appeal. The supreme court, in its opinion, specifically withheld expression of the view which has been imputed to it that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict. Aside from a holding that the court had committed an error in one of its instructions to the jury (an error not repeated in the present record), the principal reason for reversal of the first judgment was that the superior court should have granted appellant's motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence not available or known to appellant at the time of the first trial. Appellant had produced in support of that motion affidavits showing that these newly discovered witnesses would have testified in support of defendant's story; particularly in reference to occurrences at San Diego on the night when appellant claims to have remained at San Diego, *Page 168 
while waiting for Gaines to return from a pretended trip to Tia Juana. The supreme court, in its decision, indicated that if the testimony of those witnesses had been given and had been such testimony as was shown by the affidavits, this might have produced an important effect in favor of appellant and might have led to his acquittal. In view of that decision, and especially because counsel for appellant have emphasized it, I have looked into the transcript in order to read the actual testimony of those witnesses when produced at the second trial, but, so far as I can discover, none of those names is in the record now before us.
Houser, J., concurred in the judgment.