People v. Vallier
Before: Schmidt
SCHMIDT, J.,
pro tem.
Appellant was convicted in the lower court of murder in the second degree, and from the judgment and order denying his motion for a new trial has appealed to this court.
On the evening of February 15, 1930, appellant was engaged in a pool game in a room on Central Avenue in the city of Los Angeles with one Jess McDonald, with $3
[734]
wagered on the result of the game. It seems that the decedent, Elijah Wade, was the backer of McDonald and toward the close of' the game injected himself into the game by various remarks addressed to appellant. Upon appellant’s remonstrance the decedent Wade used abusive and boisterous language to appellant, resulting in a belligerent attitude between Wade and appellant, each toward the other, the former having picked up a pool ball, apparently with the intent of throwing same at appellant, and appellant taking his cue by the smaller end in an attitude of striking Wade. Before further trouble, however, others in the room stepped between the belligerents, among them one Flournoy, the pool-hall manager, who succeeded in having Wade leave the hall. As Wade was leaving he uttered some threats at appellant and then, accompanied by a cousin by the name of Miller, went north on Central Avenue. Up to this point there is no substantial conflict in the evidence. Shortly afterward appellant left the pool-hall and some seventy-five feet northerly therefrom overtook Wade and Miller. The evidence is in conflict as to the length of time that appellant remained in the pool-hall before leaving to go north on Central Avenue; the evidence is conflicting as to whether appellant overtook Wade and Miller, or whether, as appellant was hurrying northerly on Central Avenue, Wade and Miller stepped from between two automobiles in the street and accosted appellant. The evidence also is in conflict as to whether anything was said or done toward appellant by either Wade or Miller immediately prior to appellant’s striking Wade with his pocket-knife, or whether appellant hurriedly overtook Wade and Miller and without warning -struck Wade with the open blade of his pocketknife. The evidence is undisputed that appellant did strike decedent with his pocket-knife about one and one-half inches above the clavicle on the inner third of the right side of the chest, the blade penetrating inwardly and downwardly, cutting between the lungs and the pleura and causing a deep penetrating wound into the lung; that the blade of the pocketknife used broke off and remained in the body of Wade until later removed by a physician; that as a result of the injury traumatic pneumonia set in, from which Wade died some days afterward.
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