Ex parte Ah Cha

40 Cal. 426 | Cal. | 1870

Wallace, J.,

delivered tbe following opinion: [at- Chambers.]

These Chinamen bave been brought before me upon a writ of habeas corpus, to wbicb writ tbe Warden of tbe State Prison makes return tbat be detains them in custody by virtue of a judgment of tbe County Court of San Ber-nardino County, a copy of wbicb is annexed to tbe return, and by wbicb it appears tbat tbe prisoners, having been indicted of tbe crime of “an assault to commit murder,” were found guilty by tbe jury of “an assault to commit great bodily injury” only. Upon tbe verdict they were adjudged by tbe Court to be “punished by a fine of $500 each, and in default of payment of said fine, be punished *427by imprisonment in the State Prison of the State of California for the tegm of two years each.”'

The statute ufider which these persons were convicted is Section 50 of the Act concerning crimes and punishments. It will be seen that the verdict here, while it acquits the accused of the alleged attempt to commit murder, and finds them guilty of “an assault to commit great bodily injury,” does not find that this assault was made with a deadly weapon, instrument, or other deadly thing. It therefore imported nothing more on its face than that the defendants were guilty of a simple assault under Section 49, which is a misdemeanor merely, upon conviction of which a fine not exceeding $500, or imprisonment in the County Jail not exceeding three months, may be imposed. That the verdict, as rendered against these Chinamen, does not import a conviction of a felony, was decided by the Supreme Court in the People v. Vanard, (6 Cal. 562), where the verdict (found upon an indictment similar to this one) was “ guilty of an assault with the intent to do bodily injury,” and the Court says that it is necessary, in order to support a conviction of an assault with a deadly weapon, “that the weapon or instrument with which the assault was committed should be alleged and found, as the fact that the assault was made with a deadly weapon, etc., is of the substance and distinguishes it from an ordinary assault. It was accordingly determined in that case that the prisoner had been found guilty of a misdemeanor only, and that she could not be punished for a felony. In the much more recent case of the People v. English, (30 Cal. 214), the question of the sufficiency of a verdict found under this statute was again presented to the Court. The indictment in that case, as in this and the Yanard case, was for an assault with intent to commit murder. The verdict, as found, was “guilty of assault with a deadly weapon, with intent to inflict bodily injury,” etc.

The Court held this verdict sufficient, because it found that the assault was made with a deadly weapon, within the decision in the Yanard case, which was cited as laying *428down the correct rule as to what such a verdict should contain.

The judgment here was not merely erroneous; it was absolutely void. It shows upon its face that these persons had been by the verdict acquitted of the charge of a felonious assault, and convicted of a misdemeanor only; nevertheless it proceeds to adjudge that they be punished by imprisonment in the State Prison — a punishment not permitted by law upon conviction of a mere misdemeanor.

The prisoners must be discharged from custody by the Warden, and it is so ordered.