210 P. 529 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1922
Plaintiff was given judgment against both defendants for the possession of a diamond ring or the value thereof in case delivery could not be made.
[1] It is contended "that there is no basis for the judgment against defendant Perky. The evidence shows without dispute that he was a salesman in the store of defendant Zemansky." The complaint alleges that the defendants came into possession of the ring and retained possession thereof. The answer alleges "that on or about the tenth day of March, 1920, said plaintiff left with said defendants a diamond ring, which was the only diamond ring claimed, or *326 in the possession of plaintiff, of which defendants or either of them ever had possession, to be sold by defendants . . . and said diamond ring was, on or about the nineteenth day of March, 1920, by said defendant, Abe Zemansky, given and returned to the possession of said plaintiff." It is thus plain that the only issue to be tried was whether the ring had been returned. The evidence bearing on this issue was sharply conflicting. There was ample evidence, if believed, to support the implied finding of the jury that the ring had not been returned. Since the answer admits that both defendants received the ring, the judgment against Perky cannot be disturbed for want of evidence to support it.
[2] The plaintiff is a Hindu. His wife is a white woman. Both testified at the trial. Both testified that they were husband and wife. On cross-examination both testified that they were married in Helena, Montana. The court sustained objections to questions as to the time of the marriage and refused to permit the defendants to impeach Mrs. Khan by showing that in a trial between other parties she had testified that she and the plaintiff were married in California. The time or place of marriage was wholly immaterial to any issue in the case. It is settled that a witness cannot be impeached on immaterial matters. Further, Mrs. Khan was not asked whether she had made the alleged inconsistent statement and, hence, there was no foundation for the impeaching question. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 2052.)
[3] E. C. Turney was sworn as a witness for defendants and testified that he was in Zemansky's store March 19, 1920, and there saw Zemansky deliver a diamond ring to plaintiff. He fixed the date by a sale of oil stock he made in the store on that day to one of Zemansky's employees. On cross-examination, Turney said he thought that he had sold some oil stock to W. W. McFall on the same day. In rebuttal, counsel for plaintiff called McFall as a witness, who testified that he made but one purchase of oil stock from Turney and produced the check given in payment therefor, dated May 10, 1920. He further stated that he thought the check was dated the day of the purchase, but could not say positively that such was the fact. Since Turney had fixed the time at which he saw the ring delivered to plaintiff by reference to a sale of oil stock made on that day and stated on cross-examination that he thought he had made a sale of stock *327
to McFall on the same day, the testimony given by McFall was admissible as tending in some degree to discredit Turney's statement that he was in Zemansky's store March 19th (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1868; Davis v. California Powder Works,
[4] The court refused to instruct the jury as follows:"The burden is upon the plaintiff to prove his case to a moral certainty; that is by that degree of proof which ordinarily produces conviction in an unprejudiced mind." The court instructed the jury "that the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to establish by a preponderance of the evidence each of the material allegations in the complaint not admitted by the answer. . . . That by a preponderance of evidence is meant that evidence which, after a consideration of all the evidence, is, in the judgment of the jury, entitled to the greatest weight; that testimony which points to a certain conclusion appears to be more credible and probable than the testimony to the contrary, that is more convincing. It does not mean necessarily a greater number of witnesses, but only such evidence that satisfies an unprejudiced mind of the truth of the allegations to be established by the party upon whom rests the burden of proof." The instructions given fully and correctly state the law as to burden of proof and it follows that the defendants were not prejudiced by the refusal to give the proposed instruction.
The court struck out the testimony of two character witnesses produced by the defendants for the purpose of impeaching the plaintiff as a witness. [5] T. N. Koenig, a police officer for twenty years and having charge of the detective bureau at the time of the trial, testified that he knew plaintiff's "reputation in the community in which he lives for truth, honesty, and integrity" and that it is bad. On cross-examination, the witness testified: "I know his business; I do not know where he lives, never did know where he lives." On motion of counsel for plaintiff his testimony was stricken out. Manifestly this was not error. Martin A. Pennish, a retired police officer, who had retired *328
eighteen months before the trial, testified that he had known the plaintiff for several years around the lower end of town; that he did not know where plaintiff lived, but knew where he was doing business in November, 1919, "before he moved out"; that witness "knew he was here during that time." Counsel for defendants then propounded the following question: "I will ask you if you know his reputation for truth, honesty, and integrity in the city of Sacramento?" On objection by counsel for plaintiff, the witness was further interrogated and testified that plaintiff "was living here off and on during that time." He was then asked: "Do you know his reputation?" Counsel for plaintiff objected: "We renew the objection on the ground as irrelevant, immaterial and incompetent, he does not know where —" The witness then further testified that plaintiff's residence must have been in Sacramento "or he would not have been here." The court overruled the objection and the witness answered that plaintiff's reputation is bad. On cross-examination the witness testified that he did not know where plaintiff resided since November, 1919; that witness "never knew where he resided." The court thereupon struck out the testimony of the witness. [6] The witness was not asked if he knew the general reputation of the plaintiff for truth, honesty, and integrity, the word "general" being omitted from all questions upon the subject. The objection that the testimony thus sought to be elicited was incompetent should have been sustained and it was not error for the court to strike it out. (People v. Markham,
The judgment is affirmed.
Anderson, J., pro tem., and Burnett, J., concurred. *330