27 Cal. 404 | Cal. | 1865
The defendant was indicted and convicted of grand larceny. It was admitted by the District Attorney and was proven that the defendant was an Indian.
The most important question in- the case arises upon the
But if this view is incorrect, there are other reasons militating against the defendant’s proposition.
The first section provides that “ Justices of the Peace shall have jurisdiction in all cases of complaints by, for or against Indians, in their respective townships in this State,” and the sixteenth section provides that “an Indian convicted of stealing horses, mules, cattle or any valuable thing, shall be subject to receive any number of lashes not exceeding twenty-five, or shall be subject to a fine not exceeding two hundred dollars, at the discretion of the Court or jury,” and section seventeen gives the Justice the discretion to appoint a white man or an Indian to do the whipping in his presence.
The Attorney-General asks if the punishment prescribed is not “ cruel and unusual,” and therefore unconstitutional? We think it is liable to that objection, notwithstanding it is directed by the Act that the Justice “shall not permit unnecessary cruelty in the execution of the sentence.”
Besides this, the Act of 1856, (Wood’s Digest, 337,) defines both grand and petit larceny and prescribes the punishment to be inflicted upon conviction; and as the Act by its terms is applicable to all cases of larceny, it repeals by necessary implication previous Acts providing a different mode of punishment. The Act of April 20, 1863, concerning Courts of justice of this State organized under the amended Constitution,
The defendant also assigns as error the refusal of the Court to instruct the jury “that proof of possession of property recently stolen is not of itself sufficient evidence upon which to convict the prisoner of larceny.” This instruction is marked “given,” and the record shows that the Court instructed the jury that “if the horse was stolen and immediately after being stolen, was found in the possession of the prisoner, and the prisoner failed to account for such possession, or to show that such, possession was honestly obtained, it is a circumstance tending to show his guilt.” If the instruction upon that point had there closed, the prisoner would have had no cause of complaint, but the Court immediately added, “ in fact, in such a case, the burden of proof is on the prisoner to show the possession to be lawful.” The burden of proof, in respect to any point in the case, is cast upon the prisoner only in consequence of & prima facie case having been made against him. The people must make out their case by evidence that will amount to proof of the facts alleged in the indictment, and the defendant is not required to produce evidence to rebut such evidence on the part of the prosecution, as merely tends to prove the fact in question; but when evidence has been introduced, either direct or presumptive, sufficient to prove the fact in issue, then the defendant is called upon to rebut the prima facie case made against him.
The learned Judge of the Court below was not without authority to sustain that portion of his charge, for it is said in 2 Wharton’s Am. Grim. Law, Sec. 1,777, that “ the possession of property recently stolen is prima facie evidence of guilt in
It is to be regretted that this inaccuracy is found in the instructions, which, in other respects, are expressed in terms of commendable clearness and precision:
Section four hundred and seventeen of the Criminal Practice Act provides that the jury may render a general or special verdict, except on an indictment for libel, in which case it shall be' general. It would have been improper for the Court to have directed them to render a special verdict, as asked for the defendant; but the Court, upon the request of either party, should direct them that they have.the discretion
The other errors assigned do not require any consideration. Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial,