194 P. 768 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
Defendant appeals from a judgment of imprisonment pronounced upon his conviction of the crime of statutory rape.
[1] The victim of the crime was a thirteen year old girl, who testified to the act of intercourse. For the purpose of corroborating her testimony, an aunt, Mary Foster, was called as a witness on behalf of the state. This witness, during her examination, repeatedly asked that she be accorded an interpreter, stating that she did not understand the questions asked her in the English language, which request was by the court denied until the latter part of the cross-examination, when it called an interpreter. Under section 1884 of the Code of Civil Procedure it is made the duty of the court to appoint an interpreter in those cases only where the witness does not understand or speak the English language. In each case the question is one for the judicial determination of the trial court; its ruling thereon will not be disturbed unless the record clearly shows an abuse of discretion. (People v. Young,
[2] It appearing that the prosecutrix had, immediately following the commission of the alleged offense, made complaint to her aunt, the latter on direct examination by the district attorney was interrogated as to whether the prosecutrix, at the time when she made such complaint, also told her the name of the party who had committed the offense. The questions and answers to which defendant's objection was overruled were as follows: "Q. Did she tell you who it was that did this? A. Told what? Q. This act up there in the room that caused this torn — A. Yes. I told you she told me. Q. Whom did she tell you did it? Who was the man she told you did it? A. The little girl told me boy taken her — broken the clothes. Q. Did she mention the boy's name? A. Alex Avila. She told me one boy in uniform, the one boy in uniform call Alex. Q. I don't want you to tell us anything that the little girl did not tell you, but I want you to tell the jury if the little girl told you what this man did to her. A. There are some words that I cannot understand." Like evidence, over defendant's objection, was adduced from the officer who arrested defendant. In so ruling the court committed prejudicial error. In such cases, "the true rule is to admit evidence of the fact of complaint in all cases, and in no case to admit anything more. The evidence, when restricted to this extent, is not hearsay, but in the strictest sense original evidence. When, however, these limits are exceeded, it becomes hearsay in a very objectionable form. There is every reason, therefore, why it should be admitted to the extent indicated, and none why it should be admitted further." (People
v. Mayes,
The judgment is reversed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.