106 P. 110 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1909
The defendant and appellant was accused by the district attorney of Los Angeles county, by information, of the crime of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder, and his conviction followed. This appeal is from the judgment imposed by reason thereof, and from an order denying a new trial.
The defense chiefly relied upon was insanity. The principal assignments of error relate to the action of the court in sustaining objections to testimony offered by defendant. One witness in behalf of the defense testified that she was a nurse at the hospital of which defendant was a patient; that "he seemed to be laboring under a nervous strain, and it looked as though he had been drinking." The witness was then asked by defendant's counsel if he made any statement regarding the cause of his condition; "what statement he made in relation to his domestic affairs"; "what statement, if any, was made by the defendant at that time regarding any lawsuit pending"; and, again, "what statement, if any, regarding his property." Another witness was asked questions of similar import; while still another who, having seen and conversed with defendant at the hospital, testified: "He was very nervous and absent-minded. Instead of answering *676 my questions, he would dismiss them from his mind as if he could not comprehend what I had said." Thereupon counsel for defendant asked, "What was the question you asked him?" and, in addition, propounded questions similar to those asked other witnesses, as before stated. All of these witnesses united in an opinion that defendant acted in an irrational manner. The court sustained an objection to the questions relating to what was said by the defendant to these various witnesses.
The proposition advanced by appellant, to the effect that when the mental condition of one at a particular time is in issue, conduct, acts and declarations after, as well as before, the time in question are admissible in evidence, if sufficiently near in point of time, and if they appear to have any tendency to show what that mental condition was, may be accepted. It follows that the questions propounded by defendant, to which objections were sustained, under certain circumstances might have been proper, if they were intended to develop facts the establishment of which would tend to prove insanity. But that a court may intelligently rule upon an objection urged to a question which does not of itself show its relevancy or materiality, it is imperative that counsel should state to the court what is expected to be proven. Without such statement, the court cannot determine whether the facts sought to be established by the question are pertinent or tend to prove any matter involved in the issues, and this court cannot, in the absence of such statements, determine whether or not the substantial rights of the defendant have been prejudiced by the ruling. (People v. Casselman,
While it may be conceded that the record discloses that the court misapprehended the real object of the questions, and excluded the evidence upon such ground as to develop a misunderstanding of the point involved, yet the occasion of such misunderstanding and misapprehension arose from the omission of defendant to indicate to the court the purpose of the questions and the objects sought to be attained thereby, if, as before stated, such object was to establish the insanity of defendant.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment and order are affirmed.
Taggart, J., and Shaw, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on December 6, 1909.