193 P. 511 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
Defendant was convicted of the crime of kidnaping and as punishment was sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison. He appeals from the judgment, upon the grounds, first, that the information does not charge the offense of kidnaping, as defined by section
The information charges that "The said defendant, on or about the 27th day of October, A.D. 1919, at the County and State aforesaid, did willfully, unlawfully, feloniously and forcibly without lawful warrant or authority and against the free will and without the consent of one Rosie Sunzeri steal, take, kidnap and carry said Rosie Sunzeri from a place in said County near the McKinley School, on McLaughlin Ave. in the County of Santa Clara, State of California, into another part of said County of Santa Clara, State of California, to wit: the home and dwelling of Tony Cracolice on White Road, all of which is contrary to the form, force and effect of the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the people of the State of California."
[1] The allegation of the offense follows the words of the code section defining it. The time, place, and circumstances are stated with that certainty which informed the accused of the specific offense with which he was charged under the statute, and gave him the necessary information to enable him to answer the charge. That was all that was required. (People
v. Ward,
[2] Appellant's further objection to the information is that it nowhere appears therein that "Rosie Sunseri," the subject of the alleged kidnaping, is a person or a human being. The omission to so state is merely an error of pleading. It has been held by this court, following the mandatory direction of the constitution (sec. 4 1/2 of art. VI), that the judgment in such cases should not be reversed, or a new trial granted, "unless that error of pleading has, in the opinion of the court, formed after an examination of the entire cause, including the evidence, resulted in a miscarriage of justice." (People v. Bonfanti,
The appellant does not specify wherein the evidence was insufficient to support the charge of kidnaping. We will, therefore, not consider the point any further than to briefly narrate the facts. The sister of the complaining witness is married to the brother of the defendant. The latter had been ordered away from the home of the complaining witness by her parents, because of his constant attention to her. On the afternoon in question, as the girl was going home from school, in the city of San Jose, he seized her, and forcibly dragged her into an automobile which he had hired for the purpose. He covered her head with an overcoat and attempted to stifle her screams and outcries by putting the sleeve in her mouth. At that time the defendant told the complaining witness that he "wanted to marry her" or that "she would have to marry him." He took a pistol from his pocket and told the girl he would kill anybody who followed them, at the same time telling the driver of the automobile to drive on. A number of people witnessed the abduction, and some of them told the defendant to let the girl alone. Rosie succeeded in freeing herself sufficiently to scream and *375 call to a number of people for help as the automobile sped along, and told the defendant the policemen would soon be after him. The party did not go very far. When they reached the home of one Cracolice, still in Santa Clara County, after a further demand or statement from the defendant that the complaining witness marry him, the girl pushed defendant out of the automobile, got into the front seat with the driver and was taken home by him.
As against this accusation, the defendant's position is that he was engaged to marry the complaining witness, that he had reason to believe that placing her in the automobile for the sole purpose of talking to her would not be objectionable, or offensive to her, and that she would make no objection thereto. His contention is that the evidence warrants the assumption that he was justified in this belief, and that but for a misdirection of the law of the case by the court the jury would have so concluded.
[3] In this connection he submitted an instruction modeled, he asserts, after one given in Stripling v. State, 47 Tex. Cr. 117, [
At the request of the defendant the court instructed the jury that certain lesser crimes were included in the offense charged in the information. Of its own motion the court submitted a form of verdict for false imprisonment, effected by violence or menace. Whether or not the defendant could be found guilty of that offense under the information in the case is a moot question, for he was convicted of the crime of kidnaping as charged.
[4] When the jury retired to deliberate, two forms of verdict finding the defendant guilty of a felony, two finding him guilty of a misdemeanor and one finding him not guilty, were submitted to it. After the jurors had deliberated for some time (appellant in his brief says five and one-half hours), without arriving at a verdict, they were brought into court upon their request for further instructions, and through their forelady stated that they wished to know if all of the verdicts of guilty carried a state prison sentence. This request appears to have been predicated upon the argument of appellant's counsel in his argument. The court, in response to the query, proceeded to correctly explain to the jurors that the matter of punishment, in the event they should find the defendant guilty, was a matter with which they had nothing to do. Instead of stopping there, however, and apparently being of the view that some confusion had *377 crept into the minds of the jurors by reason of the argument of counsel, the court took the verdicts one by one and, at some length, explained the extent of the punishment that might be imposed in the event the defendant should be found guilty. The procedure that might follow a conviction, in the way of a motion for a new trial, and application for probation, was likewise stated in detail. The jury was then directed to continue its deliberation, with the admonition that out of the verdicts, explained by the court, including a verdict of "not guilty," it should select the one that conformed to its conclusions, and that if the jurors in good conscience could agree upon a verdict the court desired them to do so, but if they could not, and felt they had acted honestly and conscientiously, they would be discharged in due time.
After some further deliberation the jurors returned a verdict finding the defendant guilty as charged in the information. The appellant attempts to predicate error upon the episode, and contends that the jury could not but be and were influenced by this charge of the court to arrive at a verdict, believing that if they found the defendant guilty, the court would either deal leniently with the defendant or place him on probation. His argument is that the remarks of the trial court amounted, in substance, to an admonition to the jurors to not "worry about the punishment. The punishment will be commensurate with the crime. This is not a case that would carry a ten-year sentence; it is only the most aggravated case of kidnaping where a ten-year sentence is imposed. This defendant will be taken care of. He can apply for probation and the court will consider it." We do not so understand the remarks of the trial judge. The matter of punishment of the defendant, in the event the jurors should find him guilty, was, as bluntly stated to them by the court, "none of their business." It was for them to weigh and consider the evidence, and upon that alone, and the law as given to them by the court, to determine the defendant's guilt or innocence. Having properly instructed the jury as to their duty, the court should have stopped there. But while we are convinced that the remarks of the court were entirely unnecessary, and should not have been indulged in, we cannot hold that they were so improper as to form the basis of prejudicial error. As was said in *378 People v. Lawlor,
The judgment is affirmed.
Richards, J., and Kinsell, J., pro tem., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on October 25, 1920, and a petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on November 24, 1920.
Shaw, J., Lawlor, J., Wilbur, J., Olney, J., and Sloane, J., concurred. *380