THE PEOPLE, Respondent, v. PAUL BURNS, Appellant
Crim. No. 4232
Second Dist., Div. Three
Nov. 29, 1948
88 Cal. App. 2d 867
There are no prejudicial errors in the court‘s instructions.
The attempted appeal from the order denying the motion for a new trial is dismissed. The judgment is affirmed.
York, P. J., and White, J., concurred.
Fred N. Howser, Attorney General, Frank Richards, Deputy Attorney General, W. E. Simpson, District Attorney, Jere J. Sullivan and Robert Wheeler, Deputy District Attorneys, for Respondent.
VALLÉE, J.-Defеndant, Paul Burns, was charged by information and convicted by a jury of the offense denounced by
Joy Burns testified that on October 7, 1947, the date alleged in the information as that upon which the offense was committed, she was living with the defendant, her husband, in an apartment in Los Angeles; that he hit her with his bedroom slipper. The defendant testified: On the morning of October 7, 1947, an argument with his wife occurred about the radio being on; at that time she tried to kick him; he then grabbed her foot to protect himself; there was a mark on his leg where she kicked him; he picked up his slipper and slapped her with it on the derrière, but did not hit her anywhere else; he did not recall how many blows were struck in that quarrel; they had breakfast and he left to find work. Defendant was taken into custody on the afternoon of October 7, 1947. The arresting officer testified that defendant was very intoxicated at the time of the arrest. Defendant admitted to Officer Weaver that on October 7, 1947, he had spanked his wife with a hairbrush after getting into an argument over the radio being turned on and that he had then gone out.
Joy Burns, without objection, also testified: During the evening of October 6, 1947, appellant came home very intoxicated; he did not recognize who she was; she was sitting on her bed, propped up with pillows, and he asked her if she would go out with him; she said no, that he should go to bed since he was in no condition to go out; there was a sort of brawl; she tried to get him ready for bed, he resented it and struck her more than twice with his closed hand on the back of the head; she also testified that in the brawl she received injuries on the right side of her face just below the mouth, on the left side of her body opposite the navel, on her left upper arm, some bruises on her left knee and a mark on the back of the neck and about the top of the hip bone.
A chiropractor testified: He visited Mrs. Burns in the late afternoon of October 7, 1947, and found her in bed; he examined her and found bruises on the right cheek, right shoulder, a black and blue spot over the right hip and right knee; her temperature was 99.6 and her pulse 90; she showed symptoms of slight shock; her reflexes were a little exaggerated; the рupillary reflexes were normal; there were no fractures or dislocations; she had a partial sublaxation of the right hip; he treated her three times for pains in the
Defendant testified: He came home about 10:30 in the evening on October 6, 1947; he was not intoxicated, he only had had a couple of beers at 6 o‘clock; he and his wife had an argument, but it did not get to the pоint where blows were inflicted; he did not strike his wife at all that night; he asked her, “Let‘s make up, I will take you out“; she said, “No,” and talked him into staying home; they both went to bed but there was no striking or hitting and he did not touch her that night; he did not know how she received the marks shown in the photographs; she could have fallen down or fainted; hе did not hit her. After his arrest defendant told Officer Weaver that he had not struck Mrs. Burns before the morning of October 7th, that he had just given her a mild spanking on that morning and gone out. The officer questioned him as to how his wife had received the bruises. He stated that he did not know, that he had never noticed them, and that he had nevеr hit her hard enough to make them.
Appellant contends that the trial court committed prejudicial error in refusing to give the following instructions to the jury:
(1) “An assault is an unlawful attempt, coupled with a present ability, to commit a violent injury upon the person of another.
“The term ‘violent injury‘, as used in this definition, does not require that the injury be a severe one, but includes any wrongful act committed by means of physical force against the person of another even though it entails no pain and leaves no mark.
“To constitute an assault, it is not necessary that any actual injury be inflicted, but if an injury is inflicted, that fact may be considered by the jury, in connection with all other evidence, in determining the nature of the assault.”
(2) “You may find the defendant guilty of any offense, the commission of which is necessarily included in that with which he is charged, (or of an attempt to commit the offense,) if, in your judgment, the evidence supports such a verdict under my instructions.
(3) “If you find that the defendant was guilty of an offense included within the charge of the information (indictment), but entertain a reasonable doubt as to the degree of the crime of which he is guilty, it is your duty to convict him only of the lesser offense.”
No instruction on any point covered in the foregoing instructions was given to the jury. Appellant argues that the crime of assault is necessarily included in the offense defined by
It is clear that the evidence which we have recited required the giving of the quoted instructions requested by defendant. Under the instructions as given the jury had only two alternatives, to return a verdict of guilty as charged or one of not guilty. There was evidence which would have warranted the jury in finding the defendant guilty of “simple”
Appellant also contends that the court committed prejudicial error in not giving on its own motion an instruction defining the words “a traumatic condition” used in
In view of the conclusions stated it is unnecessary to consider other points made by appellant for reversal.
Order reversed.
Wood, J., concurred.
SHINN, J.-I concur in the judgment because of error in failing to instruct on the included offense of assault. I agree that it would have been advisable to define the term “traumatic condition” but do not believe the omission was reversible error. The condition to which the evidence of injury related was a traumatic condition, whether it resulted from blows struck by defendant or was caused in some other manner. Only one condition of injury was described by the witnesses and this was of traumatic origin. The crucial question was not the nature of the injury, but the cause of it.
