69 P. 16 | Cal. | 1902
The defendant was charged in the information with the crime of robbery, and the verdict was guilty of an "attempt to commit robbery." The information also charged two prior convictions, one of petit larceny and *160 the other of a felony. The defendant pleaded not guilty to the charge set out in the information, and admitted the prior convictions. The judgment was imprisonment in the state prison for a term of nineteen years; and defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.
We do not find in the record any valid reason for reversing the order denying a new trial.
The contention of appellant that there is no such crime in this state as an attempt to commit robbery is not maintainable. It was held otherwise in People v. Lee Kong,
Instruction XXIII, upon the subject of reasonable doubt and "moral certainty," to which appellant objects, is substantially the same as the instruction on that subject reviewed by this court in the recent case of the People v. Huntington, post, p. 261; and it was held in the latter case that the giving of such instruction was not a ground for reversal.
There is a part of instruction XVII which at first blush gives some plausibility to appellant's objection to it. Appellant contends that by this instruction the jury was substantially told that they could not convict him of only a simple assault unless it appeared beyond a reasonable doubt that such assault had not been made with a felonious intent to commit robbery or grand larceny; of course, such an instruction would have been erroneous. But this is clearly not the meaning of the instruction as given. It merely tells the jury that a verdict of guilty of a simple assault would be a finding that such assault had been shown beyond a reasonable doubt, and that — as the instruction proceeds — "it had not been shown to a moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt either that such assault had been made in conjunction with a specific felonious intent to commit either robbery or grand larceny, as herein defined, or that a felonious attempt had been made to commit either of those offenses, as herein defined." Taking the instruction as a whole, it is clear that the jury could not have been misled by it. *161
The general contention that the charge of the court was so much in the nature of an argument against the appellant as to call for a reversal cannot, we think, be maintained. There are no other points arising on the appeal from the order denying the new trial which call for special notice.
We think, however, that the judgment was rendered upon a wrong theory under which the court below felt compelled to sentence appellant to a longer term of imprisonment than, as appears in the record, it otherwise would have done; and it would therefore be unjust to allow the judgment to stand. After the return of the verdict the court announced its conclusion that the only punishment that could be inflicted upon appellant was imprisonment in the state prison for one half of his natural life; and thereupon, under objection and exception of appellant, it was shown that, under the American Tables of Mortality, the expectation of life of appellant was thirty-eight years, and judgment was rendered for the exact half of that time, — to wit, nineteen years. We are satisfied that for obvious reasons a court, for the purpose of a judgment of imprisonment in a criminal case, cannot take as a basis for such judgment the expectation of life upon which insurance companies calculate their policies, and which is founded on what vital statistics show to be the average expectation. What the actual life of a particular person would be, and what would be the half of it, cannot be known; and if one half of the life of the appellant were the only punishment prescribed for the crime of which he was convicted, such punishment would be too vague and indefinite to be possible of enforcement, and no judgment could be rendered against him, but we think that under the decision in People v.Gardner,
It is argued by appellant — and it seems to have been so considered by the court — that section
The order denying the motion for a new trial is affirmed. The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the superior court to render a judgment sentencing the appellant to imprisonment in the state prison for such a term of years as, in its opinion, would be a just and fair punishment, — not less than ten years, — if there be no withdrawal of the prior convictions.
Van Dyke, J., Garoutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
Angellotti, J., dissented from the order denying a rehearing.