11 P.2d 38 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1932
The defendant was charged under the provisions of section
The appellant contends (1) the information is fatally defective for the reason that it fails to charge that the felonious acts were performed with lewd or lascivious intent, (2) the court failed to appoint two impartial medical alienists as required by section
[1] The information sufficiently charges a public offense under the provisions of section
[2] The record indicates that the court complied with the requirements of section
[4] The denial of defendant's motion to strike out the testimony of James Hester, regarding the sanity of the accused, is assigned as erroneous. Mr. Hester was a deputy sheriff who acted as recording clerk in the county jail where the defendant was imprisoned for four months prior to his trial. He was examined at the trial as an intimate acquaintance of the defendant under the provisions of subdivision 10 of section 1870 of the Code of Civil Procedure. It appears that he had observed the defendant every day during this period of four months. He had talked with the accused "practically every day". He watched his conduct and marked his manner of speech. Over the objection of the defendant that the evidence is incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and that the witness "has not shown himself to be anexpert", he was permitted to testify that the defendant appeared to be and talked rational; that he had observed no change in that regard during the four months he had watched him, and that in his opinion the defendant was *182
sane. A motion to strike out the evidence of this witness on the ground that "no qualification of this man is made as an expert"
was denied. Neither the objection to the evidence nor the motion to strike it from the record assigned the proper ground. The witness was not permitted to testify as an expert on mental disease. He was permitted to testify as an intimate acquaintance under the provisions of section 1870, supra, assigning his reasons for the opinion which he expressed. In determining the qualifications which render a witness competent to testify as an intimate acquaintance concerning the sanity of an individual, the trial judge has a wide discretion which will not be interfered with except for evident abuse thereof. (People v. McCarthy,
[5] The refusal of the court to suspend the pronouncing of judgment and impanel another jury to try the question of the defendant's sanity at that time, under the provisions of sections
The judgment and the orders are affirmed.
Preston, P.J., and Plummer, J., concurred.