141 P. 936 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1914
Appeal from a judgment following conviction on the charge that appellant did cause and contribute to the dependent state of a girl eighteen years of age. The judgment provided as follows: "No cause having been shown why judgment should not be entered, you, Samuel Cruse, should be and are now fined by this court in the amount of five hundred dollars, and in case said fine is not paid, you shall be confined in the county jail of Los Angeles County for the term of six months." No complaint is made as to the sufficiency of this judgment in form.
The information charged that on the fifteenth day of March, 1913, in the county of Los Angeles, appellant caused and contributed to the dependency of the girl named, and it is alleged that the latter was then and there a dependent person within the meaning of the acts of the legislature, in that she was in danger of growing up to lead an immoral life "by reason of the acts of the defendant." An allegation followed setting forth that the particular offense was that appellant had had upon one occasion sexual intercourse with the girl named. Under this charge it was necessary for the people to establish, not only the fact that the act of intercourse described had been committed, but also that the girl mentioned in the information was, prior to the filing of the charge against appellant, a dependent person within the *499
meaning of the statute, and that the offending conduct of appellant caused or contributed to that condition. (People v. Pierro,
A great many instructions offered by the defendant were refused, many of which might well have been given by the trial judge in order that the defendant might have had the benefit of a more detailed statement of the propositions material to be submitted given to the jury. It is said by the supreme court in the case of People v. Baldwin,
It seems that the trial judge, at the instance of appellant, sometime after the judgment appealed from was pronounced, attempted to vacate that judgment and re-sentence appellant, for the reason that it was claimed that the arraignment at the time of the first sentence was not sufficiently made. The question as to whether the trial judge could under such circumstances re-sentence appellant, is not properly here presented, as it is shown only by a supplemental transcript of the official reporter, and further because the appeal from the judgment here considered was taken prior to the time when the proceedings on the re-sentencing of appellant were had. After the appeal had been so taken and was pending the trial judge had no authority to make any order which would affect that judgment. Upon the face of the record it appears that the judgment appealed from was regularly entered.
A careful examination of the entire record does not disclose any errors which may be said to have injuriously affected appellant in his right to a fair trial.
The judgment is affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and Shaw, J., concurred. *503