175 P. 24 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1918
Defendant, after conviction of the crime described in section
The evidence offered on behalf of the prosecution was as to its most material part furnished by a little girl eight years of age. She testified that on the seventeenth day of February, 1918, she entered a picture theater in the city of Hanford and took a seat well toward the front of the room; that in the seat next to her was the defendant, a young Mexican, whom she had never seen before to her knowledge; that defendant offered her five cents and told her to get some popcorn, but that she did not do this; that defendant offered her ten cents, but did not present it to her; that he gave her another ten-cent piece and took that away, then "half a dollar or a dollar" and took that away; that when he proffered her the first ten cents he said, "if you will give me a kiss"; that thereafter he moved over toward her, placed his hand under her dress and placed one of her hands in his lap under his hat and upon his private organs. The little girl further testified that she took her hand away "about a minute after," and that upon going out of the theater she told her mother, who in turn told the father. The evidence was further that on a Sunday, two weeks later, she went to the theater with her mother and father, the latter being determined to trap the man if he should again approach the child. The mother and father took seats toward the rear of the room and the child went to the front and sat down. Soon the same man came and sat beside her and began to talk to her; whereupon an officer was called, who placed him under arrest. Throughout the early part of her testimony the little girl had referred in positive terms to the defendant as being the man who had committed the lewd act on the seventeenth day of February. Toward the conclusion of her testimony she was asked by the district attorney whether she was sure that the defendant was the same man who molested her on the 17th of February, and the following dialogue thereupon occurred: "A. I am almost sure, because he offered me money. Q. Are you not positive? A. I am almost sure. Q. You are almost sure? A. Yes, sir. Q. Are you sure that it is the same man that came in the second time when they arrested him? A. I am almost sure. Q. Well, are you just as sure it was the same man they arrested on the second Sunday as you are that it was the same man you saw there on the 17th? *809 A. I am almost sure. Q. Well, I want to find out how sure you are, Birdie. You say you are almost sure it was the same man both times; now are you just as sure that it was the same man the first time as you are that it was the same man the second time? A. Yes." The latter answers given by the child form the basis for the argument made by appellant that the evidence was insufficient to warrant the conviction in that there was no sufficient proof of the identity of the defendant. The cross-examination of the child developed no greater uncertainty as to the matter of her identification of the defendant than that appearing from the testimony quoted. We think that there was enough presented to the jury to warrant it in concluding that the defendant was the person who committed the lewd acts on the day charged; that is, there is no such want of evidence as to authorize this court to say that the verdict in that particular is unsupported.
The appellant further contends that if any criminal act was committed, the child was an accomplice to it, and that her testimony should have been corroborated. It does not appear that the child was an active participant in the unlawful performance, but rather that she was, if anything, a mere passive instrument in the hands of the defendant. She was, therefore, not an accomplice. (People v. Camp,
Appellant claims that it was prejudicial error for the court to permit a physician to testify in answer to a hypothetical question embodying the circumstances of the offense and to give his opinion that the acts complained of would "tend to excite the passions and gratify to a certain extent the desires of the individual perpetrating such acts." The matter was probably not one calling for the expression of expert opinion, but conceding error in admitting this testimony, we cannot see that any prejudice could result therefrom. Defendant denied in toto the commission of any such acts. The acts themselves, as described by the child (we have not attempted to relate all of the details in the foregoing), were in their very nature of the kind denounced by the statute; and under the evidence, the jury could not well have concluded that they were other than of that variety.
The court instructed the jury fully and fairly, and we think no error is shown in the refusal to give certain instructions offered by the defendant and in modifying others. The errors claimed as affecting the instructions, in our opinion, do not warrant any particular discussion. It may be noted that the court was careful to advise the jury that the testimony of a child of tender years ought to be viewed with great care and caution and without bias and prejudice; further stating that the charge made against the defendant was one "easy to make, but hard to disprove."
Appellant urged before the trial court that he was entitled to a new trial because of alleged newly discovered evidence. This evidence, as shown by several affidavits used on hearing of the motion, consisted in the statements of persons who deposed that they had seen the appellant on the day and during the time that the alleged crime was committed a considerable distance away from the town of Hanford; one of these deponents at least had talked with the appellant, who, he deposed, was driving a horse and wagon on a journey for firewood. The nature of this so-called newly discovered evidence was such as must have been within the reach of defendant at all times during his trial; his counsel, by the very nature of the defense which he presented, was put upon inquiry as to the same facts. Defendant at the trial testified that he was not in the picture show house on the 17th of February, but that he was at work on a ranch. This contention of his would at once suggest the finding of other evidence in *811 the nature of alibi proof and would ordinarily lead to an inquiry by his counsel as to what persons the defendant had been with, seen, or talked to at the important time. It cannot be said, we think, that the evidence claimed to have been newly discovered was such as could not have been procured with reasonable diligence at the trial. No abuse of discretion is, therefore, shown in denial of the motion.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and Shaw, J., concurred.