221 P. 693 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1923
By an information containing three counts defendant was charged, in the first count, with the crime of occupying a room with papers for the purpose of recording bets upon the result of a contest of speed between horses — the offense defined in subdivision 2 of section
The facts, in brief, are as follows: Defendant was the proprietor of a cigar-store on the ground floor of a building fronting on a street in the city of San Diego. At the time mentioned in the information two San Diego police officers, while driving in an automobile along the street on which the store faced, saw two men inside defendant's premises. These two persons were seen standing in front of the cigar counter engaged in conversation with defendant. One of the men was leaning over the counter. As the officers rode by they observed defendant writing on a pad of paper which lay on the counter. This document, later taken from defendant's person by one of the officers, was, so the officers testified, a "register of bets" — a document ordinarily used by bookmakers for the purpose of recording bets on horseraces. As the officers passed the store they observed another man, an employee of defendant, whom the officers referred to in their testimony as the "lookout." He was standing at the door which led into defendant's store. Observing these things the officers hurriedly parked their automobile near by and immediately returned to defendant's place of business. As they entered, defendant's employee — the person whom the officers previously had observed standing in the doorway — turned toward defendant and exclaimed, "Look out!" By that time the two men whom the officers had seen in the store talking with defendant while the latter was writing on the pad of paper had moved from the spot where they had stood in front of the cigar counter and were then standing on the sidewalk in front of the store. Defendant was telephoning when the officers entered the store. Between the time when the officers first observed defendant as they drove by and the time when they walked into the store — a brief period, not exceeding two minutes — defendant had taken from the cigar-stand the pad of paper — the document which was described by the officers as a "register of bets" — and had folded it and put it in his pocket. One of the officers demanded that he surrender it. Defendant refused to hand it over. Whereupon the officer forcibly took the document from him. Referring to this incident, the officer testified: "I came in and he took it [the register of bets] up off the counter, folded it up and started to put it *378 in his pocket, and he started backing away from me and would not give it to me, so I backed him up against the wall and took it away from him." Defendant told the officers that he had just made two bets and was sending the paper to the race-track at Tia Juana. At the same time the officers took from defendant, or from under his cigar counter, another document which they described as a "bookmaker's chart."
[1] Appellant claims that the court erred in permitting the arresting officers to testify that the two papers which they took from him were, respectively, a register of bets and a bookmaker's chart, and are such papers as ordinarily are used by bookmakers. The officers were qualified by experience to give expert testimony. Long prior to the time when they arrested appellant they had been specially detailed to work on cases of this character. Their duties often took them to the race-track at Tia Juana, where, as well as in the haunts of the bookmakers pursuing their calling in the city of San Diego, they had made a study of race-track gambling and its modusoperandi. They had acquired experience in ferreting out offenders engaged in violating the provisions of this act. As a part of their duties they had familiarized themselves with the papers, books, and paraphernalia ordinarily used by bookmakers. They had acquired some special knowledge of a subject which is not within the common experience of mankind generally. They possessed a knowledge which ordinarily does not come within the ken of the average member of a mixed jury of men and women — the juror who has moved in only the routine walks of an exemplary life and has not permitted his feet to wander into the forbidden byways frequented by the gamester. The experience thus gained by the officers was clearly sufficient to establishprima facie their competency to give expert testimony as to the character of the documents which they had taken from appellant, as well as to the significance of the cryptic letters and figures which were written on those documents. (See Vallejoetc. R. R. Co. v. Reed Orchard Co.,
Not only were the arresting officers qualified by experience to give expert testimony, but the nature of the documents taken from appellant's possession was such as to call for opinion evidence to explain their hidden meaning. Courts do not take judicial notice of the meaning of the signs and characters used by horse-race gamblers. Neither the judge nor the jury could properly speculate upon what was the peculiar significance to be given to the cabalistic letters and figures which appeared on the papers taken from appellant, or what meaning they would convey to the minds of men instructed in the bookmakers' school. But while these characters was a concealed mystery to the uninitiated, they were as an open book to those who, by their study of the methods and instrumentalities employed by bookmakers, had been inducted into the arcana of the gambler's craft. It was therefore proper to permit the officers to explain to the jury the nature and character of the papers taken from appellant and to state what, in their opinion, is the peculiar significance attaching to the letters and figures which appeared on these two exhibits. (State v. Gaines,
[3] The evidence is sufficient to justify the verdict. It was not necessary to show that a horse-race was actually run. (People v. Carroll,
[5] While it may be the better rule to allow cross-examination of an expert as to his competency before he gives his opinion, it was not error, certainly not reversible error, to refuse appellant's counsel permission to cross-examine the police officers as to their qualifications before they were permitted to give their opinion evidence. On regular cross-examination, after the witness has completed his direct examination, his competency as an expert can be tested. That was the procedure which the court enforced in the instant case. Such cross-examination, conducted after *381
each officer had concluded his direct examination, did not affect in any material degree the evidence which the witness had given on his direct examination respecting his competency. Whether an opposing party shall be accorded permission to test the qualifications of an expert by a preliminary cross-examination before the witness states his opinion, or whether the privilege of testing the witness' competency shall be exercised on his regular cross-examination after he has given his opinion and has concluded his direct examination, involves, not a matter of right but a question of procedure which lies within the discretionary power of the trial court. (Finch v. Chicago etc. Ry. Co.,
We have examined the record with care and have found no substantial ground for complaint against the manner in which the case was tried by the court below. In other words, we have found no prejudicial error.
The judgment and the order denying a new trial are affirmed.
Works, J., and Craig, J., concurred.
A petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on January 7, 1924.
All the Justices concurred.