111 Cal. 453 | Cal. | 1896
Respondent was tried for the offense of obtaining money and property by false pretenses. At the conclusion of the evidence in chief for the prosecution the court advised the jury to acquit, for the reason that in the judgment of the court the case had not been established; and the case was then submitted to the jury upon the instructions of the court, without evidence on behalf of defendant, or argument of counsel. The jury, notwithstanding the advice of the court, found the defendant guilty, and thereupon the court of its own motion made an order setting aside the verdict, and granting the defendant a new trial.
From this order the people prosecute this appeal, the sole point made being that the action of the court was an abuse of its discretion.
The case was argued here by both parties upon the assumption that the new trial was granted upon the ground that the evidence was deemed insufficient to sustain the verdict; and while no specific ground is
It can, of course, make no difference in the exercise of this power by the court that the evidence in the case was wholly that of the prosecution, and stands, in the sense at least that it is not controverted by evidence on behalf of defendant, without conflict. The same duty rests upon the judge in such a case as where the evidence is conflicting, to satisfy himself that guilt has been established; and notwithstanding the evidence may be all one way, he is not required to believe it. “A court may reject the most positive testimony, though the witness be not discredited by direct testimony impeaching him
Nor does it affect the question that the evidence in the case may have a legal tendency to prove all the material facts. Guilt is be established beyond a reasonable doubt; and while there may be some evidence to support each fact, this does not signify that it is necessarily such as to satisfy the conscience of the judge that a case is made which warrants conviction.
Applying these principles to the record before us, we cannot, say that the learned judge of the court below improperly exercised his discretion in the premises.
In this view it is neither pertinent nor proper for us to review or comment upon the evidence, since another trial must be had. Nor for the same reason is it proper at this time to indicate our views upon the point urged by defendant, that the evidence'is insufficient in law to warrant a conviction. That point should not be anticipated, since upon another trial the evidence may be so essentially different that it may not arise.
The order is affirmed.
Harrison, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.