4 P.2d 601 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
The defendant was charged in the first count of the information with the crime of forgery of a certain check or draft and in the second count thereof with the crime of issuing a check without sufficient funds. The check which is the basis of the charge contained in the second count is the same instrument which is charged to have been forged by the defendant in the first count. Included in the information is a charge of prior conviction of the crime of grand larceny committed in the state of Louisiana. When arraigned upon the information the defendant pleaded not guilty of both offenses charged in the information and confessed the prior conviction. Upon the conclusion of his trial he was found guilty of the crime of forgery "as charged in the first count of the information" and was sentenced to a term of imprisonment at the state prison at Folsom. From the judgment of conviction thus rendered and from the order of the court denying his motion for a new trial defendant prosecutes this appeal.
The principal contention made by appellant is that the court erred in admitting in evidence a certain extrajudicial confession without sufficient proof of the corpus delicti having been established. It is an elementary principle that at some stage of the proceedings during the trial of a criminal action proof of the corpus delicti must be made to entitle the prosecution to introduce the evidence of a confession. It is not contended that the fact that the admission of the confession was prior to the admission of a portion of the evidence tending to establish thecorpus delicti is sufficient to warrant a reversal of the judgment, as it is conceded that the order of proof is a matter within the discretion of the trial court (People v. Hinshaw,
The evidence which tended to show that there was no such person as R.C. Gilbert in the city of Fort Worth, Texas, was negative in character, produced by the prosecution in support of the theory that the name signed to the instrument as the purported drawer was the name of a fictitious person. [1] Under the decisions slight evidence is sufficient where an attempt to prove a negative is being made (People v. Macbeth,
Appellant further complains that the trial court erred in admitting in evidence two checks. [5] One of them, a check drawn on the Bank of America in Los Angeles, made payable to P.W. Goodwin and purporting to be signed by E.L. Gilbert, was offered in evidence as an admitted specimen of appellant's handwriting and was received for this limited purpose. It was competent evidence for the purpose announced and the court did not err in thus admitting it. [6] The second check which was drawn on a bank in a foreign jurisdiction was offered by the prosecution for the purpose of proving guilty knowledge and intent. It was competent for the purpose for which it was offered (People v.McGlade,
[8] It is further urged that the court erred in admitting in evidence the protest and notice thereof relating to the draft set out in the information of whose forgery appellant was convicted. Appellant again relies upon People v. Whiteman, supra, wherein the Supreme Court said that the admission of such evidence was error, but pointed out that no injury could have resulted therefrom to defendant since its only materiality was that it tended to show that the check was not paid upon presentation, which was not a fact in controversy. Exactly the same situation is here presented. Conceding that the trial court erred in admitting the protest, it is obvious that no harm resulted to appellant therefrom. The fact of nonpayment was sufficiently shown by other evidence produced by the prosecution.
[9] Appellant complains that certain instructions offered by him were not given by the court and that the instructions which the court gave relating to principles of law embodied in his rejected instructions did not correctly state the law. Particular exception is taken to the court's refusal to give two instructions which in effect defined the phrase corpus delicti
and stated that its various elements must be established by evidence independent of any purported confession of the accused and that such purported confession could not be used to establish or to supply any of the elements making up the corpus delicti.
The instruction given by the court covering this feature of the case properly and fully advised the jury that it was incumbent upon the prosecution to establish the corpus delicti beyond a reasonable doubt by evidence other than and independent of the oral admissions or confessions of the accused made out of court and that after the corpus delicti had been thus established *738
oral admissions or confessions made out of court by the accused could be used to support or corroborate any element of thecorpus delicti. It is obvious that the instructions actually given declare in effect the exact principles covered by the requested and rejected instructions of appellant. [10] It is urged that since the evidence of the admissions of appellant consisted of testimony voluntarily given by him at his preliminary examination before the committing magistrate, the jury may have been misled by the expression "out of court" used in the instructions that were given and may have received the impression that they could properly consider such evidence in attempting to discover whether or not the corpus delicti had been established. It may be conceded that voluntary admissions made by appellant under oath during his preliminary examination stand on the same footing as unsworn extrajudicial statements (People v. Kelley,
Examination of the record herein discloses that the instructions taken as a whole were full and correct and that they properly announced the various principles of law necessary for the guidance of the jury. It is equally clear that appellant received a fair trial and suffered no prejudice which would entitle him to a reversal of the judgment during the course of the proceedings that resulted in his conviction.
The judgment and order from which this appeal has been taken are affirmed.
Barnard, P.J., and Marks, J., concurred. *739