63 P. 1070 | Cal. | 1901
Defendant has been convicted of the crime of arson, and prosecutes this appeal from the judgment, order denying his motion for a new trial, and order refusing an arrest of judgment. The case has been before the court upon a previous occasion.(People v. Mooney,
Upon pleading to the second information, defendant set up a former acquittal, and based his plea upon the proceedings taken at the first trial, including the appeal to this court and the judgment rendered upon that appeal. Defendant's contention seems to be that his previous appeal to this court being in part an appeal from an order refusing to arrest the judgment, and such order, in conjunction with the judgment and order denying his motion for a new trial, being reversed, that, upon the going down of the remittitur, the judgment should have been arrested, and the subsequent order of discharge made by the trial court was, in effect, a judgment of acquittal. While it is quite a common practice to appeal from an order refusing to arrest a judgment, and while this court seems to have entertained appeals from such orders in a few cases, yet, upon consulting section
Defendant claims that he has undergone a statutory acquittal by reason of section
The contention is made that the court should have given two certain instructions asked by defendant, bearing upon *17
the burning of the building or its contents, with the intent to defraud the insurance company. The instructions were not as clear and explicit as they should have been. But, aside from that defect in the wording of them, the court told the jurors that, in order to find the defendant guilty, they must be satisfied from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that he set fire to the building with the intent to destroy it. This instruction covers the facts set out in the information, and also fully covers the law, by which the jury were bound to act in returning their verdict. The statement made by the judge, bearing upon the amount of insurance resting upon the property, as testified to by a certain witness, was a statement made to the attorneys in the course of argument, and not a statement made to the jury. The jurors had no right to consider it. At the same time the judge also stated that he did not wish to be understood as quoting the evidence of any witness in the case. The limitations placed upon the cross-examination of the witness Croop were proper. It was also proper to allow the expert witness Ames to testify as to the reasons upon which he based his opinion given as an expert upon handwriting. (Healey v. Visalia etc. R.R. Co.,
For the foregoing reasons the judgment and orders are affirmed.
Van Dyke, J., and Harrison, J., concurred. *18