277 P. 1080 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1929
Appellant was accused by indictment of violating the provisions of chapter 339 of the Statutes of 1923 (Stats. 1923, p. 695), it being charged that, having been previously convicted of and served a term in the state prison for the crime of grand larceny, he did, on March 3, 1928, in the city and county of San Francisco, feloniously possess and carry concealed upon his person a loaded revolver. Upon trial he was found guilty by a jury, and this appeal is taken from the judgment of conviction and the order denying his motion for a new trial. The grounds urged for reversal relate to the trial court's rulings upon matters connected with appellant's pleas of former acquittal and once in jeopardy.
The record discloses the following facts: Between 7:30 and 8 o'clock on the night of March 3, 1928, appellant and a companion named Risbin, both armed with pistols, entered an apartment on upper Market Street, San Francisco, occupied by a man named Brenner, and, after robbing Brenner, fled. An alarm was given and two motor officers took up the pursuit and within a few minutes captured the robbers in the basement of a building several blocks distant from the scene of the robbery. Appellant was immediately searched *92
and the loaded pistol used by him in perpetrating the robbery was found concealed upon his person, and when questioned he admitted having served a term in the penitentiary for grand larceny. He was first charged by information with robbery and with prior conviction of grand larceny. When arraigned on that information he denied the prior conviction and entered pleas of not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity to the charge of robbery. He was tried first upon the general issue and found guilty of robbery in the first degree, and the jury found also that the alleged prior conviction was true. He was then tried before the same jury upon the issue of insanity, and the verdict was that he "was insane at the precise time the offense was committed on March 3, 1928, as alleged in the information." Thereupon the trial court ordered that he be sent to the detention hospital for observation by the board of insanity commissioners. About a week later said board returned its findings, declaring him to be sane. The trial court then made an order pursuant to the provisions of section
[1] We are of the opinion that the rulings of the trial court relating to the pleas of former acquittal and once in jeopardy of which appellant complains were not erroneous. The crime charged in the indictment was, as appellant concedes, entirely separate and distinct from the crime of robbery for which he was first tried, and that being so he was subject to separate indictment, conviction and punishment therefor, irrespective of the result of the robbery case, and notwithstanding that both crimes may have grown out of the same continuous transaction and been committed at the same time (People v. Snyder,
[3] Appellant's argument in support of his pleas of former acquittal and once in jeopardy is based mainly upon the theory that the verdict in the robbery case finding him to be insane at the time of the commission of that crime operated as an acquittal of that charge, and that, since it was not shown that he had the loaded revolver upon his person at any time other than during the commission of the robbery and the few minutes following, said verdict operated also as an acquittal of any other offense he may have committed at the same time. The contention is without merit for the reason that under the present law a verdict declaring an accused to be insane at the time of the commission of the acts constituting the crime does not operate as an acquittal of the charge. As said in People v. Troche, supra, it serves only as a reason why the penalty of the law prescribed as the punishment for the commission of the acts constituting the crime should not be visited upon the accused. [4] In the present situation, therefore, the effect of the verdict of insanity in the robbery case was to declare merely that at the time the robbery was committed appellant was mentally deranged to the extent of being incapable of distinguishing between right and wrong in relation to the acts constituting that particular crime, and consequently should not be punished therefor (People v. Troche, supra; 7 Cal. Jur. 862); but it was in no way decisive of the question of appellant's sanity at the time he committed another *95 and distinct crime, even though it was committed at the same time.
[5] Nor are we able to agree to the further contention made by appellant that the trial court was without power to proceed with the trial of the present case until there was a final determination of the proceeding instituted in the robbery case as to appellant's present sanity. Section
After a review of the entire record, we are unable to find wherein appellant has been deprived of any substantial legal right. The judgment and order appealed from are therefore affirmed.
Tyler, P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred. *96