174 P. 916 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1918
The defendant was charged by an information with and convicted by a jury in the superior court of Placer County of having committed lewd and lascivious acts upon and with the body of a female child under the age of fourteen years, and prosecutes these appeals from the judgment of conviction and the order denying his motion for a new trial.
The information is based on section
The information charges the offense as follows: "The said Roffi Rossi on or about the seventeenth day of January, A.D. 1918, at the said county of Placer, in the said state of California, and before the filing of this information, did then and there willfully, unlawfully, feloniously, and lewdly, kiss, embrace, hug, and place his hands under the clothes and on and between the legs of one Lucille Orsolini, a female child under the age of fourteen years, with the intent of then and there arousing, appealing to, and gratifying the lust and passion and sexual desires of said child, all of which is contrary to the form, force, and effect," etc.
The point first made by the defendant is that if the defendant was shown by the evidence to have been guilty of any crime at all, it was that of an attempt to commit rape and not that defined by section
The point is without merit.
The child upon whom the alleged lascivious act was committed by the defendant is the daughter of a Mr. and Mrs. Orsolini, residents of Roseville, Placer County, and was, at the time of the commission of said act (the seventeenth day of January, 1918), a little more than nine years of age. The alleged crime was committed in the early morning of the day named at the home of the parents of the child in Roseville, after the father had gone to his work as a machinist in the railroad shops at Roseville and the mother had gone to the city of Sacramento to spend the day. A family by the name of Trott was occupying the house temporarily with the Orsolinis, and Trott was the only person left in the house with the child, Mrs. Trott having also gone to Sacramento that day. Trott was in bed and the little girl was in the kitchen engaged in preparing her own breakfast, when the defendant, for the *780 purpose, so he claimed, of delivering to Trott a key to a house in Roseville which the latter contemplated leasing for use by himself and family, made his appearance at the Orsolini home. Trott was aroused from a semi-sleeping condition by the noise of persons talking and "rustling around" in the adjoining room, and finally heard a child's voice say: "Don't do that — stop that — it hurts." Trott thereupon went to the bathroom door, from which he could see into the adjoining bedroom, and there he saw the defendant sitting upon the bed, but did not then see the child. Trott then returned to his own room and went back to bed and, within a few minutes thereafter, again heard similar noises to those which he had previously heard, and again he arose and went to the bathroom door, and, looking into the adjoining bedroom, saw the defendant sitting on the bed, holding the child between his legs, with the back part of her clothes up and his left hand under her clothes, while his right hand was around her body. Trott said that the defendant was moving himself "up and down" and holding the child on his lap. Trott, addressing the defendant, asked: "What in hell are you doing there?" whereupon the child broke away from the embraces of the defendant and ran into the adjacent room, exclaiming, as she ran out, "You dirty thing! I told you not to do that." When the child thus got away from the defendant Trott observed that the latter's private parts were out of his pantaloons and exposed.
There was no testimony that the defendant had sexual relations with the child. In fact, the girl testified that he did not insert his private parts into hers, but kissed and hugged her and had his hand under her dress and upon her person. She explained that when she said to the defendant, "Stop that; it hurts," etc., she had reference to his hugging her or pressing her body to his with such force as to make it painful to her.
It requires no argument to demonstrate that, under the facts as they are above briefly detailed, the defendant's acts were those denounced as a crime by section
The next and last point urged by the appellant for a reversal is predicated upon certain alleged misconduct of the district attorney during the course of his argument to the jury. That officer several times, in his address, referred to the case as one in which the "little girl" had been "debauched" by the defendant and also declared that the latter was a "debaucher." Counsel for the defendant objected to the use of those words by the district attorney, and the court thereupon suggested that the prosecutor omit their use in his argument, saying that if the words were employed by the district attorney in the sense that the defendant had actually had sexual intercourse with the child, the evidence did not justify their use. This statement by the court was itself sufficient to overcome the effect of any damage which the defendant might have otherwise suffered from the use of those words by the prosecutor. But we do not think the district attorney went far afield when he described the defendant as a "debaucher." The evidence, of which we have herein given a statement in substance, discloses the defendant's revolting and beastly acts upon the child, and even though he did not succeed in having actual sexual relations with her, it is fairly and reasonably to be assumed from the evidence that he was not above doing so, and might have carried his lechery that far but for the appearance of the witness, Trott, in the room at a timely moment. We are, however, not so sure that one *782
doing as the defendant was shown by the evidence to have done in this case may not with propriety be termed a "debaucher." His acts with the child were obviously such as to instill into her childish mind thoughts of the most degrading character and tendency and which are naturally calculated to lead an adolescent, presumably without fixed or correct notions of the principles of morality or a proper appreciation of the appalling significance of the loss of chastity by a female, to the commission of acts of unspeakable depravity. A man responsible for such a state of mind in a young female, who may be assumed, from her immature years, to be mentally irresponsible or without the ability to appreciate the terrible consequences to her of immoral conduct, is, although himself never having been criminally intimate with such child, no less a debaucher than one who has committed upon the child the sexual act itself. A district attorney, however, has the right in argument to build up a theory of his case as it is made by the evidence, and often in doing so he may give expression to thoughts which have been drawn from the realms of his imagination. If thus he keeps within the general character of the case as it is made by the proofs, then he remains within the sphere of legitimate argument. Of course, the prosecutor should not be permitted, in argument, to bring into the case facts vitally bearing upon the charge or the defendant's alleged connection therewith which have no foundation in the evidence, but where the evidence, as here, is such as clearly to warrant the belief that the defendant on trial committed the crime charged, then the prosecuting officer is authorized in argument to assume his guilt and to refer to and characterize him according to the nature or degree of turpitude of the crime of which he is accused. As was said in People v. Glaze,
No other points are made by the defendant, but the attorney-general has called our attention to an error in the judgment of sentence of which notice herein should be taken. The crime of which the defendant was convicted was, as above shown, committed in the month of January, 1918. The legislature of 1917 passed what is known as the "Indeterminate Sentence" Act, which went into operation in August of said year (see Stats. 1917, p. 665), said law being now section
Section
The attorney-general, however, upon a point of practice in a matter of this kind, has called our attention to the case of the People v. Mendosa,
Accordingly, the portion of the judgment of sentence herein which attempts and purports to fix the maximum penalty at *785 twenty years is stricken from said judgment, and as so modified the judgment appealed from, as well as the order, likewise attacked here, denying the defendant's motion for a new trial, are affirmed.
Chipman, P. J., and Burnett, J., concurred.