Defendant appeals from the judgment of the trial court sentencing him to state prison for the term prescribed by law for forcible rape in violation of subdivision 3 of section 261 of the Penal Code. The defendant was convicted of this offense and of robbery in the second degree in violation of section 211 of the Penal Code following trial by jury, but the latter conviction was set aside on motion of the district attorney on the grounds that further proceedings on that charge would subject the defendant to double punishment. On his arraignment on an amended information the defendant, in addition to entering a plea of not guilty to each of the foregoing charges, had admitted allegations which charged that he had a prior conviction of robbery in 1957 and a prior conviction of kidnapping in 1959, and that he had served a term of imprisonment for each in the state prison.
Defendant attacks the ruling of the trial court in limiting him to 10 peremptory challenges, its rulings on the admission of evidence, the manner in which it instructed the jury, and asserts allegedly prejudicial misconduct on the part of the prosecutor.
The victim testified she was robbed and criminally assaulted at about 1:30 a.m. on December 8, 1963, in a parking lot as she was about to drive home. She identified defendant as the perpetrator following his apprehension within an hour of the alleged attack, again at a police lineup on December 9th, and finally at the trial.
The defendant claimed that he was elsewhere at the time of the alleged assault and produced witnesses who generally corroborated the activities recited by him, but left him unattended going from one cafe to another restaurant at about the time in question.
The remaining facts surrounding the occurrence insofar as they bear on the issues raised by appellant are hereinafter set forth.
The Alleged Error in Disallowing More Than Ten Peremptory Challenges
After the defendant had exercised nine peremptory challenges and had examined a juror seated to replace one whom had been excused by the court for cause, and after the People had expressed satisfaction with the jury as constituted, the court stated: “What says the Defendant? This is your last challenge Mr. Larson. ’ ’ The defendant excused the juror, and thereupon a new juror was sworn and examined by both sides. *611 When the People expressed satisfaction with the jury, the court ordered the clerk to swear the jurors to try the case. The defendant then sought to exercise a further peremptory challenge to a juror who had been seated following the exercise of his ninth challenge. 1
Defendant claims he was deprived of his rights under section 1070 of the Penal Code which provides: “If the offense charged be punishable with death, or with imprisonment in the state prison for life, the defendant is entitled to twenty and the state to twenty peremptory challenges. On a trial for any other offense, the defendant is entitled to ten and the state to ten peremptory challenges.” The failure to grant a defendant the prescribed number of peremptory challenges when the record reflects his desire to excuse a juror before whom he was tried is reversible error.
(People
v.
Diaz
(1951)
He first points out that under the charge of forcible rape he was punishable by, and in fact was sentenced to, imprisonment in the state prison for a term of not less than three years (Pen. Code, § 264), which under the provisions of section 671 of the Penal Code subjected and subjects him to a maximum term of imprisonment in the state prison for life.
(People
v.
Bales
(1961)
The question presented by the sentences for the principal offenses—not less than three years for rape (Pen. Code, § 264) or not less than five years, or one year, for robbery (Pen. Code, § 213) came before the court in
People
v.
Clough
(1881)
Defendant seeks to avoid the ruling of the foregoing line of cases because they were decided when the provisions of section 671 of the Penal Code read as follows: “Whenever any person is declared punishable for a crime by imprisonment in the state prison for a term not less than any specified number of years, and no limit to the duration of such imprisonment is declared, the court authorized to pronounce judgment upon such conviction may, in its discretion, sentence such offender to imprisonment during his natural life, or for any number of years not less than prescribed. ’ ’ (As enacted 1872 and until amended Stats. 1951, ch. 1674, § 1, p. 3830.) He also points out that those cases arose before the passage of provisions providing for indeterminate sentences to be fixed administratively. (Stats. 1917, ch. 527, p. 665; Pen. Code, §§ 1168 and 3020-3025; see
People
v.
Gonzales
(1918)
“We can see no merit in the claim that the law does not prescribe the maximum penalty for the crime of robbery. The maximum penalty ‘prescribed by the law’ is the extreme penalty that the law authorizes to be imposed—that is, life imprisonment in the present case, as we have seen.
“The two sections of the Penal Code may be read together and they amount to this: ‘Robbery is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison not less than one year and it may be for life. ’ ” (
This interpretation is not necessarily inconsistent with the authorities which hold that a prisoner who may receive a maximum punishment of a life sentence may be treated as undergoing such until a sentence is fixed at a lesser term (Harmon and Larsen, supra), or cases which hold that a conviction which subjects the offender to a possible life sentence carries the possibility of greater punishment than one with a fixed term, and the latter must therefore yield to the former if double punishment would violate the provisions of section 654 of the Penal Code. (Bales, Collins and Aldridge, supra.)
In
People
v.
Ralph
(1944)
The precept that each reference to life imprisonment must
*615
be interpreted in its own content, is further exemplified by the principle that the provisions of section 669 of the Penal Code do not preclude the sentencing court from making an indeterminate sentence which may carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment consecutive to another sentence.
(In re Quinn
(1945)
Quinn
recites that: “There is no merit in petitioner’s contention. Certainly an indeterminate sentence without a fixed maximum is regarded for certain purposes as having the effect of a life sentence until and unless the prison term board has acted and fixed a term for years.
(People
v.
Ralph
(1944)
Kostal establishes that an indeterminate sentence with a maximum term of life imprisonment did not become “life imprisonment” within the meaning of section 669 because of the amendments to section 671 of the Penal Code in 1951 (Stats. 1951, ch. 1674, p. 3829) which recast it to read: “Whenever any person is declared punishable for a crime by imprisonment in the state prison for a term not less than any specified number of years, and no limit to the duration of such imprisonment is declared, punishment of such offender shall be imprisonment during his natural life subject to the provisions of Part 3 of this code. ’ ’
It is concluded that the right to 20 peremptory chai
*616
lenges is not available where the punishment for the offense charged is an indeterminate sentence which may be fixed at less than a life term. As stated in
Sullivan, supra:
“The construction thus given to the section [§ 1070] was made . . . years ago; and as the legislature has not seen fit to make a change in the statute, we do not feel authorized to recede from the construction then given.” (
There remains for consideration the contention that the possibility of punishment as an habitual criminal establishes that the defendant is entitled to the 20 peremptory challenges. As originally presented to this court the record reflected the separate convictions for robbery and kidnapping referred to above, and defendant’s admission that he had served a term of imprisonment for each in the state prison. From the different dates in the amended information it was apparently assumed by all concerned with the appeal 3 that defendant not only had been “previously twice convicted upon charges separately brought and tried ’ ’ within the provisions of section 644, subdivision (a), of the Penal Code, but also, as recited therein, had “served separate terms therefor in . . . [the] state prison.” It was therefore concluded that as he stood trial for a third felony of a class described therein he was subject, if found guilty, to “imprisonment in the state prison for life” as prescribed by that section.
Following the granting of petitions for rehearing in this matter the respondent lodged with this court certified copies of abstracts of judgment which reflect that the terms served for the aforementioned convictions of robbery and kidnapping were expressly made concurrent (the sentence for the former offense was imposed, following revocation of probation, at the same time as that for the latter offense), and a certified copy of the sentence data maintained by the Department of Corrections which reflects that in 1963 his terms were fixed at seven years each to run concurrently, and that he was subsequently paroled the same year. Judicial notice may be taken of the foregoing records. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1875, subd. 3;
People
v.
Rojas
(1962)
Attention is therefore directed to the question of whether or not defendant in fact was subject to “imprisonment in the state prison for life” under the provisions of Penal Code section 644, subdivision (a), at the time the jury was selected for his trial on the charges which are the subject of these proceedings. The availability of the sentence data on the prior charges makes it unnecessary to consider whether the allegations of the amended information would fail to sustain sentencing as an habitual criminal because of a lack of allega
*618
tions of “separate terms.” (See
People
v.
Propp
(1965)
Defendant has further requested us to take judicial notice that as a condition of probation on the earlier prior conviction, he was ordered to spend 12 months in the county jail. Jail time cannot be considered as a term served under section 644.
(In re Wolfson
(1947)
Prom the foregoing it is clear that defendant at the time the jury was impaneled was not subject to possible “imprisonment in the state prison for life” under the provisions of section 644, subdivision (a), of the Penal Code, if convicted of either or both of the charges of which he stood accused. It is therefore unnecessary to determine whether such a status would entitle him to 20 peremptory challenges, or whether or not he waived any right to assert this contention by failure to assert it in the lower court.
Defendant attempted to exercise an eleventh peremptory challenge in spite of the fact that prior to the exercise of
*619
his last previous challenge the court had advised him it was his last. He thereupon found himself, on the denial of that challenge, with a juror who may have been unfavorably influenced by the challenge. (See
People
v.
Diaz, supra,
These facts might be used to show possible prejudice if error had been committed in denying an authorized peremptory challenge. (See Const., art. VI, §
4½;
but cf.
People
v.
Diaz, supra,
There was no error in connection with the impanelment of the jury.
Alleged Errors in the Admission of Evidence
Appellant states, ‘ The trial court erred in admitting against appellant evidence illegally obtained and illegally searched.”
(A) It is first alleged that defendant was arrested without probable cause.
The evidence reflects that following a report by the victim, a description was broadcast. An officer of the Richmond Police Department saw defendant, who answered the description, and another man walking on a street in the neighborhood. He asked the defendant for identification and detained him until another officer who had interviewed the victim could arrive. When the latter came on the scene, he asked the defendant to show his money. It included 14 pennies which were the same number of pennies which the victim had reported had been taken from her. The defendant was requested to accompany the officers to confront the complainant.
*620
The trial court heard testimony out of the presence of the jury
4
and concluded that the arrest was legal whether made before or after he was identified. Defendant contends that the circumstances are similar to those in which it has been found an arrest occurred with the primary detention (see
People
v.
Gibson
(1963)
*621
In any event, it appears that the officers were doing no more than has been suggested by our Supreme Court.
(People
v.
Mickelson (1963) 59
Cal.2d 448, 454 [
For the foregoing reasons it cannot be said that his subsequent identification by the victim on that evening, and at a subsequent lineup, or the use of tests disclosing seminal stains on the' shorts taken from him after his arrest, were the product of an illegal arrest. (Cf.
Mapp
v.
Ohio
(1961)
(B) Secondly, it is contended that evidence of his confrontation with the complainant was improper because defendant was not represented by counsel or advised of his right thereto. (See
Gideon
v.
Wainwright
(1963)
(C) He further asserts that his underwear was illegally seized, and that in any event it should not have been subjected to tests without a search warrant.
The seizure of the underwear, in view of the nature of the offense charged, was justified as would be the seizure of a blood-stained shirt tending to connect a person with an offense in which blood had flowed. (See
People
v.
Teale
(1965)
Defendant relies upon
United States
v.
Lefkowitz
(1932)
The evidence having been legally seized its subsequent examination and analysis does not offend any constitutional principles.
Preston
v.
United States, supra,
It is concluded that there was no error in the receipt of the evidence referred to in the foregoing.
Alleged Errors in the Instructions
(A) Defendant would predicate error on the reading of an instruction, admittedly correct, concerning the effect of defendant’s prior felony convictions on his credibility, separate and apart from other instructions concerning credibility. He asserts that undue emphasis and weight thereby were given to those prior convictions. The court did instruct the jury that they were “not to single out any certain sentence, or any individual point or instruction, and ignore the others, but you are to consider all the instructions and as a whole, and to regard each in the light of all the others.” (See CALJIC No. 5.) It is presumed that the jury followed this instruction.
(People
v.
Robles
(1962)
(B) A former victim of the defendant testified that about five years earlier he had attempted to rape her under circumstances and in a manner which were similar to those under consideration. Defendant offered an instruction setting forth six purposes for which evidence of another offense could be considered. (CALJIC No. 33.) The court’s instructions only referred to consideration for one of these purposes— plan, scheme, or design. Defendant refers to
People
v.
Lindsay
(1964)
(C) The court gave the standard cautionary instruction concerning the evidence of a prosecutrix in a rape case. (See
People
v.
Nye
(1951)
Alleged Misconduct of the Prosecutrix
(A) At the conclusion of the closing argument the deputy district attorney stated: ‘1 The Judge, I believe, will tell you that the matter of penalty has no place in your deliberations in this case. And, I would urge you, please, to disregard any question of what may happen to this D. iendant —in the event that you should, please God, convict him. And, I say this sincerely, Ladies and Gentlemen. Take this man off our streets.” Defendant asserted, “Your Honor, that’s á very prejudicial statement, and has no place in this courtroom,” and the court commented: “She has the right to make this argument. Go ahead,...”
Defendant asserts that the comment was improper because it implied that defendant would rape again if acquitted (see
People
v.
Whitehead
(1957)
(B) In the course of her closing argument the attorney for the People addressed herself to the defendant’s contention that the victim, who admittedly had been drinking during the course of the evening, was too intoxicated to recognize her attacker and subsequently identify the defendant as such. After commenting on some of the evidence bearing upon her sobriety, or lack of it, the attorney stated: “She couldn’t identify him.—She was too intoxicated.—This has to be a wrong identification.' This is really the meat of this case—the heart of this case, Ladies and Gentlemen. Now, I have never been subjected to a situation like this, which Mrs. Igo had referred to—but I would think that the spectre of this man, forcing himself into my car and on top of me, would sober me up so fast—the adrenalin in my system would completely compensate for whatever alcohol was in it—the fear. And, you can use your common sense as to whether or not this could happen.” Defendant, despite lack of objection below, contends that the foregoing, with the exclusion of the last sentence, assumes facts not in evidence, was an improper statement of the personal opinion of the prosecuting attorney,
*626
and by virtue of her sex and personal identification with the example given, was an appeal to the passion and sympathy of the jury. (See
People
v.
Whitehead, supra,
There was no evidence in this case concerning the effect of fear upon a person’s sobriety either with or without a reaction of the adrenalin in the system. Nevertheless the argument that fear may have an effect on the perception of one whose senses were otherwise dulled by alcohol does not appear to pass the bounds of common understanding. Insofar as it was made personal, the attorney did not profess knowledge, but rather lack of such an experience. The use of the first person really refers to a hypothetical intoxicated woman in the victim’s situation. The attorney’s sex permitted a personal reference, rather than a more discreet use of the third person as would have been required in the use of the same example by a male prosecutor. Nevertheless any alleged appeal to passion or prejudice from this incident is no greater than that inherent in entrusting the prosecution of an offense of this nature to an attorney of the same sex as the victim. To find error in such practice would necessitate depriving women of the rightful place they have earned for themselves in the professions through years of struggle. There is nothing unfair or prejudicial in the argument made, and the appeal to the jurors to use their common sense demonstrates a lack of intention to inflame or prejudice their minds. “The prosecutor has a wide range in which to state his views as to what the evidence shows and as to conclusions to be drawn therefrom.’’
(People
v.
Burwell
(1955)
There was no error in the remarks of the prosecuting attorney.
The judgment is affirmed.
Sullivan, P. J., and Molinari, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 15, 1965, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December 15, 1965.
Notes
The record reflects: “Mb. Larson [attorney for defendant]: One minute, Your Honor—the Defendant would like to exercise a challenge and excuse Mr. Blodgett. The Court : On what grounds ? Mb. Larson : Peremptorily, Your Honor. The Court: What grounds? Mb. Larson: On the ground that we have twenty (20) challenges and we have used ten (10). The Court: The Court will find that you are entitled to ten (10) and you have used ten (10)—and will disregard the challenge. The Clerk will swear the jury. Mr. Larson: I should also object to the swearing of the jury at this time, Your Honor. The Court: The record will note your objection, Mr. Larson. Mr. Larson: Thank you.”
This rule appears to be limited to California. It is stated generally: “Where the right is given in the ease of trials for offenses punishable in a certain manner, the right exists if the offenses charged may be so punished, although the ease is one where the court may impose a lighter punishment” (50 C.J.S. Juries, § 280 c.(1), fn. 27, p. 1070); and “. . . [an] accused is entitled to the number of challenges corresponding to the greatest punishment that may be imposed for the offense charged”
(id.
§281 b. (2), fn. 89, pp. 1071, 1075; see also
Dull
v.
People
(N.Y. 1847)
The record does not reflect that this question was presented by defendant’s request for an additional peremptory challenge, or otherwise raised or considered by the trial court. It cannot be ascertained therefrom whether defendant’s request was based on (1) the maximum life sentence for each of the offenses charged, (2) the possibility of a life sentence as an habitual criminal, or (3) the contention that he was entitled to 10 challenges on each count, or (4) any combination of the foregoing.
The officer testified: “A. I asked him would he come with me to Seventh and Macdonald for identification. At first he hesitated, and then— Q. Why? A. Well, he stated that he didn’t want to get into the police vehicle—because the last time he had been in he had stayed in jail for three (3) days or so. Q. All right, and what did you tell him then, Officer? A. I informed him that if he didn’t do anything that he wouldn’t have anything to worry about, and that if he wasn’t responsible then he wouldn’t be detained any longer. Q. And, what did he say then? A. He said ‘Well, let’s go,’ and he got into the police vehicle.” ... ‘‘I asked him would he come down to Sixth and Macdonald for identification purposes. Q. And, did he do so? A. At first he hesitated—and then he did.”
Subsequently the defendant testified as follows: ‘‘Q. And, then he told you that you would not be detained if this lady didn’t identify yoii, isn’t that right, Mr. Shaw? A. Not exactly like that. Q. Well,'it was the general meaning, that they couldn’t keep you if she said that you weren’t the man. A. I’m not going to—I couldn’t accept that as the general meaning. The Court: Well, tell us, what did he say? The Witness: Because the way that the man spoke to me—it was more so a threat to come along, as it were—an order. I didn’t have no other choice. Miss Snyder: Q. You did go along? A. Yes, I went along.”
On rebuttal a second officer testified: ‘ ‘ Q. I ’ll ask you, Officer, whether or not the defendant, in response to a suggestion that he go to the scene where the victim was to identify him or not—that after he had been told that he could be released if he were not identified—I’ll ask you whether or not he didn’t say ‘Hell, let’s get up there?’ A. I don’t remember the exact words, but he was insisting on going up there—because he wanted to be released then. Q. And, did he state further at that time ‘Remember, if she doesn’t identify me—I get to go?’ A. Words to that effect, yes. ’ ’
