64 Cal. 380 | Cal. | 1883
1. We cannot say the court below abused its
2. Nor did the court err in denying defendants’ motion to dismiss the information. On motion of defendant an information may be set aside if it be not signed by the district attorney, or if, before the filing thereof, the defendant was not legally committed by a magistrate. (Pen. Code, § 995.) In the case at bar, the information was subscribed by the district attorney of the county, and the transcript does not show but that the defendants were legally committed by a magistrate.
3. The court properly disallowed defendants’ challenge to the panel of jurors. There was no material departure from the forms prescribed for the drawing and return of juries. (Pen. Code, § 1059.)
4. 5, 6, 7. We think the testimony of the witness Witt as to the manner and conduct of defendant Shem Ah Fook, and the -witness’ statement that another person spoke of the peculiarity of defendant’s manner at the time, was 'admissible. Nor was the testimony of the constable, Meade, as to defendants’ manner and conduct when he arrested them, inadmissible, taken in connection with' the declarations of Shem Ah Fook.
8,- 9, 10. The eighth, ninth, and tenth points of appellants are based on objections to questions of the prosecution, on the ground that they were leading questions. It was for the court below, in its wise discretion, to permit questions, leading in form.
11, 12. There was no material error in denying defendants’ motion to strike out the testimony of the witness, Millard, nor in' overruling the objection to Hubner’s testifying. As to the statements said by the witness to have been made by defendants, in the evening, in the sheriff’s office, and in the interval between the first and second day’s proceedings before the committing magistrate, liowever liable to abuse such mode of securing evidence may be, we cannot say that the statements of defendants, as testified to, were not voluntarily made. There is nothing in the transcript to indicate that the statements made by defendants to each other in their cells in the jail were not voluntary.
13. The objection to the testimony of the witness Hubner, as