214 P. 462 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1923
The defendant was, by information filed in the superior court of the county of Nevada, jointly charged with Segundio Rodriguez, Vincent Alvarez, and Albert Greenwald with the crime of conspiracy, under section
The jury found him guilty as charged and he appeals from the judgment and the order denying him a new trial.
The information as originally filed alleged that the parties just named and the defendant, on or about the sixteenth day of March, 1922, in the county of Nevada, "unlawfully and feloniously did conspire and agree . . . to commit the crime of burglary, to-wit: by then and there feloniously to burglarize the office of the North Star Mines Company, . . ., and the said Silbelo, in pursuance and furtherance of said conspiracy and toeffect the object thereof, did attempt to pick the lock of thedoor of the office of the said North Star Mines Company toenter and consummate the purposes of said conspiracy," etc.
Subsequently to the trial and conviction of the defendant's co-conspirator, Segundio Rodriguez, in whose case an opinion by this court upholding the result arrived at in the court below has this day been filed, and after the defendant had entered his plea to the information as originally filed, the court allowed the district attorney, upon motion, to amend the information by striking out the words above italicized and inserting in lieu thereof the following:
". . . and that on said 16th day of March, A.D. 1922, at and in the County of Nevada, . . ., the said C. Silbelo, in execution of said last mentioned premises, and in pursuance and furtherance of said conspiracy, combination, confederation and agreement with Vincent Alvarez, Segundio Rodriguez and Albert Greenwald, and to effect the object thereof, did attempt to unlawfully, feloniously and burglariously enter said building, to-wit, said office of the North Star Mines Company, . . ., with the intent then and there to commit the crime of grand larceny, a felony," etc.
The action of the court in permitting the information to be amended as indicated presents the first point submitted here for decision.
The authority for the amendment of indictments and informations is to be found in section
There is no record here of a motion to set aside the information (Pen. Code, sec.
[1] Nor does the information, as amended, state a different offense from that set forth therein as the same was originally filed. The information, as amended, as it did prior to the amendment or as it was originally filed, charges that Silbelo and his confederates entered into and formed a conspiracy to burglarize the office of the North Star Mines Company and in pursuance of said conspiracy attempted to enter said office. The amendment merely relates to or affects the allegation as to the means alleged in the information, as it was originally filed, as having been employed by the conspirators to commit the overt act or attempt to effect an entrance into the office. (See People v. Rodriguez, ante, p. 69 [
[2] But it is vigorously contended that the information as amended is defective in that it does not correspond with the requirements of subdivision 2 of section
The facts of this case are substantially the same as those brought out in the case of People v. Segundio Rodriguez, ante,
p. 69 [
[3] In this case it is stated that the reason that no special instructions were requested in the cases of Segundio Rodriguez and the defendant here was because "it had not developed to a moral certainty that the alleged co-conspirator, Albert Greenwald, would not be also brought to trial; . . .; that the jury were led to believe that it was the theory of the prosecution that Greenwald was a real conspirator and would be prosecuted." We do not understand the purport of the argument thus essayed. It would seem obvious that it could make no difference what the intention of the district attorney was as to the disposition that was to be made of the case against Greenwald. The nature of the "special instructions" which defendant would have proposed had it been known to his counsel that Greenwald was not to be prosecuted is not indicated in the briefs. An instruction, however, based on section
The charge of the court in this case, except in a few immaterial particulars, was the same as that given in the case of Rodriguez. The criticisms of the instructions given herein are the same as those aimed at the charge of the *98 court in the Rodriguez case. There is, therefore, no necessity for reviewing in this opinion these assignments.
The same may be said as to the instructions proposed by the defendant and rejected by the court. With one or two exceptions the refused instructions are the same as those offered by the defendant and rejected by the court in the Rodriguez case. In the opinion in that case we have disposed of these assignments and it is not necessary to review them herein. The principles sought to be stated in all the rejected instructions in this case, including the one or two added to those offered and refused in the Rodriguez case, were covered by the charge of the court.
For the foregoing reasons, and upon the authority of the case of People v. Rodriguez, ante, p. 69 [
Finch, P. J., and Burnett, J., concurred.