209 P. 248 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1922
This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment upon a verdict of a jury finding him guilty of a violation of section
The evidence presented at the trial is not included in the record presented to us upon this appeal, and appellant's contentions are, first, that the trial court erred in a certain instruction to the jury, and, second, that the defendant was prejudiced by certain alleged misconduct of the deputy district attorney in his closing argument to the jury.
[1] The first objection is to the following instruction: "You are also instructed, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, that it is the final judgment that grants the divorce and restores the parties to the status of single persons. The interlocutory judgment does not have that effect. It merely declares the right that the party is entitled to a divorce, a divorce to be afterward adjudged. It is the final judgment alone that grants the divorce, dissolves the marriage and restores the parties to the status of single persons, and permits each to marry again."
"The statute does not itself declare the marriage dissolved at the expiration of the year from the interlocutory judgment. It merely suspends for one year the power of the court to dissolve it, and, in effect, provides that it becomes dissolved only when, after the expiration of that period, the court has, by its final judgment, so declared. In the meantime, the parties remain in the relation of husband and wife."
As we have stated, the evidence is not before us and we must assume that it shows such conduct on the part of the defendant as to bring him within the provisions of said section of the Penal Code, provided he is the husband of Sarah Smith, the woman involved. It is admitted that Sarah Smith and defendant had been married and that an interlocutory decree of divorce had been entered in an action brought by her to dissolve the marriage. No final decree of divorce had ever been entered and the time at which such a decree might have been entered had not arrived when the offense charged was committed. Under such circumstances, appellant contends that Sarah Smith was not his wife within the meaning of the section of the Penal *609
Code involved here. The question is settled against his contention by the supreme court of this state in the case ofEstate of Dargie,
The instruction of which complaint is made followed the language of the last cited case and was not erroneous.
[2] The second matter urged by appellant is that the deputy district attorney was guilty of misconduct in reading to the jury the allegations of the petition for divorce which had previously been filed by Sarah Smith against the defendant and which had resulted in the interlocutory decree mentioned. The attorney for the defendant in his argument to the jury had referred, evidently, to evidence produced by the defendant at the trial relative to his industry and good character. In reply the deputy district attorney produced the record in the divorce action, which had not been offered in evidence, and read the allegations of the complaint, which included charges of idleness and abuse. He then commented upon the fact that the defendant had failed to answer this complaint and to deny the allegations therein made. The presentation to the jury of the allegations of the complaint in the divorce action as evidence against the defendant of the facts therein recited was clearly unwarranted. The record in that action was evidence against the defendant, in favor of third parties, only as to the status of the parties to said divorce action, and not as to the facts alleged in the pleadings therein. [3] The estoppel of a judgment must be mutual in order *610
to be admissible against a party to an action. In this case the state, assuredly, would not have been bound by allegations in any of the pleadings in the divorce action, and could not use the same against the defendant. (Gill v. Read,
The judgment is affirmed.
Nourse, J., and Sturtevant, J., concurred.