115 Cal. 57 | Cal. | 1896
Lead Opinion
The defendant was prosecuted upon an information for the crime of rape, alleged to have been committed at the county of Ventura, on September 28, 1895, upon the person of Sena Crane, a female under the age of fourteen years, was found guilty by the jury, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the state’s prison for the term of seven years. From that judgment, and
The information upon which he was tried was filed in the superior court on March 9, 1896, and the depositions, transcript, and order of commitment were not returned to the superior court by the examining magistrate until March 10, 1896.
Upon his arraignment, the defendant moved to set aside the information, upon the ground that it was filed before any commitment, deposition, or other record showing that he had had a preliminary examination, had been returned or filed in said court, and upon the further ground that no order of commitment was indorsed upon the depositions afterward returned. Said motion was denied, and- the defendant excepted.
Good practice requires that the return of the examining magistrate should be made and filed before the information is filed, but we are not prepared to say that the filing of the information, after the examination was had, and the order holding the defendant to answer was in fact made, was more than an irregularity which would not justify a reversal of the judgment where it does not appear that it affected any substantial right of the defendant. Section 1258 of the Penal Code provides: “After hearing the appeal, the court must give judgment without regard to technical errors or defects) or to exceptions, which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties.”
Section 995 of the Penal Code specifies two grounds upon which an information must be set aside upon the defendant’s motion: “ 1. That before the filing thereof the defendant had not been legally committed by a magistrate; 2. That it was not subscribed by the district attorney of the county.”
The question arising under the first subdivision above stated is, When is the defendant legally committed? We think that occurs when the magistrate has acted judicially, and has made and signed the order of commitment. His judicial functions then cease, and the return
In People v. Wallace, 94 Cal. 499, it was said: “ It is doubtless true that the order holding to answer must be in writing; but when, as a result of an examination, such an order has in fact been made and entered upon the docket of the justice, it would seem that no further action on his part is necessary to authorize the district attorney to file an information against the defendant for the offense named in the order.”
In that case—as in the case at bar—the order holding the defendant to answer before the superior court was entered upon the justice’s docket, but was not indorsed upon the complaint or depositions.
It was also specified as an additional ground of said motion that the defendant was not accorded his right to a public examination before the magistrate, because the examination was held with closed doors, all persons being excluded except the defendant, his attorneys, the prosecuting attorney, the reporter, and the witness under examination. The order of exclusion was made at defendant’s request.
Section 868 of the Penal Code provides: “ The magistrate must, also, upon the request of the defendant, exclude from the examination every person except his clerk, the prosecutor, and his counsel, the attorney general, the district attorney of the county, the defendant and his counsel, and the officer .having the defendant in custody.”
It is argued, however, that the defendant had no power to waive the provisions of section 13, of article I, of the constitution, which provides: “ In criminal prosecutions, in any court whatever, the party accused shall have the right to a speedy and public trial.”
In People v. Swafford, 65 Cal. 223, an order of exclusion was sustained; the record being silent, it was assumed that the defendant assented to or demanded the order. That cause was reviewed and materially qualified in People v. Hartman, 103 Cal. 245, 42 Am. St. Rep.
Appellant further contends that the court erred in receiving the testimony of Frank Hobart, the committing magistrate, touching statements alleged to have been made by the defendant after his arrest and before his examination. The objection to this testimony was that the corpus delicti had not been shown at the time it was received, or at all.
The testimony of the medical witness was that on March 6,1896, he made an examination of Sena Crane, that he believed her to be then pregnant, and that she was then advanced in pregnancy about four and one-half months; and it was shown by the testimony of her father and mother that she became fourteen years of age on February 3, 1896. As the pregnancy had its inception before she had attained the age of consent, the fact that the crime of rape had been committed by some one was shown, and defendant’s objection was therefore not well taken. Proof of the corpus delicti need not in any manner connect the defendant with its commission.
It is specified, among the grounds of defendant’s motion for a new trial, that the verdict is contrary to the evidence in several particulars: 1. That it was not shown that the offense was committed within the county of Ventura; 2. That it was not shown that Sena was not the wife of the defendant at the time of the commission of the alleged offense; 3. That it was not shown that the defendant committed the alleged offense.
The only evidence that a rape had been committed upon the person of Sena Crane was the, fact of her pregnancy; and the only evidence, aside from the alleged admission of defendant testified to by the examining magistrate, tending to connect the defendant with its commission was the fact that for about a year he had been in partnership with Sena’s father in the butchering business; that during that time he lived with Crane’s family, which consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Crane and their six children and Mrs. Crane’s father; that Sena sometimes rode with the defendant on the wagon used in his business, and sometimes attended social gatherings with the defendant, but no act of impropriety was at any time discovered in defendant’s conduct. Thus far the evidence only showed a possible opportunity for the commission of the offense by the defendant, but did not exclude similar opportunities by others.
If the evidence had stopped there it is clear that there could have been no conviction, for the opportunity to commit an offense can have no weight, apart from other circumstances, unless it excludes all reasonable opportunity for its commission by another, and, standing alone, is insufficient to sustain a conviction.
In this state of the evidence the prosecution called Frank Hobart, the justice of the peace before whom the defendant was brought upon being arrested, and asked him whether the defendant made any statements to him, and the witness replied as follows: “He wanted to know if I could give him an order to see the girl. I told him no. He said if the girl went back on him he would have to take his medicine; there was no use denying it. And just what one he used to qualify, just what he meant, is more than I can remember—whether it was to deny the case, deny the charge, deny the act, or what the word was.” The district attorney: “ State what was
The constable, Frank Tryce, was present during said conversation, and was examined by the prosecution, and testified in substance that he heard the defendant ask for an order to see the girl; that defendant said something else, but he could not state it; that the other part he could not remember “ only by Judge Hobart bringing it to my mind, speaking about it.”
Upon cross-examination he testified in substance that Hobart wanted to know if the witness understood it as he did; that they did not understand it alike; that nothing was said by the defendant with reference to his guilt or innocence; that defendant did not intimate.that he was guilty; that Hobart asked witness how lie understood the conversation with defendant, and,the witness replied, “ I told him as I understood it. Q,. What was the occasion when he said whatever he did say? A. Yes, he said something; he said he didn’t believe that the girl had sworn to that complaint until he had seen it. Q. That was the reason he wanted to see it? A. Yes, sir.” The girl, Sena, refused to be sworn, and no other evidence was given tending to show defendant’s guilt. The defendant" offered no evidence.
The testimony in chief of the witness Hobart, as well as the testimony of Tryce, shows that he, Hobart, failed to remember some material part of the defendant’s statement. He could not tell “whether it was to deny the case, deny the charge, deny the act, or what the word was.” It is well settled that the witness may testify to a part of an entire conversation, if he heard only a part, and such part appears to be complete and intelligible; but, if the witness is unable to state what he heard, and especially where the witness states that the word or the part he fails to remember was used to qualify something, or was essential to an understanding of the mean
“With respect to all verbal admissions it may be observed that they ought to be received with great caution.”' (1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 200.) “In the proof of confessions, as in the case of admissions in civil cases,, the whole of what the prisoner said on the subject at the-time of making the confession should be taken together. This rule is the dictate of reason as well as humanity.”' (1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 218.)
In People v. Gelabert, 39 Cal. 663, the alleged confession was made partly in Spanish and partly in broken English, and the witness stated that he did not understand all that the prisoner said in Spanish. He was permitted to testify to the alleged confession against defendant’s objection. Upon appeal the judgment was reversed, the court, by Wallace, J., saying: “Here it is certain that, to some extent, the witness failed to comprehend all that the prisoner said. How important the portion not understood may have been we cannot know. It might have, if correctly and fully detailed, relieved the prisoner from the serious contradiction which, as here given, it fixed upon him.”
In People v. Keith, 50 Cal. 139, it was said: “The witness, Rosenberg, testified to only a portion of the conversation in which the defendant admitted the homicide, and, standing alone, the evidence of a part of the conversation would have been inadmissible.”
No objection was made to the introduction of the evi
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted.
Searls, 0., and Britt, 0., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are reversed and a new trial granted. Henshaw, J., Temple, J.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment of reversal, although I am not as entirely clear that it is correct as I would like to be. I am the more inclined to concur because it seems likely that the jury erroneously based their verdict more upon the circumstance that neither the prosecuting witness nor the appellant testified, than upon the sufficiency of the evidence actually introduced. The girl may have refused to testify because she could not truthfully incriminate the appellant; and, as to a defendant in a criminal action, under the code, “His neglect or refusal to be a witness cannot in any manner prejudice him nor be used against him on the trial or proceeding.”