Defendant appeals from judgment of conviction after jury verdict of count I, violation of Penal Code section 261 (statutory rape); count II, violation of Penal Code section 288 (lewd and lascivious conduct with a child; count III, violation of Penal Code section 266h (pimping) ; and count IY, violation of Penal Code section 266h (pimping —different female). 1
Defendant’s motion for new trial and application for probation were denied. Sentences as to counts II, III and IY were to be served concurrently with each other; sentence as to count I was stayed pending appeal and during the serving of *494 a sentence under count II and thereafter to he stayed permanently.
Questions Presented
1. Reasonable belief that the prosecutrix Cheri was 14 years of age or older is not a defense to a charge of violation of Penal Code section 288. Moreover, no such defense was raised in the trial court.
2. The element of nonmarriage was established by circumstantial evidence.
3. There was a double conviction.
Evidence
As the only attack on the sufficiency of the evidence is limited to the matters hereinafter discussed only a brief statement of the evidence is necessary.
Cheri, a 13-year-old girl and a ward of the juvenile court, hitchhiked a ride from Hayward to Stockton with two boys. The three met one Tom and it was arranged that Cheri would prostitute herself to raise money for gas. Tom “sold” Cheri to defendant for $5. Defendant took Cheri to a hotel room where Cheri had intercourse with a “gentleman” for the price of $8, which defendant received. Defendant gave the two boys $3 of this amount. Defendant offered Cheri an apartment and clothes in return for her engaging in prostitution, but first finding out if she was “woman enough” or “capable enough to do the job” by having intercourse with her. Defendant later admitted to Ann, hereinafter mentioned, that Cheri was on the street for him.
Ann, who had several aliases, was picked up by the police in company with Cheri. Ann was 19 years of age. She first met defendant in October 1967. They had discussed her engaging in acts of prostitution. For three or four days she engaged in it for him, during which time she turned five to seven “tricks” at a price of $10 each. If she solicited the “trick” she gave the money to defendant. If he solicited it, he kept the money. She received no money whatever.
Defendant did not testify. He offered no defense to the charge of pimping for Ann. His defense to the Cheri charges was an alibi.
1. Belief of Cheri’s age.
Defendant’s only attacks on the sufficiency of the evidence relate to count I, statutory rape, and count II, violation of section 288 of the Penal Code (lewd and lascivious conduct *495 with “a child under the age of fourteen years”). As to the first offense, his only contention is the evidence did not show nomnarriage to the victim, and as to the latter offense, his only contentions are that the evidence did not show that defendant believed or had reason to believe that Oheri was under 14 years of age at the time of the acts complained of and that the jury should have been instructed that defendant could not be convicted of violation of Penal Code section 288 unless the jury found that defendant believed or had reason to believe that Cheri was 14 or over. 2 3****No evidence nor instruction was offered on this subject by defendant, and the prosecution offered no evidence that Cheri appeared older or younger than 14.
In
People
v.
Hernandez
(1964)
Moreover, we are convinced that such belief is not a defense under section 288, and that the philosophy applying to violations of that section is entirely different from that applying to violations of section 261, subdivision 1.
3
“The very refusal to distinguish between a child of tender years and an adult may be said to be characteristic of some of those who engage in the sort of conduct of which defendant has been convicted.”
*496
(People
v.
Tober
(1966)
In
People
v.
Clark
(1953)
In
Hernandez, supra,
*497 2. Nonmarriage established.
No direct evidence was introduced to show that Cheri was not married to defendant. As said in
People
v.
Meraviglia
(1925)
The case at bench was tried on the assumption that the parties were not married. Cheri was bearing her maiden name, and although the evidence did not show that Cheri was a school girl or living at home, it did disclose that she was only 13 and living with foster parents, apparently the ward of a court. The act of intercourse occurred the first afternoon she met defendant, whom she had not met before. The inferences to be deduced from the facts surrounding the meeting and the subsequent acts of the parties point positively to the nonmarriage of the parties.
The evidence fully supports defendant’s conviction on all counts.
3. Although not raised by defendant, it appears that there was a double conviction in this case, namely, violation of sections 288 and 261, subdivision 1.
Defendant’s failure on appeal to urge this double conviction does not preclude this court from considering it.
(People
v.
Fleig
(1967)
“[S]inee section 288 specifically includes acts constituting other crimes mentioned in part one of the Penal Code, a person cannot be convicted of both a. violation of section 288 and a violation of section 261, subdivision (1) for the same act.”
(People
v.
Slobodion
(1948)
As the statutory rape offense is necessarily included in the section 288 offense, it is not sufficient that the court merely stay the sentence on the statutory rape offense. The conviction as well as the sentence on it must be reversed. (See
People
v.
Tideman
(1962)
We have reviewed the order denying new trial and found no error in it. As the order is not appealable, the purported appeal therefrom is dismissed.
The judgment is reversed as to count I and the trial court is directed to set aside the sentence as to that count and dismiss it. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.
Pierce, P. J., and Regan, J,. concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 30,1969.
Notes
Retired Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
Defendant admitted three prior felony convictions.
As to his conviction of statutory rape on Cheri, defendant does not contend that an instruction on his behalf as to her age should have been given relating to that charge. Apparently he does not wish to contend that he could have been mistaken as to her not being under 18.
Ordinarily the failure to raise a defense in the trial court and to ask instructions concerning it precludes the matter being raised on appeal.
(People
v.
Greenwood
(1962)
Violation of section 228—one year to life; violation of section 261— county jail not more than one year or state prison not more than 50 years.
The trial court followed this procedure in staying sentence as to count I (statutory rape) pending appeal and during the serving of sentence under count II (§ 288) and thereafter stayed permanently.
