THE PEOPLE, Respondent, v. AL TRIPPELL, Appellant.
Crim. No. 2969
Second Appellate District, Division Two
April 16, 1937
20 Cal. App. 2d 386
U. S. Webb, Attorney-General, and Paul D. McCormick, Deputy Attorney-General, for Respondent.
CRAIL, P. J.—This is an appeal from an order denying a motion after judgment to determine the sanity or insanity of defendant and to halt the punishment provided by the judgment until his sanity was restored. The motion was brought under
As long ago as the year 1934 the defendant, a former deputy district attorney, was accused by information of the crime of violation of
The defendant relies upon that part of
The attorney-general contends that this section must be read in connection with
The question is a rare one and we go to a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, decided in 1897, for a statement of the common law under such a situation. In the case of Nobles v. State of Georgia, 168 U. S. 398 [18 Sup. Ct. 87, 42 L. Ed. 515], the same question came before that court upon the contention of a defendant who had been convicted of murder that under somewhat similar circumstances he was entitled to a jury trial as a matter of right and that having been denied a trial by jury there was a failure of the trial court to observe “due process of law“. After quoting at length the language of Blackstone relied upon by the defendant and after analyzing the same, the high court said: “In other words, by the common law, if, after conviction and sentence, a suggestion of insanity was made, not that the judge to whom it was made should, as a matter of right, proceed to summon a jury and have another trial, but that he should take such action as, in his discretion, he deemed best. . . . The plea at this stage is only an appeal to the humanity of the court to postpone the punishment until a recovery takes place, or as a merciful dispensation. . . . If the right of trial by jury exist at all it must exist at all times, no matter how often the plea is repeated alleging insanity occurring since the last verdict. . . . There must be a sound discretion to be exercised by the court. If a case of real doubt arise, a just judge will not fail to relieve his own conscience by submitting the fact to a jury. . . . It being demonstrated by reason and authority that at common law a suggestion, made after verdict and sentence, of insanity did not give rise to an absolute right on the part of a convict to have such issue tried before the court and to a jury, but addressed itself to the discretion of the judge, it follows that the manner in which such question should be determined was purely a matter of legislative regulation. It was therefore a subject within the control of the state of Georgia.” The court also demonstrated the obvious unsoundness of the defendant‘s contention by pointing to “the absurd conclusion” which would result from its establishment. It said: “If it were true that at common law a suggestion of insanity after sentence created on the part of a convict an
It will be further observed that the order of the court was not a denial to the defendant of a trial by jury after doubt had arisen as to his sanity, but was merely a denial by the court that it had a doubt of the defendant‘s sanity. We are of the view that the court did not abuse its discretion in the matter. We have set forth above the numerous delays obtained by the defendant and the numerous times he came before the court. During these times the court may well have exercised its own powers of observation as to the defendant‘s sanity. All presumptions are in favor of the order. It is a fair presumption that the court denied the motion for the reason that no doubt as to the defendant‘s sanity had been created in its mind.
Finally, it must be remembered that the defendant is not being punished while he is incarcerated in the county jail. The only purpose in retaining defendant in the county jail at this time is to guard against his escape and to insure his custody for delivery to punishment. (Ex parte Ahumada, 93 Cal. App. 152 [269 Pac. 181].) Neither will the defendant be subject to punishment while he is being delivered to the state penitentiary. It is the fact of actual imprisonment which constitutes punishment. (Ex parte Williams, 87 Cal. 78 [24 Pac. 602, 25 Pac. 248].) “The term of imprisonment fixed by the judgment in a criminal action commences to run only upon the actual delivery of the defendant at the place of imprisonment . . . ” (
Order affirmed.
McComb, J., concurred.
