165 P.2d 720 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1917
This is an action in which defendants were accused, by information laid in Sacramento County, of the crime of libel, as follows: "That the said E. K. Wakao and M. Ishihashi on the __ day of December, 1915, in the County of Sacramento, in the said State of California, and before the filing of this information, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and maliciously and with intent thereby to injury (injure?) and defame one Risaburo Hattori and to impeach his honesty and integrity and virtue and reputation and to expose him, the said Risaburo Hattori, to public hatred and contempt and ridicule, did compose, print, and publish in a certain newspaper called 'The Central California Times,' printed and published in the County of Fresno, State of *455 California, and circulated therein and which said newspaper was then and there circulated and published in the County of Sacramento, State of California, certain false, scandalous, malicious, defamatory and libelous words of, and concerning the said Risaburo Hattori, in the Japanese language, as follows, to wit: [Then follows a photographic copy of the newspaper article and its alleged translation.] Contrary to the form, force and effect of the statute," etc.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged. Defendants moved for a new trial on statutory grounds, and also moved in arrest of judgment on the ground that the court "has not and never had any jurisdiction of the offense charged in the information." The motions were denied, whereupon defendants were sentenced to imprisonment for the period of one year each in the county jail. They appeal from the judgment and order denying their motion for a new trial.
The principal point now urged for a reversal of the judgment is that the court was without jurisdiction, and the contention is based upon the failure of the information to allege that Hattori, the person alleged to have been libeled, resided in Sacramento County at the time said newspaper was circulated therein.
Section 9 of article I of the constitution of the state provides that in all criminal prosecutions for libels, "indictments found, or information laid, for publication in newspapers shall be tried in the county where such newspapers have their publication office, or in the county where the party alleged to be libeled resided at the time of the alleged publication, unless the place of trial shall be changed for good cause."
The interpretation put upon this provision of the constitution by the attorney-general is that "it was intended to give defendant a defense in the event the offense was prosecuted in any other county than Fresno or Sacramento"; that it "does not prescribe a rule of pleading, but merely shows a rule of defense," and hence it was not necessary to allege in the information that Hattori, the person libeled, was, at the time the libel was circulated in Sacramento County, a resident therein. If this be true, it would be equally true that had the information been laid in Fresno County it would not have been necessary to allege that the newspaper mentioned had its "publication office" in that county. That is to say — the information charging the publication of the offensive article *456 to have been made in a newspaper in the county where the information is laid need not state that the newspaper had its publication office in that county; nor, if the information is laid in another county, need it state that the complainant resided in such county. We cannot assent that an information constructed on such interpretation of the constitution would be sufficient.
Under the constitution of 1849 such prosecutions could be made in any county in the state where the newspaper was circulated. It was said in Older v. Superior Court,
Venue means place of trial and place of trial means the jurisdiction of the court which, in the present case, is limited by the constitution to one of the two counties mentioned therein. The libelous article may be circulated in every other county in the state, but the superior court has no jurisdiction to bring the offender to trial in any of these counties, for the reason that the constitution has declared that jurisdiction resides only in the two counties specified. It seems to us that to confer this jurisdiction it is essential that the particular facts upon which it depends should be alleged.
It is a well-settled principle of law that the information or indictment must allege that the offense was committed within the jurisdiction of the court. (People v. Wong Wang,
In Henderson v. Palmer Union Oil Co.,
The rule of pleading in criminal law should not be less exacting. It was held in People v. Cohen,
In People v. Terrill,
There are three cases reported in which the prosecution was at the residence of the complainant: In re Kowalsky,
According to the theory of the prosecution the information would be sufficient if silent as to the residence of the prosecuting witness, or the place where the newspaper has its publication office. Suppose an information thus framed were laid in a county where the publication office was not situated and where the complainant did not reside. Upon habeas corpus the defendant could not find relief against the warrant of arrest, since, on the attorney-general's theory, the information would be sufficient on its face. Defendant would be compelled to appear and answer or demur. His demurrer would not avail him for the same reason that his discharge on habeascorpus must be denied. To do the only thing open to him he must plead not guilty. Obviously, to make out a case where the information is laid in a county other than that in which the newspaper has its publication office, the prosecution must prove that the complainant resided in such county at the time the alleged newspaper article was circulated therein. It is not for the defendant to make negative proof otherwise than to controvert such fact. The fact is to be established by the prosecution as an essential element of the power of the court to try the case. Otherwise the newspaper publisher is thrown back into the midst of the evil from the consequences of which the constitution was intended to protect him. True, he could not, in the case supposed, be legally convicted, but he could be put to the expense and annoyance of submitting to compulsory appearance in a county remote from the place of publication or remote from the residence of the complainant, whereas, if defendants' position be sound, as we think it is, he can have present and speedy relief by habeas corpus and the prosecution would be forced to seek the forum which the constitution has provided.
The district attorney is presumed to know the residence of the complaining witness. The defendant is not charged with such knowledge. The fact, as we have said, is essential to jurisdiction. Upon every principle or pleading this jurisdictional fact should be stated in the information. *459
Other questions are presented by the record, but as they may not arise, should there be a new trial, we refrain from noticing them.
The judgment and order are reversed.
Hart, J., and Burnett, J., concurred.