Davis v. Superior Court

345 P.2d 513, 175 Cal. App. 2d 8, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1289
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1959
DocketCiv. 18759
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 345 P.2d 513 (Davis v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Superior Court, 345 P.2d 513, 175 Cal. App. 2d 8, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1289 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

TOBRINER, J.

We propose to support in more detail infra the following conclusions as to Davis’s petition for writ of prohibition to restrain the superior court from proceeding further upon the indictment returned against him. The indictment charges a conspiracy to pervert and obstruct justice and the due administration of the law and to cheat and defraud the State of California of property by means of violation of section 4570 of the Penal Code in taking a manuscript out of San Quentin without permission of the warden and by means of such acts to sell and distribute the book. The charge of conspiracy to obstruct justice and to cheat and defraud the state cannot be applied in its full sweep under Penal Code, section 182 subdivision 5. If we narrow down the indictment to a conspiracy under subdivision 1 or 5 of that section to violate section 4570 of the Penal Code, it will stand. Section 4570 is constitutional and the statute of limitations would not bar this prosecution for a conspiracy to violate it. But, in this proceeding, the facts presented the grand jury fail to induce a reasonable probability that the crime as thus defined was committed by petitioner, and the writ should issue.

The proceedings devolve from the writing, removal from prison and publication of a book, “The Face of Justice,” by Caryl Chessman, an inmate of California State Prison at San Quentin. All issues in this case flow from the fact that the Warden of San Quentin apparently prohibited this particular inmate from writing manuscripts for publication. The record gives no reason for this ruling, and the only reference to the ruling itself is the testimony of Associate Warden Louis S. Nelson that he was “present” when Chessman was “notified” of an “order . . . forbidding him to write for publication.”

Chessman violated the order and wrote the book. The annals of the case do not tell when he wrote it; we know only it must *12 have been finally completed after January 18, 1957, since it embodies a reference to an editorial in the San Francisco News bearing that date.

Petitioner Davis, one of Chessman’s attorneys, received the manuscript through the mail, although the prison officials granted no permission to take it out. The record supplies a reason for its receipt by Davis, although the superior court struck from the grand jury transcript the evidence which offers it. The stricken evidence consisted of a written contract by which Davis agreed to render legal services to Chessman, who, in lieu of a fee, agreed to “author, prepare and deliver to George T. Davis within one year from the date of this agreement, a book-length manuscript in, among other things, the nature of a biography pertaining to and covering the legal and personal career of George T. Davis.”

Davis probably received the manuscript sometime in the holiday season of 1956-1957 since at that approximate time he left it temporarily for review with San Francisco newspaper columnists Dorothy and Ted Friend. The inclusion in the book of the reference to the News editorial of January 18, 1957, raises a doubt as to the identity of the manuscript which Davis received, but the grand jury apparently resolved this doubt against Davis. Chessman’s fingerprints and signature at least authenticate the fact that the document in Davis’s hands was an original Chessman manuscript. Its contents, moreover, generally duplicated the book finally published. Not much later, on February 13, 1957, a search of Chessman’s cell afforded a carbon copy of the manuscript.

Upon discovery of the removal of the manuscript, first the warden and then the district attorney of Marin County wrote Prentice-Hall demanding its return on the ground the manuscript was the product of prison labor. Prentice-Hall refused; it published the manuscript. Offering the book for sale in California, Prentice-Hall arranged that sales be made directly from its principal place of business in New Jersey and not through its California outlet.

The printed “afterword” of the book purportedly written by petitioner Longstreth, Chessman’s literary agent for his first two books, and read to the grand jury in the form of a letter of Longstreth to Chessman, stated that Longstreth received the manuscript shortly after the warden wired him that, if he had the book, he should return it. Longstreth also acknowledged receipt of a demand by the assistant attorney *13 general of California to return the book. Longstreth wrote, too, that he delivered the manuscript to Prentice-Hall, and that he negotiated as to its publication with various parties including Davis.

The writing, removal, and publication of “The Face of Justice” produced, on December 2, 1958, the indictment of the three petitioners, George T. Davis, Joseph Longstreth, and Prentice-Hall, Inc. The grand jury of the county of Marin accused them under section 182 of the Penal Code of the crime of conspiracy “to pervert and obstruct justice and the due administration of the law and to cheat and defraud the State of California and the Department of Corrections thereof of property by means which are in themselves criminal, and to commit a crime, to wit: Violation of section 4570 of the Penal Code of the State of California, by causing, encouraging, aiding and abetting a person, without the permission of the Warden of San Quentin State Prison, to take and by taking from said San Quentin State Prison, and from a prisoner confined therein, a writing, to wit: the original manuscript of a book entitled ‘The Face of Justice,' authored by an inmate of said State Prison, to wit: the said Caryl Chessman, and by means of the foregoing unlawful acts to publish, sell and distribute said book within the County of Marin, State of California, and elsewhere. ’ ’

The overt acts alleged in the indictment are: (1) the writing of the book by Chessman; (2) removal of the original manuscript from the prison; (3) exhibition by Davis to Miss Asher of the original manuscript; (4) exhibition by Davis of the manuscript to Mr. and Mrs. Friend; (5) delivery of the manuscript outside of California by Davis to Longstreth; (6) delivery of the manuscript outside of California by Longstreth to Prentice-Hall after demand for return of the book had been made to Longstreth by the warden,- and (7) publication and distribution of the book by Prentice-Hall.

Petitioners filed motions to dismiss the indictment on the grounds that (1) the alleged violation was barred by the statute of limitations, (2) sections 182 and 4570 of the Penal Code were unconstitutional, and (3) the transcript before the grand jury did not contain competent evidence. Upon denial of these motions petitioners filed petitions for writs of prohibition in this court, requesting that the superior court be restrained from any further proceedings in this matter.

We begin with the problem of the extent to which *14 Penal Code, section 182 subdivision 5 may be constitutionally invoked to support such an indictment as the instant one.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
345 P.2d 513, 175 Cal. App. 2d 8, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-superior-court-calctapp-1959.