In Re Application of Tahbel

189 P. 804, 46 Cal. App. 755, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 719
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1920
DocketCrim. No. 713.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 189 P. 804 (In Re Application of Tahbel) 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
In Re Application of Tahbel, 189 P. 804, 46 Cal. App. 755, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 719 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

By his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the petitioner, Henry Tahbel, father of Bodo Tahbel, a boy fifteen years of age, seeks his son’s release from “Juvenile Hall,” a detention home, in the city of Los Angeles, established under the juvenile court law as a place for the confinement of delinquent minors, and to which the boy was committed for refusing to answer certain questions when a witness in the juvenile court. The boy’s refusals to answer were made upon the ground that by his answers he might incriminate himself.

On January 19, 1920, there was filed in the juvenile court for Los Angeles County a petition wherein it is charged that the minor, Bodo Tahbel, is a person defined in subdivisions 2, 4, 11, and 13 of section 1 of the “juvenile court law” (Stats. 1915, p. 1225 et seq.), and that he comes within the purview of section 1 of that act in that he has no parent or guardian willing to exercise proper parental control; that, by reason of the depravity of his parents, his home is an unfit place for him; that, by reason of the association of his parents with lewd and lascivious characters and the influence of his parents and of such characters, he is in danger of leading a lewd and immoral life; and further, that he -has violated the criminal law of *757 this state, in that he did commit perjury, as defined in section 118 of the Penal Code, and did violate section 134 of the Penal Code by preparing a false paper and instrument in writing with intent to produce it in the superior court of Los Angeles County in the trial of the case of People v. Otoman-Adusht-Zar-Ha’Nish. The petition so filed in the juvenile court against the minor sets forth in detail the acts charged against him as an alleged violator of the two above-mentioned sections of the Penal Code, and prays that he be adjudged to be a ward of the juvenile court and be dealt with as provided in the juvenile court law.

Some time prior to the presentation of this petition of January 19, 1920, to the juvenile court, another petition had been filed therein against the minor, similar in all respects to that filed January 19, 1920, except that it did not charge the minor with the commission of any crime. The proceeding so initiated by the prior petition is still pending; » though it seems that no formal judgment has as yet been entered therein adjudging the minor to be a ward of the juvenile court, the only order made in that proceeding being an order that the minor be allowed to remain in the custody of his father. He remained in his father’s custody until the court, because of his refusal to answer the questions, ordered his detention in Juvenile Hall.

The second petition, that wherein the minor is charged with the commission of felonies—violations of sections 118 and 134 of the Penal Code—was referred to a duly appointed referee of the juvenile court to take testimony concerning the charges therein made against the minor, and to make report to the juvenile court. During the course of the proceedings before the referee, the minor was sworn as a witness and asked certain questions, which, on the advice of counsel representing him, he refused to answer, upon the ground that his answers would tend to incriminate him. At the hearing before us on this habeas corpus proceeding it was agreed by counsel on both sides that the questions which the witness refused to answer were such that answers thereto would tend to incriminate him. The referee reported to the juvenile court that the minor, when a witness before her, had refused to answer the questions so propounded to him, and set forth in her report facts tending to show the materiality of the evidence sought to be *758 elicited from the minor by the questions that he refused to answer. Upon the hearing of the referee’s report, the judge of the juvenile court instructed the minor to answer the questions. The minor continuing his refusal, upon the ground that his answers might incriminate him, the juvenile court made • the following order: “It is the order of this court that said witness, Bodo Tahbel, be committed to the custody of the superintendent of Juvenile Hall until he does answer said questions.”

[1] Every person is subject to the power of the legislature to compel him in any judicial proceeding to give testimony of any fact within his knowledge and material to the issue, except in so far as the constitution restrains the exercise of this power or protects the individual from compulsory compliance with its attempted exercise. The constitution of this state has limited the extent to which the legislature may exercise its power, and has given the individual protection against its exercise by providing, in article I, section 13, that “no person shall be compelled in a criminal case to be a witness against himself.”

[2] According to one of the oldest maxims of the common law, nemo tenetur seipsum acensare, any person, whether a party or stranger to the litigation, either in a civil action or a criminal prosecution, may, if he sees fit, refuse to answer any question the answer to which, if true, will render him • punishable for crime, or which, in any degree, may tend to establish a public offense with which he might be charged. (Rapalje on Witnesses, sec. 26Í.) This principle of the common law doubtless had its birth in the abhorrence with which confessions coerced by inquisitorial torture were regarded alike in England and America. (8 R. C. L., p. 78.) Its soundness has seldom been questioned. And to-day it stands among the guaranties of personal liberty and security in all the constitutions, both of England and America.

[3] The words “criminal case,” as used in section 13 of article I of the constitution, are broader than “criminal prosecution.” To bring a person within the immunity of this provision, it is not necessary that the examination of the witness should be had in the course of a criminal prosecution against him, or that a criminal proceeding should have been commenced and be actually pending. It is suf *759 ficent if there is a law creating the offense under which the witness may be prosecuted. If there is such a law, and if the witness may be indicted or otherwise prosecuted for a public offense arising out of the acts to which the examination relates, he cannot be compelled to answer in any collateral proceeding, civil or criminal, unless the law has absolutely secured him against any use in a criminal prosecution of the evidence he may give; and this can only be done by a statutory provision that, if he submits to the examination and answers the questions, he shall be exempt from criminal prosecution for any offense that may be disclosed as a consequence of his examination. (Ex parte Clarke, 103 Cal. 352, [37 Pac. 230]; Counselmen v. Hitchcock, 142 U. S. 547, [35 L. Ed. 1110, 12 Sup. Ct. Rep. 195, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes]; Karel v. Conlan, 155 Wis. 221, [49 L. R. A. (N. S.) 826, 144 N. W. 266].) There has been no immunity law in this state since the repeal of section 1324.of the Penal Code that will justify a court in compelling a witness to give self-incriminatory evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 804, 46 Cal. App. 755, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-application-of-tahbel-calctapp-1920.