Matter of the Application of Preciado

158 P. 1063, 30 Cal. App. 323, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 32
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1916
DocketCrim. No. 352.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 158 P. 1063 (Matter of the Application of Preciado) 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
Matter of the Application of Preciado, 158 P. 1063, 30 Cal. App. 323, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 32 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HART, J.

The petitioner was convicted in the superior court of Madera County, on the thirteenth day of March, 1916, of the crime of embezzling public funds, he being at the time of the alleged commission of said offense tax collector of said county. Upon his conviction by the jury, he was remanded to the custody of the sheriff of Madera County and by that official incarcerated in the county jail of said county, wherein he is now and ever since his conviction has been confined.

He has taken an appeal to the appellate court from the judgment of conviction, and has inaugurated this proceeding for the purpose of obtaining an order admitting him to bail pending the determination of said appeal.

The writ was made returnable before and heard by two of the justices of this court.

The petition alleges that, upon the conviction of the petitioner, and before his commitment, “application was made to the Hon. C. 0. Busick, trial judge, in behalf of your petitioner for bail, pending appeal to be taken, which said motion was denied upon the ground that no adequate showing had been made for admission to bail; that your petitioner, upon the date set for his sentence, to wit, on Saturday, the 18th day of March, 1916, gave due and legal notice of appeal from the judgment of said court, which said appeal is now pending and in process of perfection, and at the same time and place, another motion was made in behalf of your petitioner for admission to bail pending his said appeal, which said motion was by said trial judge denied.”

The petitioner is, according to the petition and the proofs, a chronic epileptic, having suffered from epilepsy for a period *325 of over eight years, and being “subject to frequent violent attacks of the ‘grand mal’ form of said malady.” It is alleged in the petition that the cell in which he is confined “is of metal, about four by seven feet in size, fitted with a hammock, an iron washstand and an iron toilet bowl; that the floor, ceiling and walls of said cell are of steel; that the corridor npon which said cell opens is built of steel in its entirety ; that since the date of your petitioner’s confinement, he has been seized with grand mal attacks six times.” It is further alleged:.“That since Tuesday, April 11th, 1916, your petitioner has been confined in his cell alone during the daytime, a brother remaining with him at night, by and with the consent of the sheriff; that up to the present time, there has been some other person present during seizures, but as there are no other person or persons confined with your petitioner at this time, your petitioner fears that subsequent seizures will result in grievous injury, and perhaps death, and .that his continued confinement in his present quarters is fraught with serious impending danger to his life, and that his continued confinement pending his appeal is likely to result fatally.”

The application for bail to the court below was based upon the uncontroverted affidavits filed by the petitioner. Some of these affidavits were by physicians who therein stated that the petitioner is and has been for a number of years subject to epileptic fits, and that the attacks were of the character known in medical science as the grand mal type, which is pronounced by experts in that science to be the most serious form in which that malady manifests itself. Other affidavits are by persons who personally witnessed and described a number of these attacks suffered by the petitioner since his incarceration in jail.

The same affidavits have been filed with the petition before us. In addition to these, there have been filed here, in behalf of the petitioner, the affidavits of J. J. Cramer, night jailer at the Madera County jail, and Henry and W. B. Preciado, brothers of the petitioner, and, by way of a counter-showing by the respondent, the affidavits of Drs. T. M. Hayden and C. P. H. Kjaerbye, and those of the district attorney of Madera County and J. P. Lewis, sheriff of said county.

It is conceded that the petitioner is an epileptic, that he suffers from intermittent attacks of that disease, and that *326 the paroxysms are very severe, or of the most serious form of that malady. It is stated in the affidavits upon which the application was made for bail before the court below and which affidavits, as seen, are among those upon which this application is made, that the petitioner has suffered six epileptic attacks since his confinement. The statement that he has had a number of attacks since -his confinement was not denied before the trial judge, nor is it controverted here. On the contrary, it is conceded to be true.

The affidavits used in the application to the trial judge for bail disclosed, as here, that W. B. Preciado, a brother of petitioner, found it necessary, because of the condition of petitioner as alleged and described, that the latter should have some one with him in the county jail at all times to prevent injury resulting to him when seized with an epileptic fit, and that, by permission of the sheriff, he (W. B. Preciado) has remained with the petitioner during the night-time since the latter’s confinement.

The affidavits of the physicians filed in behalf of the petitioner declare that it is the professional opinion of each of the affiants that “confinement in jail is greatly injurious to his (petitioner’s) health and endangers his life.”

The additional proof presented on this hearing in behalf of the petitioner shows that the latter has suffered two epileptic attacks since the date of the application to the trial judge for an order admitting him to bail — one occurring on April 14th and the other on April 16th.

The two doctors whose affidavits were filed here by the respondent each states that he made a professional examination of the petitioner on the twenty-first day of April, 1916; that, from such examination, he found petitioner to be “in good normal condition”; and “that his body was well nourished, his skin, was clear, his urine normal, his eyes bright and temperature normal; that his pulse was 65, his lungs and heart normal, his tendon reflex normal, and that according to the statement of the said 0. F.' Preciado (petitioner) his appetite was good; . . . that he was in a cheerful state of mind, talked intelligently about his case; that he suffered, or seemed to suffer, no more from his confinement than the ordinary average prisoner suffers or seems to suffer from confinement.” These affiants further state that they have been informed by the sheriff, his deputies, and the petitioner him *327 self that the latter, since his incarceration, has had but four attacks or fits; that he has been confined in jail for five weeks and “that this number of attacks during this period of time is a decrease in number from the number he has suffered according to the testimony introduced at the trial of the said C. F. Preciado during the period of eight or nine years immediately before his confinement in the county jail,” etc., and that “the said G. F. Preciado, due to his incarceration in the said jail, is not in imminent danger of death.”

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Bluebook (online)
158 P. 1063, 30 Cal. App. 323, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-the-application-of-preciado-calctapp-1916.