People v. Ah Lee Doon

31 P. 933, 97 Cal. 171, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 504
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1893
DocketNo. 20912
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 31 P. 933 (People v. Ah Lee Doon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Ah Lee Doon, 31 P. 933, 97 Cal. 171, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 504 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Beatty, C. J.

The defendant, on the second day of December, 1890, shot and killed William N. Shenton, at the town of San Rafael, in Marin County. On the 29th of December, 1890, F. M. Angellotti, then district attorney of said county, filed in the superior court an information charging the defendant with the crime of murder, and also charging him with a prior conviction of murder in the first degree, which it was alleged had never been reversed, annulled, or set aside. On the same day, the defendant was arraigned before E. B. Mahon, then judge of the superior court of Marin, and was given time to plead until January 5,1891. On that day, F. M. Angellotti, who, as district attorney, had taken the dying declaration of Shenton, conducted the preliminary examination of defendant, and filed the information against him, having succeeded E. B. Mahon as judge of the superior court, and being disqualified to sit or act in the case (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 170, subd. 3), extended the defendant’s time to plead until January 10th, at which time D. J. Murphy, one of the judges of the superior court of San Francisco, being present and presiding, the defendant appeared with his counsel and entered his plea of not guilty. The case was there[174]*174upon set for trial on the 19th of January, but was subsequently continued until February 2d, at which date the trial commenced before Judge Murphy. Between the date of defendant’s plea and the commencement of his trial, one or more orders continuing the cause from day to day were made by Judge Angellotti. On January 10th, the date of defendant’s plea, Judge Angellotti made an order directing the clerk to draw fifty jurors and the sheriff to summon them for January 19th, the day for which defendant’s trial was set. Judge Angellotti presided at the drawing of said fifty jurors, and from the panel so obtained, the jury which tried the defendant was selected, no challenge or objection to the panel having been at any time interposed by or on behalf of the defendant.

When the cause was called for trial on February 2d, the defendant moved for a continuance, on the ground of the absence of a material witness. His motion was overruled, and the trial proceeded, resulting in his conviction of murder in the first degree and sentence of death. Before sentence he moved for a new trial, which was denied, from which order and the judgment he prosecutes this appeal.

The errors assigned in support of the appeal are numerous, and only partly indicated by the foregoing statement, which, however, is sufficient to exhibit the case in its general outlines. Other material facts will be stated in connection with the points to which they more particularly relate.

It is proper at the outset to say that the attempted amendments or additions to the record, filed by the people and by the defendant respectively, must be wholly disregarded. The paper filed by the attorney-general on the part of the people consists of a copy of the judge’s charge to the jury, certified by the county clerk, which, it is said, differs materially from that contained in the printed record. But the copy eontained in the printed record, or o'ne of them (for it appears in two places), is embraced in the bill of exceptions settled and allowed [175]*175by the judge who presided at the trial, while the eopy certified by the clerk seems to be a long-hand transcript of the official reporter’s notes of the charge filed with the clerk, but never indorsed or authenticated by the judge. Such a document is no part of the record (People v. January, 77 Cal. 179), and cannot, of course, be used to correct the bill of exceptions which is a part of the record. The paper filed by the defendant consists of copies, certified by the private secretary of the governor, of certain correspondence between Judge Angellotti and the clerk of Marin County on one side, and the governor on the other, relating to the designation of Judge Murphy to preside in the superior court of Marin County for the trial of defendant and others whose prosecution for criminal offenses had been commenced by Judge Angellotti while district attorney. The facts shown by this proposed amendment appear to be wholly immaterial, but if they were otherwise, they could not be considered. To make them part of the record, they should have been embodied in the bill of exceptions.

Looking, then, exclusively to the duly certified record of the case contained in the printed transcript, I proceed to consider the matters assigned as error.

1. It is contended that Judge Angellotti, being disqualified to sit or act in the case, had no power or jurisdiction to order the drawing of the panel of jurors for the session of the court at which the defendant was to be tried, and especially that he was incompetent to preside at the drawing of such jurors.

Section 170 of the Code of Civil Procedure reads as follows:—

“Sec. 170. No justice, judge, or justice of the peace shall sit or act as such in any action or proceeding, — 1. To which he is a party, or in which he is interested; 2. When he is related to either party by consanguinity or affinity within the third degree, computed according to the rules of law; 3. When he has been attorney or counsel ifor either party in the action or proceeding. But the provisions of this section shall not apjifiy to [176]*176the arrangement of the calendar, or the regulation of the order of business, nor to the power of transferring the action or proceeding to some other court.”

It is perfectly clear from the terms of this section, without reference to the numerous cases in which its provisions have been applied and enforced, that Judge Angellotti was disqualified by the third subdivision from sitting or acting in this cause, except for the purpose of making the merely formal orders enumerated in the last clause of the section, and it is well settled that so far as he may have done so, his acts were void. The question therefore is, whether, in ordering and superintending the drawing of the panel of jurors, he did sit or act in this cause. It does not appear that the jury was drawn specially for this case, and presumably it was the regular jury for the ensuing term or session of the court "which it is made the duty of the presiding judge to have drawn and summoned. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 214.) To draw such jury "was not a proceeding in this cause or in any cause, and could not possibly have been a void act merely because this cause, and possibly others in which Judge Angellotti was disqualified, was coming on for trial. The fault, if fault there was, consisted in selecting the jury which tried this cause from the panel so drawn. But if the jurors drawn and summoned in pursuance of Judge Angellotti’s order were incompetent to try this cause, the objection should have been taken by a challenge to the panel, and if, for the purposes of this cause, the act of the judge in ordering the jurors drawn was void, as counsel contend, then certainly the statute (Pen. Code, sec. 1059) is broad enough to have given the defendant good ground of challenge to the panel. And that was the regular and only way to raise the objection. If it had been made at that time, and sustained, a special venire could at once have been issued. Raised for the first time after verdict, it comes too late.

2. It is objected that Judge Murphy had no authority to act in the cause on January 10th, when he received the [177]*177defendant’s plea. It is certainly true that the order of the governor, issued on January 12th, conferred no authority to act on the 10th.

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Bluebook (online)
31 P. 933, 97 Cal. 171, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ah-lee-doon-cal-1893.