People v. Amer

90 P. 698, 151 Cal. 303, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 426
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1907
DocketCrim. No. 1371.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 90 P. 698 (People v. Amer) 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. Amer, 90 P. 698, 151 Cal. 303, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 426 (Cal. 1907).

Opinions

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an appeal from an order granting a motion for a new trial made by defendant after conviction of the crime of embezzlement of public funds while treasurer of Madera County. The language of the order granting the motion was such as to exclude insufficiency of the evidence as a ground of the action of the court. The trial court, according to the language of the order, granted *305 the motion solely on the ground of misconduct of the district attorney in his closing argument to the jury. It is not claimed that there was any error of the trial-court in relation to the alleged misconduct. In fact, it affirmatively appears that the learned trial judge, immediately upon the making by the district attorney of the remarks alleged to constitute misconduct, emphatically and at length correctly instructed the jury as to the law applicable to the matters referred to by the district attorney, and admonished them to disregard such remarks. The same thing was more elaborately done by the court in its charge to the jury. The principal question presented by this appeal is whether, in a criminal case, misconduct of the district attorney, unaccompanied by any error of the court, can warrant the granting by the trial court of a motion for a new trial.

In view of the .positive and unambiguous language of section 1181 of the Penal Code, it is clear that a motion for a new trial can be granted only in the cases therein mentioned. That language in terms limits the authority of the court to grant a new trial to the grounds therein specified. That the section means exactly what it says was held by this court in People v. Bernstein, 18 Cal. 699. The statutory provision as to new trials then in force was substantially the same as the present provision, except that when that case arose newly discovered evidence was not specified as one of the grounds upon which a new trial could be granted, that ground having been subsequently added by amendment. The defendant moved for a new trial upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, and this court disposed of the motion in these words: “It will be seen that the statute not only does not allow this as a ground for setting aside the verdict, but that it enumerates certain other grounds as those exclusively allowable to that end. This was done designedly, and we have no power to supply the omission. The legislature had full power to prescribe the cause and grounds of this application. If, in any case, injustice be done in consequence of this omission, the resort is not to the courts, but to the executive.” A substantially similar question was presented in People v. Fair, 43 Cal. 137, 147, where this court held, expressly overruling People v. Plummer, 9 Cal. 298, that an objection to the competency of a juror, taken for the first time after verdict, *306 cannot be availed of on motion for a new trial. The court said: “In reference to a motion for a new trial, the statute has not only enumerated the grounds upon which it may be made, but has expressly excluded all others.” (See, also, People v. Shainwold, 51 Cal. 468 ; People v. Bawden, 90 Cal. 195, 199, [27 Pac. 204] ; People v. Simmons, 119 Cal. 1, [50 Pac. 844].) "Whatever may be the rights under the constitution of a defendant on an appeal from a judgment, whether or not the remedy by motion for a new trial shall exist in any class of cases, and if so, upon what grounds, are questions for the exclusive determination of the legislature.

Misconduct of the district attorney is not, eo nomine, specified by the statute as a ground upon which a new trial may be granted, and, in our judgment, there is no specification therein that can, by any possibility, be held to include it. There is no claim that it is so included, unless it is covered by the language of subdivision 5 or subdivision 6 of section 1181 of the Penal Code. Subdivision 5 provides for the granting of a new trial when the court has misdirected the jury in matter of law, or has erred in the decision of any question of law arising during the course of the trial, and subdivision 6 provides for the granting of a new trial “When the verdict is contrary to law or evidence.” These were the grounds specified on the motion for new trial. We have already seen that the court did not misdirect, the jury in this matter or err in the decision of any question of law arising in regard thereto. It, of course, cannot be claimed that the mere fact that the district attorney has been guilty of misconduct renders a verdict contrary to the evidence. A verdict is contrary to the evidence only when the evidence introduced upon the trial does not warrant the conclusion reached by the jury. Nor can it be held that the verdict is “contrary to law” simply because there has been misconduct on the part of the district attorney, however prejudicial to defendant’s rights the court may deem such misconduct to have been. If the verdict itself is in no degree opposed to the law applicable to the case, in the light of the evidence received by the court on the trial, it is not “contrary to law” within the meaning of that term as used in subdivision 6 of section 1181 of the Penal Code, no matter what causes may have operated to influence the jurors to render it. That subdivision has to *307 do solely with the verdict as rendered, and not with the causes that produced it, the sole questions thereunder being as to whether it is sustained by the evidence admitted and as to whether it is opposed to the law applicable to the case. To give to the term “contrary to law” any broader meaning would make it include every improper influence that may have operated upon the minds of the jurors to the prejudice of a defendant, and render any further specification of such things by statute as grounds for a new trial superfluous. Improper evidence erroneously admitted by the court, evidence wrongfully received by a juror out of court, erroneous instructions as to the law, misconduct of jurors, and errors in the decision of any question of law arising on the trial, might all so operate as to make a verdict contrary to law in such a general sense, yet we find all these things carefully specified in section 1181 of the Penal Code as separate grounds for a new trial. Unless we are to hold that nothing was meant by the careful specification in section 1181 of the Penal Code of the “only” cases in which a motion for a new trial may be granted, and that any prejudicial irregularity in the proceedings not specified in any other subdivision will render the verdict one “against law,” thus rendering meaningless and superfluous the express provision of the section that a new trial may be granted “in the. following cases only,” the provision “when the verdict is contrary to law or evidence” must be given the construction already stated. The words “contrary to law” as here used mean no more than the words “against law” used in subdivision 6 of section 657 of the Code of Civil Procedure in relation to the verdict in a civil case, in the specification of grounds for a new trial. That section expressly provides in subdivision 1 that a new trial may be granted in civil cases for “Irregularity in the proceeding of the . . . adverse party, ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 P. 698, 151 Cal. 303, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-amer-cal-1907.