People v. Anthony

196 P. 47, 185 Cal. 152, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 532
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1921
DocketCrim. No. 2312.
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 196 P. 47 (People v. Anthony) 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. Anthony, 196 P. 47, 185 Cal. 152, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 532 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

WILBUR, J.

The defendant was convicted of the offense of lewd and lascivious acts done upon the body of a female child under the age of fourteen years, with the intent to arouse and appeal to his own sexual desires, contrary to the provisions of section 288 of the Penal Code. He appeals from the judgment.

*153 A reversal is asked upon three grounds, as follows: (1) Misconduct of the district attorney during the trial; (2) the refusal to give an instruction requested by the defendant; (3) the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict of conviction.

The third ground was not pressed upon the argument. The testimony of the complaining witness was alone sufficient to support the verdict and her testimony was corroborated by another girl eleven years of age.

The principal point urged in support of the appeal is the misconduct of the district attorney. Several instances of asserted misconduct are assigned. A further statement of the facts is necessary to explain them.

The Good Templars Home is an institution maintained at Vallejo for the care and support of small children of both sexes. At the time of the offense charged the affairs of the home were under the actual management of the defendant and his wife, who were living at the home. The defendant was called as a witness in his own behalf and denied the charge made against him. Without the slightest basis therefor in the direct or cross-examination the district attorney asked the defendant if he had not hesitated to mention a certain room in his description of the premises, because in that room in the months of January, February, and March he had sexual intercourse with two gilds whose names were mentioned in the question, one of whom was nine and the other thirteen years of age. The defendant assigned this as misconduct and moved that the answer be stricken out. Thereupon a recess was taken for the argument of the question, the objection was sustained and the answer stricken out. The jury were thereupon instructed by the court at the instance of the defendant to give absolutely no consideration to the question and to dispel from their mind anything in relation thereto and to disregard it.

A Mrs. Hansen was called as a witness by the prosecution in rebuttal, and testified that the defendant’s general reputation for morality in the community in which he lived was bad. Thereupon the district attorney asked the witness if she had heard anything prior to the 2d of March, 1919, concerning Mr. Anthony having sexual intercourse with one of the girls in the home, naming her. The question was *154 objected to, the conduct of the district attorney in asking the question was assigned as error, and the court sustained the objection and admonished the jury substantially as before, to disregard the same.

Miss Nellie Bresnan, who was called by the defendant as a witness, on cross-examination was asked the following question: “Q. Now, Miss Bresnan, have you ever heard, while you were at the Home, of Mr. Anthony making a practice of committing lewd and lascivious acts and having improper intercourse with the girl inmates there, and in particular with those whom you have mentioned?” This question included the same girls who had been mentioned in the question subsequently asked of the defendant. The objection to this question was sustained, but no request was made for the admonition of the jury to disregard the asking of the question. The only excuse for this question is that the district attorney assumed that the witness had testified to the reputation of the defendant for morality on direct examination. It appears that on the direct examination the defendant sought to show his general course of conduct toward the girls in the home and his care and efforts on their behalf at the time of the influenza epidemic on the theory that this would tend to show his character for morality. The district attorney objected to this line of evidence and the questions were then postponed and were not subsequently asked. The questions asked by the defendant’s counsel did not relate to the reputation of the defendant but to his course of conduct, - and were as follows:

“Now, Miss Bresnan, up to the time of the making of this charge, did you ever have occasion to observe Mr. Anthony about the home?
“A. I have.
“Q. Now, up to the time of the making of the charges did you ever have occasion to observe Mr. Anthony’s attitude and conduct toward the children ?
“Mr. Lindauer: What purpose, what trait?
“Mr. Smith: Morality.
“A. Not any way—just in a fatherly way.
“Mr. Lindauer: I move to strike it out, ‘Just in. a fatherly way’—if your Honor please—this is a question of morality.
“Q. You understand, do you, Miss Bresnan ?
*155 “A. Yes.
“Q. Mr. Smith has asked you the question.
“A. Beg your pardon. I have never seen anything wrong in morality.
“Mr. Smith: I submit it should stand.”
Later, in response to this question: “Did you see him with the girls about him many times or not?
“A. Yes, many times, as I would any man that comes around, greeting him, you know, in a nice way.”

At this juncture the examination was halted by the objection of the district attorney that this was not the way to prove the reputation for morality.

The question is whether the asking of these questions, assigned as error, and, particularly that addressed to the defendant himself, constituted misconduct of so grievous a character that it could not be cured by the instructions of the court to the jury to utterly and wholly disregard it. In determining that question it is proper also to observe that the district attorney called several of the young girls from the institution in rebuttal who testified that the reputation of the defendant for morality was bad. The questions were directed to his reputation in the Orphans’ Home and not in the community in which he lived. For instance, one girl, aged fourteen, testified as follows: “Q. Now, what was Mr. Anthony’s reputation or general reputation at the Orphans’ Home for morality, good or bad? A. It was bad.” She had been previously asked by the defendant on cross-examination in testing her knowledge as to what morality means: “Q. And when was the first time you ever heard anyone talk about Mr. Anthony’s morality, before the second day of March, 1919? A. Before then? Q. Yes. A. Why, I don’t remember before. Q. You don’t remember before? A. I don’t remember how long he told me before.”

She also testified that she had heard statements before the 2d of March. On her redirect examination she was asked the following question: “Q. ... Do you remember an occasion in the month of February, 1919, on which occasion you were up in the barn with Mr. Anthony, and you left the barn in anger, do you remember that occasion? A. Yes, sir. Q. Why did you get angry?”

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Bluebook (online)
196 P. 47, 185 Cal. 152, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-anthony-cal-1921.