People v. Beal

254 P.2d 100, 116 Cal. App. 2d 475, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1089
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 1953
DocketCrim. 4936
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 254 P.2d 100 (People v. Beal) 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
People v. Beal, 254 P.2d 100, 116 Cal. App. 2d 475, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1089 (Cal. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

*476 VALLÉE, J.

Defendant was charged in count I of an information with having accomplished an act of sexual intercourse with and upon Margaret, and in counts II and III with having eommited the same offense upon Luressie. A jury-convicted him of the offense charged in count I, and acquitted him of the offenses charged in counts II and III. He appeals from the judgment rendered and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.'

As grounds for reversal defendant contends that: (1) the verdict is unsupported by the evidence; (2) the testimony of the complaining witness is inherently improbable; (3) the court did not adequately instruct the jury on circumstantial evidence; (4) the court erred in the admission of evidence• (5) the district attorney was guilty of prejudicial misconduct.

The complaining witness, a girl 13 years of age, testified that on the night of April 16, 1952, she “had intercourse” with defendant while they were in the rear seat of an automobile; he pushed her on the seat and then she was forced to have intercourse with him after she was down on the seat; defendant pushed the legs of her panties aside; it lasted about five minutes; it hurt; this was the first time she ever had “sexual intercourse”; defendant “raped” her. There was evidence from which the jury could infer that the complaining witness was not the wife of the defendant. Defendant was 19 years of age. This was sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in concluding that defendant had sexual intercourse with the complaining witness as charged, and that she was not the wife of the defendant. (People v. Stangler, 18 Cal.2d 688, 690 [117 P.2d 321]; People v. Owsley, 76 Cal.App.2d 166, 171 [172 P.2d 561]; People v. Vicencio, 71 Cal.App.2d 361, 365 [162 P.2d 650].)

In his closing argument, the district attorney made the following statements to the jury: “Ladies and Gentlemen, I assure you, I have been a prosecutor for 20 years. When I first entered the District Attorney’s Office, a very distinguished gentleman, now dead, who was Chief Deputy, caused me to read some cases from the Supreme Court of the United States, to read the Constitution of the United States, the Bill of Rights, and the Supreme Court of California as to the duties of a prosecutor. Every one of the higher courts, the Constitution, everything in the records; the law says that a prosecutor shall at all times be fair, shall go down the middle of the road and shall not take sides, that this defendant there is his client, and his duty to the defendant comes first to the *477 duty of anybody else, because he is the attorney for all the people. I assure you on my word of honor, I am an old man now; some day soon I have got to meet a higher Judge than any Judge here, and I am confident as I stand here I have never in my life prosecuted an innocent man. If there is the slightest doubt in my mind, and remember I have more records than you have on these cases. There is lots of evidence that we are not permitted to bring before a jury. I would not, I am not obligated to, and I am forbidden to prosecute any man whom I have first not investigated on my own part and convinced myself of his guilt. The law says that I must give him the benefit of the doubt before I ask anybody to do it.” Counsel for defendant immediately asked the court to strike the statement, assigned it as misconduct, and asked the court to instruct the jury to disregard it. The court said: “The motion is denied.”

That the argument of the district attorney was highly improper and constituted prejudicial misconduct compelling a reversal is not debatable. In the recent ease of People v. Kirkes, 39 Cal.2d 719 [249 P.2d 1], the district attorney made substantially the same argument to the jury as was made in the present case. In holding that the argument was prejudicial and in reversing the judgment the court said (p. 723) : “It is well established that statements by the prosecuting attorney, not based upon legitimate inferences from the evidence, to the effect that he has personal knowledge of the defendant’s guilt and that he would not conduct the prosecution unless he believed the defendant to be guilty are misconduct. [Citations.] ‘There can be fio excuse for such comment.’ [Citation.] The classic expression of the rule appears in this oft-quoted statement in People v. Edgar, 34 Cal.App. 459, 468 [167 P. 891]: ‘When the district attorney declared that he would not prosecute any man he did not believe guilty he thereby wrongfully placed his personal opinion of the guilt of the defendant in evidence in the case. He was privileged to argue to the jury that it was his opinion formed from deductions made from the evidence adduced at the trial that the defendant was guilty of the crime charged (People v. Rogers, 163 Cal. 476 [126 P. 143]; but his declaration to the jury that he would not prosecute any man whom he did not believe to be guilty was tantamount to an assertion that he believed in the guilt of the defendant at the very inception of the prosecution; and necessarily such belief must have been founded upon the result of the district attorney’s *478 original and independent investigation of the charge, and therefore in all likelihood was based, in part at least, upon facts which did not appear and which perhaps could not have been shown in evidence.’

“The latter portion of the quotation is especially pertinent here. Not only did the deputy district attorney state his belief in Kirkes’ guilt, without which he would not have been associated with the prosecution; he also flatly stated that he knew of Kirkes’ guilt ‘prior to the time’ that he entered the case. Such knowledge could not have been based upon inferences from the evidence presented. In effect, the prosecutor, who had just laid a foundation by showing his own excellent character and long years of public service, was testifying to the ultimate fact in issue without disclosing the source of his information. Such markedly unfair conduct cannot be condoned.” (See, also, People v. Hidalgo, 78 Cal.App.2d 926, 938 [179 P.2d 102]; People v. Brown, 81 Cal.App. 226, 241 [253 P. 735]; People v. Hale, 82 Cal.App.2d 827, 832 [187 P.2d 121]; People v. Talle, 111 Cal.App.2d 650, 673 [245 P.2d 633].) In the present ease the district attorney was guilty of other improper conduct which it is not necessary to relate.

It has been said many times that a district attorney may strike hard blows, but he is not at liberty to strike foul ones. Here he struck foul ones.

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Bluebook (online)
254 P.2d 100, 116 Cal. App. 2d 475, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-beal-calctapp-1953.