People v. Boyd

116 P. 323, 16 Cal. App. 130, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 167
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 1911
DocketCrim. No. 150.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 116 P. 323 (People v. Boyd) 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. Boyd, 116 P. 323, 16 Cal. App. 130, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 167 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant, having been informed against by the district attorney of Siskiyou county for the crime of *132 robbery, was tried therefor, convicted of said crime and thereupon sentenced by the court to imprisonment in the state prison for the term of two and a half years.

This appeal is from the judgment and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The points made by the appellant for a reversal are: 1. Errors in the.decision of questions of law arising during the course of the trial; 2. That the jury were “guilty of misconduct by which a fair and due consideration of the case has been prevented”; 3. “That the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence in the case.”

1. The claim that the court erred in the decision of questions of law grows out of the admission in evidence, over the objection of the defendant, of the deposition of one George L. Weston, who was a witness at the preliminary examination and who could not be found by the sheriff and his presence at the trial secured. The ground of the objection to said deposition was that a sufficient showing of diligence in an effort to subpoena and procure the attendance of said witness at the trial had not been made to justify the ruling of the court in permitting it to be read to the jury.

By section 686, subdivision 3, of the Penal Code, it is provided that, where the charge has been preliminarily examined before a committing magistrate, and the testimony taken down by question and answer, in the presence of the defendant, who has, either in person or by counsel, cross-examined or had an opportunity to cross-examine the witness, the deposition of such witness may be read, upon its being satisfactorily shown to the court that he . . . cannot with due diligence be found within the state.

Upon the question of diligence it was shown that the case was set for trial for the thirty-first day of October, 1910; that, on the twenty-seventh day of September, 1910, a subpoena for Weston was issued by the district attorney and delivered into the hands of the sheriff for service; that the sheriff went to the home of the witness at the town of Etna Mills, in Siskiyou county, and that that officer was informed by the wife of the witness that the latter was not at home and that she did not know exactly where he was; that she declared that, suffering from rheumatism, the witness left home some days before, saying that he intended going to *133 Neyes Springs, in said county, and that if, upon arriving at said springs, he found them closed for the season, his intention was to go to Tuscan Springs, in Tehama county. It was shown that the sheriff addressed letters to all his deputies, located in various parts of Siskiyou county, commanding them to search for Weston; that a deputy sheriff went to Neyes Springs and failed to find him there; that the district attorney personally telephoned to Tuscan Springs, giving the name and description of the witness and inquiring whether he was there or had been there, “and the management at Tuscan Springs informed me there was no man by that name there. ’ ’ The district attorney further testified: “I telephoned up to Garretson Springs, a mineral spring up on the mountain here, thinking probably if he was going to a mineral spring, he might go there, and was informed that there was no man by that name there.”

Besides the foregoing, it' appears from the record that the officers entertained some suspicion that Weston might be connected either with the robbery of which the defendant was accused or with some other crimes that had been perpetrated in and about the town of Etna Mills. It is evident, from this fact, that the witness was purposely avoiding the service of process, thus hoping to escape the ordeal of such a cross-examination as that to which he was subjected at the preliminary hearing.-

We cannot say, upon the showing made, that the court abused its discretion in allowing the deposition of Weston to be read.

Counsel for appellant seem to think that, in order to disclose the “due diligence” contemplated by the statute and necessary to be shown before the deposition of an absent witness taken at the preliminary hearing may be read in evidence at the trial, it must appear that a subpoena for such witness has been sent to every county in the state. In this they are mistaken.

As is said in Heintz v. Cooper, 104 Cal. 670, [38 Pac. 512], “diligence is a relative term incapable of exact definition. What would amount to due diligence under one state of facts would fall absolutely short of it under another and different state of facts. It depends, therefore, so essentially upon the particular circumstances of each case, with all their distinct *134 and varying phases and hearings, as they have appeared tthe lower court at the trial and throughout the conduct of the cause, in determining whether diligence has been used in any particular instance, that this court should hesitate to disturb a ruling upon this ground where it has any substance whatever upon which to rest. The presumption is that the discretion has been properly exercised, and that presumption must be overcome by a clear want of facts before the order will be disturbed.” (See Jones v. Singleton, 45 Cal. 92; Baker v. Joseph, 16 Cal. 180; Kenezleber v. Wahl, 92 Cal. 202, 28 Pac. 225; People v. Johnson, 13 Cal. App. 779, 110 Pac. 965.)

In the case at bar, we have seen that the witness was a resident of Siskiyou county, was a married man and that his wife, at the time the sheriff sought to serve a subpoena upon him, was at their home at Etna Mills; that she pretended to know nothing of his precise whereabouts at the time the sheriff called at their home in search of him. These circumstances were such as to make it manifest to the mind of any reasonable person that he had not permanently abandoned Siskiyou county and such as to indicate that the witness was trying to avoid service of the subpoena and to that end was in hiding. The officers, in their efforts to find him, searched and inquired for him at all the places where, according to information obtained from all the available sources, there was any likelihood that he might be found. If the witness was purposely keeping out of the way of the officers so that he might not be subpoenaed, as the circumstances very strongly tend to show was the fact, it would then have been perfectly futile to have sent subpoenas to other counties, for, if his purpose was to elude the officers, he would have been very particular to conceal his identity, so far as he could, wherever he might be or go.

If the witness had been at the time without a family in Siskiyou county or some other strong incentive for his return to that county, and it was not made to appear, as it certainly was made to appear, that he was endeavoring to avoid the service of process calling for his appearance as a witness at the trial, we cannot say but that, perhaps, a better showing than was made here might be required. Under all the circumstances disclosed here, however, we think that the court made no error in its ruling admitting the deposition.

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Bluebook (online)
116 P. 323, 16 Cal. App. 130, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-boyd-calctapp-1911.