People v. Clayberg

147 P. 994, 26 Cal. App. 614, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 196
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 20, 1915
DocketCrim. No. 279.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 147 P. 994 (People v. Clayberg) 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. Clayberg, 147 P. 994, 26 Cal. App. 614, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 196 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant was charged by an information, filed in the superior court of Humboldt County, with the crime of rape, alleged to have been committed on the twenty-ninth day of May, 1914, upon the person of one Garland White, a female. Upon said information the defendant was duly tried, and a verdict of guilty of the offense so charged was returned by the jury.

The defendant moved for a new trial, which was denied, and from the judgment and the order denying said motion he presents these appeals.

The first point made by the defendant is that the district attorney was without authority to file a new or, as he calls it, “an amended” information, after a second information, substituted for the original filed by the district attorney, had been set aside on motion.

It appears that by the complaint filed in the magistrate’s court, and which constituted the foundation of the preliminary hearing of the charge against the defendant, the latter was accused of statutory rape—that is to say, he was thus accused of criminally violating the person of the prosecutrix, “then and there under the age of eighteen years, to wit: of the age of seventeen years,” the element of force not being therein alleged. Upon the conclusion of the preliminary ex- *616 animation of the charge, the magistrate indorsed on said complaint an order committing the defendant to trial in the following language: “It appearing to me that the offense of rape as herein set forth has been committed, and that there is sufficient cause to believe the within named C. B. Clayberg guilty thereof, I order that he be held to answer the same.”

Within due time after the commitment of the accused, the district attorney filed an information in the superior court charging the defendant with the crime as it was stated in the complaint filed before the magistrate and the order of commitment. Thereafter, upon his own initiative or without an order or authority from the court so to do, the district attorney filed in the place of the original a new information charging the defendant with the crime for which he had been committed, but therein alleged, in addition to the statement that the prosecutrix was under the age of legal consent in such cases, that the act of sexual intercourse so charged was accomplished by the defendant by a resort to force and violence, “and without the consent and against the will of the said Garland White,” and that she “resisted the accomplishment of said act of sexual intercourse, but her resistance was then overcome by force and violence upon” her by said defendant, etc.

The defendant demurred to the information as so filed and the demurrer was overruled, and thereupon he filed and the court granted a motion to set said pleading aside upon the ground that, before the filing thereof, the defendant had not been legally committed< by a magistrate. (Pen. Code, sec. 995.) In granting said motion, the court ordered “that a new information be filed herein against said defendant by the district attorney of the county of Humboldt, state of California,” and thereupon that officer filed another information whose allegations conform to the charge as it was stated in the complaint and the magistrate’s commitment of the defendant for trial.

The information set aside by the court charged the offense for which the defendant was committed, and its allegations that force and violence were employed by the accused in the perpetration of the crime of rape were mere surplusage. The crime as described in the commitment or the depositions upon which the commitment was founded was also alleged. In our *617 opinion, the motion to set aside the information should have been disallowed.

However, we shall, in considering the argument against the action of the court in allowing another information to be filed by the district attorney, assume that the information set aside was defective in that it exceeded the scope of the commitment in stating the offense for which the accused was held, or, in other words, in practical effect, the information did not state the precise crime for which the accused was committed.

Counsel for the defendant refer to the information upon which the defendant was tried as “an amendment to an amended information” and assert that there is no warrant of law for amending an information which is itself an amendment of the one previously filed. But the information last filed in this case was not an amendment of the information previously filed. Amendments of indictments or informations may be made by authority alone of section 1008 of the Penal Code, as amended by the legislature of 1911. (Stats. 1911, p. 436.) That section expressly authorizes the amendment of an indictment or information in certain indicated particulars. The information upon which the defendant was tried, however, was the information which the district attorney may file, in lieu of one set aside on motion, upon an order by the court directing him to adopt that course, and is the result of a proceeding authorized by section 997 of the Penal Code.

That section provides that, if the motion to set aside the indictment or information is granted, “the court must order that the defendant, if in custody, be discharged therefrom; . . . unless it directs that the ease, be resubmitted to the same or another grand jury, or that an information be filed by the district attorney; provided, that after such order of resubmission the defendant may be examined before a magistrate, and discharged or committed by him, as in other cases, if before indictment or information filed he has not been examined and committed by a magistrate.”

There can be no doubt that where it is made to appear that an information as filed by the district attorney has gone beyond the scope of the magistrate’s-commitment or charges an offense different from that for which the accused has been committed by the magistrate and the superior court for that reason sets it aside, as in such case it would be its duty to do, said court, by the power vested in it by said section of the *618 Penal Code, may authorize, by a proper order, the district attorney to file another information upon and conformably to the commitment as made by the magistrate upon the preliminary hearing of the charge. (People v. Lane, 101 Cal. 513, [36 Pac. 16]; Carpenter v. Nutter, 127 Cal. 61, 64, [59 Pac. 301] ; Ex parte Fowler, 5 Cal. App. 549, [90 Pac. 958].) This is as it should be. The commitment is based upon testimony taken at the hearing, and, where an information has been set aside upon the ground that it does not charge the offense for which the accused has been committed, and the court thereupon directs, by a proper order, that another information be filed on such commitment, there is no conceivable reason calling for a re-examination of the same charge, thus necessitating the retaking of testimony once heard, where the commitment, founded upon such testimony, discloses that an offense of which the superior court has jurisdiction has been committed and that there is reasonable ground arising from the testimony so taken for committing the accused for trial upon the charge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 P. 994, 26 Cal. App. 614, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-clayberg-calctapp-1915.