People v. De Fehr

254 P. 588, 81 Cal. App. 562, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 886
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 1927
DocketDocket No. 930.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 254 P. 588 (People v. De Fehr) 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. De Fehr, 254 P. 588, 81 Cal. App. 562, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 886 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

HART, J.

On the sixteenth day of November, 1925, an information was filed by the district attorney of Sacramento County, in the superior court of said county, charging the defendant with the crime of pimping, as said crime is defined by an act of the legislature of 1911 (Stats. 1911, p. 10) as amended by the legislature of 1921 (Stats. 1921, p. 96.) On the seventeenth day of November, 1925, the defendant was arraigned upon said information, entered *564 a plea of not guilty thereto, and his trial for the offense so charged fixed and set for the twenty-eighth day of December, 1925, at the hour of 10 o’clock A. M. On the last-mentioned date, the case having been called for trial, the defendant, through his counsel, asked for and was by the court granted permission to withdraw his plea of not guilty theretofore interposed to the information and, being thereupon called upon to plead to said information, entered a plea of guilty to the crime therein charged. On the same day (December 28, 1925), the court, having upon investigation found that the age of the accused was between eighteen and twenty-one years, made an order, under authority of section 7 of the Juvenile Court Law ('Stats. 1915, pp. 1225, 1230), and with the consent of the accused, committing the latter to the custody of the Preston School of Industry at lone, state of California, “there to be detained . . . until he shall have attained the age of twenty-one years.” The record shows that, under the authority of said order, the defendant was, within due time after the making thereof, committed to the custody of the above-named state reform school. Thereafter, on the eighth day of March, 1926, the court made the following order, the same being over the signature of the judge:

“To O. H. Close, Superintendent Preston School of Industry, lone, California:
“You are hereby ordered and directed to produce Barney DeFehr in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Sacramento, in Department One thereof, at 10 o’clock A. M. on the 22nd day of March, 1926, then and there to show cause, if any he has, why the order of this court heretofore made that he be confined in the Preston School of Industry in satisfaction of the judgment and sentence of this court on his plea of guilty to a charge of Pimping should not be set aside and made void and that he be on said judgment and sentence committed to the State Prison at San Quentin, for the term prescribed by law.”

That the action of the court in making the above order may be understood, it is proper that there should now be presented a statement of the facts leading to the filing of the information against the accused as well as those *565 occurring subsequently to the making of the order committing- the accused to the custody of the reform school. It appears that early in the month of November, 1925, the defendant, accompanied by a girl of about eighteen years of age, went to the city of Sacramento from the city of San Francisco, arriving in the first-named city near the hour of 7 o’clock in the evening. The twain took a room at a hotel in Sacramento and together occupied said room. The record is not clear as to the period of time during which the couple lived together at the hotel referred to, but it is made to appear that, within a very brief period of time after they arrived in Sacramento, the defendant made arrangements with a woman by the name of Mitchell, who, it was and is claimed by the district attorney, was then maintaining a house of prostitution in Sacramento, whereby his young female companion was taken into said house of prostitution for the purpose of carrying on the malodorous business of a prostitute, and that she did for several days following her entrance into the house so occupy herself. These facts became known to the officers, and the young woman was removed from the place, put in proper hands, and both the defendant and the Mitchell woman were arrested, the first named charged, as we have seen, with the crime of pimping, and the last named with the crime of contributing to the delinquency of a minor female. The trial of the case of the Mitchell woman was taken up and proceeded with early in the month of February, 1926. The defendant was subpoenaed by the People to testify in said case and the superintendent of the reform school, where the accused was then under restraint, returned him to the superior court for the purpose of testifying therein. The district attorney called the defendant to the witness-stand in said case and proceeded to question him concerning his knowledge of the character of the house owned and conducted by the Mitchell woman and the circumstances under which the female minor referred to entered said house and her conduct while an inmate thereof. The defendant, in the first instance, stated, in response to his examination as a witness by the district attorney, that he did not know the premises numbered and designated “315%” J Street, in the city of Sacramento (the place where the Mitchell woman is al *566 leged to have conducted a house of prostitution and to which the defendant had taken the female minor mentioned), and further that he had never been at said premises. After giving those answers, and at the afternoon session of the court, the defendant, upon resuming his place in the witness-chair, stated in open court that he desired to correct the testimony given by him at the forenoon session of the court. Being permitted to do so, he stated that he was familiar with and had been at the premises of the Mitchell woman, at No. 315% J Street, Sacramento, prior to his arrest upon the charge of pimping. The district attorney then propounded a number of questions pertinent to the Mitchell case and the defendant in each instance refused to answer the questions, basing his refusal upon the ground that answers thereto would tend to incriminate him or subject him to prosecution for and conviction of offenses other than that to which he had theretofore pleaded guilty and for which he was then being held in custody by the authorities of the reform school. The district attorney made an application to the superior court for an order vacating and setting aside the order suspending the pronouncement of judgment in the case of the defendant, upon his plea of guilty' to the crime of pimping, and committing him to the custody of the Preston School of Industry in lieu of imprisonment in the state penitentiary, and in support of said application filed an affidavit setting forth the facts above stated, and further, in substance: That, after the arraignment of the accused on the charge of pimping, his attorney called on the district attorney and assured that officer that the defendant was under the age of eighteen years, and that he would change his plea to the crime of pimping, as charged against him, if the district attorney would recommend to the judge of the superior court that defendant be sent to the Preston School of Industry “instead of being sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison”; that he (district attorney) replied that the defendant would be called as a witness in the ease of the “People v. Vivian Mitchell, charged with the crime of contributing to the dependency of one-, a girl under the age of 21 years” (referring to the young woman accompanying defendant to Sacramento and by the latter placed in the Mitchell house of prostitu *567

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re K.W.
California Court of Appeal, 2020
Buckley v. Corey
230 Cal. App. 2d 813 (California Court of Appeal, 1964)
People v. Williams
163 P.2d 692 (California Supreme Court, 1945)
In Re Gilliam
161 P.2d 793 (California Supreme Court, 1945)
In Re Herrera
143 P.2d 345 (California Supreme Court, 1943)
People v. Sanchez
132 P.2d 810 (California Supreme Court, 1942)
Thomas v. United States
121 F.2d 905 (D.C. Circuit, 1941)
People v. Thomas
113 P.2d 706 (California Court of Appeal, 1941)
People v. Howard
60 P.2d 336 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)
In Re Edwards
278 P. 910 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 P. 588, 81 Cal. App. 562, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-de-fehr-calctapp-1927.