People v. Denton

178 P.2d 524, 78 Cal. App. 2d 540, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1504
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 13, 1947
DocketCrim. 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 178 P.2d 524 (People v. Denton) 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. Denton, 178 P.2d 524, 78 Cal. App. 2d 540, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1504 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

SCHOTTKY, J. pro tem.

An information was filed against defendant and appellant in which he was accused as follows: In count one of the crime of sex perversion, a violation of section 288a of the Penal Code, it being alleged that defendant and appellant on May 13, 1946, participated in an act of copulating his male sexual organ with the mouth of one Joe Hernandez. In count two of the infamous crime against nature, committed on the same date upon the person of one Joe Hernandez; in counts three, four and five of prior convictions of felonies, one of arson and two of burglary. Appellant pleaded not guilty to counts one and two, and admitted the prior convictions charged in counts three, four and five. Upon trial the jury returned separate verdicts finding appellant guilty on counts one and two. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was denied and appellant was thereupon sentenced to concurrent terms of imprisonment in the state prison. This appeal is from said judgment and from the order denying a new trial.

The first of appellant’s numerous claims of reversible error is that the evidence is insufficient to support the ver *544 diets. The substance of appellant’s contention upon this point is that the evidence of the prosecution, and particularly the complaining witness, Joe Hernandez, was so palpably false and incredible that it cannot afford a base for the verdicts. Before discussing this contention we shall briefly state what the testimony in the instant case shows.

It is apparent that appellant accosted Joe Hernandez, aged 10, Billie Hernandez, aged 8, and Bob Keola, aged 10, in the forenoon of May 13, 1946, while they were playing hookey from school and were fishing under the M Street bridge across the Sacramento River on the. Yolo County side. The appellant soon separated the three boys, striking Bobby Keola and causing Billie and Bobby to take to their heels to secure help. Joe was left alone with Denton who pulled his pants down, and tried to insert his penis in the boy’s “seat.” Joe then put his pants on, and Denton kept hold of his arm and guided him on top of the levee. The two then walked up the river about a block towards the I Street bridge and stopped under a tree at a point between the levee and the river, when the defendant pulled the boy’s pants down again, and unbuttoned his own trousers. While the boy was lying down, defendant then attempted to insert his penis in the boy’s “seat.” Denton then told the boy to put Den- • ton’s penis in his mouth, and struck the boy in the eye and tried to choke him, following which the boy placed his mouth around Denton’s penis. Following this performance, Denton again inserted his penis in the boy’s rectum, inserting it to such an extent that it hurt. Joe began to cry, and the act hurt him so much that he had to urinate. Joe Hernandez recounted in detail the acts of sexual perversion and degeneracy practiced upon him; and the witnesses Nathan Ballansaw and Leon Watkins, who had been summoned to the scene by the two boys who had run off, both observed appellant in a most compromising position, his trousers lowered, the trousers of the boy also lowered, and appellant’s private parts exposed. The witnesses Ballansaw and Watkins came into view of appellant and the boy from different directions a!nd not at the same moment. Ballansaw testified that the boy was facing appellant, his face being about five inches from appellant’s penis while Watkins testified that appellant had his penis by the boy’s rectum. Appellant attempted to flee from the scene and pleaded with Ballansaw and Watkins to “allow him a chance.” An examination of the victim’s *545 rectum indicated that the mucous membrane appeared to be irritated, which irritation the examining doctor testified could have been caused by the insertion of a penis. While the opinion given by the doctor did not positively limit the cause of the boy’s anal disorder to a criminal attack, it was certainly consistent therewith.

Appellant in his testimony denied any criminal acts and introduced testimony seeldng to impeach the complaining witness and other witnesses for the People, but the verdicts of the jury indicate that they did not place much reliance upon the testimony of appellant and his witnesses.

Appellant in his brief seeks to point out inconsistencies and contradictions in the testimony of Joe Hernandez and other witnesses, but these were all matters for the jury to pass upon and are not matters to be weighed by an appellate tribunal. A reading of the record not only convinces us that the evidence is sufficient to support the judgments, but makes it difficult for us to understand how the jury could have arrived at any other verdicts. There is nothing inherently improbable in the testimony relied upon by the prosecution and we can only conclude that the contention of appellant that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdicts is entirely devoid of merit.

Appellant’s second contention is that Joe Hernandez, the complaining witness, was incompetent to testify. The record shows that said witness was ten years old and that at the outset of his testimony he was interrogated as to the nature of an oath and answered that he knew it was wrong to tell a lie and that he knew he would be punished if he did not tell the truth. The trial court after participating in the preliminary questioning and seeing and hearing the witness ruled that the witness was competent to testify.

This contention of appellant lacks substantial merit. The law is well settled in California that all persons capable of perception and communication may be witnesses. (Pen. Code, § 1321; Code Civ. Proc., § 1879.) The law upon this subject is well stated in the case of People v. Harrison, 46 Cal.App.2d 779, at page 785 [117 P.2d 19], as follows:

“It is the law that children under ten years of age cannot be witnesses where they appear incapable of receiving just impressions of the facts respecting which they are examined or of relating them truly. (Sec. 1880, Code of Civil Procedure.) The last cited section means nothing more than that *546 if a child under ten years of age appears to the trial judge to be competent, i. e., to have the capacity to receive impressions and to relate them truthfully, he becomes a competent witness. (People v. Gasser, 34 Cal.App. 541, 543 [168 P. 157].) After the judge has heard the child give his testimony and has determined that he was a competent witness, such determination is not a matter of review any more than his ruling upon the capacity of any other witness. (People v. Craig, 111 Cal. 460 [44 P. 186]; People v. Morcumb, 28 Cal.App.2d 465 [82 P.2d 714].) There is nothing in the testimony of any of the five children that indicated in the slightest degree his incompetency to testify. The only two daughters under ten years of age were ID and OY. At the time of the trial ID was more than 91/2 years of age; her testimony was responsive, coherent and intelligent. The fourth daughter was OY, eight years of age. The trial judge satisfactorily tested her qualifications on voir dire. In addition to

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Bluebook (online)
178 P.2d 524, 78 Cal. App. 2d 540, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-denton-calctapp-1947.