People v. Dorland

40 P.2d 474, 2 Cal. 2d 235, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 489
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1934
DocketCrim. 3801
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 40 P.2d 474 (People v. Dorland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Dorland, 40 P.2d 474, 2 Cal. 2d 235, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 489 (Cal. 1934).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

This appeal, being within the original appellate jurisdiction of the District Court of Appeal, was heard and determined in the District Court of Appeal, Fourth District, Presiding Justice Barnard writing the opinion of that court.

On petition for hearing, an order of. transfer was made to this court. In granting the petition for hearing, we were influenced largely by the unusual nature of the offense itself, the character of the parties involved, and the manner in which the offense was perpetrated. An important question of law also appeared to be involved - as to whether preju *237 dicial error was committed by the district attorney in asking the wife of appellant, on cross-examination, if upon her visit with her brother on the day following appellant’s arrest to the home of the parents of the boy against whom the act of delinquency is alleged to have been committed, she did not request the father of said boy to drop the charges and give assurances, if he consented to do so, that the family of appellant would care for the appellant by placing him in a sanatorium or an asylum. It was made to appear that she had talked the matter over with the appellant’s family. The inference to be drawn, being the subject-matter of the foregoing question, was that the family had agreed upon such a plan.

We have given full consideration to this assignment of error, as well as to the other assignments urged by appellant, and we have been compelled to conclude that the wife of appellant, having been called as a witness on behalf of her husband, her activity in attempting to weaken or break down the prosecution by persuading or inducing those most directly affected by the wrong committed to relax their efforts or use their influence to have the case dismissed, placed her on the same level with all other witnesses in the ease, and that her interest was to be considered by the jury in the same manner as would the interest of any other witness in the case. Of course, whether the acts of a wife, under the circumstances of the ease, were committed with a view of wilfully attempting to obstruct justice or whether the result sought to be accomplished was committed in good faith and with the conviction that the charges were false, would be an element that should enter into the determination as to what credit the testimony of the witness should be. given. The bona fides would be a question for the jury. Three or four persons testified to the proposition made by the Dorlands to the effect that the appellant would be taken care of in a public or private institution, if the case should be dropped, while the appellant’s wife and brother deny that any such proposition was made.

The opinion of the District Court of Appeal fully meets the objection made to the admissibility of said testimony. The trial court took extraordinary pains to, and did repeatedly, admonish the jury, both by oral and written charges, that said testimony was limited exclusively to the activity *238 or interest as shown by said persons in attempting to induce the father of the boy to abandon prosecution of said case.

This action has received meticulous consideration by the trial court, by the District Court of Appeal, and by ourselves. We have read the entire record, consisting of five hundred pages of testimony tafeen both at the trial and upon the application of appellant to be released on probation. The trial court was exceptionally indulgent and considerate of every legal right to which the appellant was entitled. It was the opinion of these two courts, after a trial and examination of a record which presents a most unusual course of human conduct, that the jury’s verdict could not be disturbed. This court, having considered every question which no doubt disturbed the judicial poise of said two courts, finds itself in a like frame of mind.

The fourteen year old boy, victim of the alleged immoral acts, was assailed by the defense from every conceivable angle. He was examined and catechized by psychiatrists, physicians and lawyers. His former teachers, officers of the school board, and persons who had known him from early childhood were called as witnesses as to his mental and moral qualities. He stood the test to the satisfaction of the jury and we may add that the evidence tending to show a normal, moral American boy outweighed any suggestions made to the contrary. It is true that some of the acts which he testified to as having been committed by the appellant almost challenge human credibility, but this may be said generally of most all persons who commit unnatural sexual acts. There is no rule of logic by which these acts may be tested. There are but few serious contradictions in ■the boy's testimony.

The appellant’s attempt to account for his presence in the neighborhood and his reason for courting the company of a fourteen year old boy are not impressive. He hailed the * boy, he claims, to gain information about persons in a locality in which he was a stranger and about which matter the boy would probably have no knowledge. He at first stated that he was attempting to locate homestead No. 25, the location of which he afterward admitted he knew was not situate in the neighborhood in which he was making inquiry. He was on the highway at the time he hailed the boy, within sight of and but some 300 feet from an oil and *239 gas station, where he could have made inquiry of three or four men, who would have been more likely to have given him the desired information concerning land ownership than would the boy. During all of his stay of approximately one hour and a half in the locality in question, he made no inquiry of a single other person for the information which he says he was in search of, and he was in the boy’s sole company during all of said time. This, too, in view of the fact that he testified that, after the boy had been in his company but a short while, the boy made reference to lustful subjects and he, a man of thirty-five years, did not reprove the boy, but remained in his company. The appellant utterly failed to give any satisfactory reason why he sought the boy’s company or why he was in the particular locality, with no apparent objective, at about the time school was dismissed.

When brought into the presence of the boy and the officer,' he listened to the boy relate a direct accusatory account of appellant’s mistreatment of him and, when the boy concluded, he was asked by the officer if he wished to interrogate the boy as to his accusatory charges. He declined to admit or refute the charge. His only anxiety was as to the boy’s ability to identify the gun.

There are other facts tending to corroborate the testimony of the boy. Of course, corroboration is not essential to an affirmance of the judgment. Every presumption must be indulged in favor of the judgment after conviction. This is the rule in criminal appeals. The jury accepted the testimony of the prosecution’s witnesses as against the accused and his witnesses, and there is no legal reason why this court should disturb its findings.

The case is very fully and fairly reviewed by the District Court of Appeal. Every material objection raised against the judgment has been fully and ably considered. Without further duplication of the facts or discussions of the law, we herewith adopt said opinion as our opinion in words and figures as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
40 P.2d 474, 2 Cal. 2d 235, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-dorland-cal-1934.