People v. Durrant

48 P. 75, 116 Cal. 179, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 528
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1897
DocketCrim. No. 196
StatusPublished
Cited by204 cases

This text of 48 P. 75 (People v. Durrant) 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. Durrant, 48 P. 75, 116 Cal. 179, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 528 (Cal. 1897).

Opinions

Henshaw, J.

The defendant, convicted of the murder of Blanche Lament, prosecutes these appeals from the judgment and from the order denying him a new trial.

Reviewing the specifications of error in their natural sequence, rather than in the order of their presentation in argument, the first which invite attention are defendant’s challenges to the panel. He contended that the list of trial jurors had not been selected or returned as required by sections 204-09 of the Code of Civil Procedure. In support of this contention he offered the-record of the proceedings of the judges of the superior court in the matter. This record, kept by the secretary of the judges, was incomplete. Under direction of the presiding judge the secretary amended his record, and as amended his minutes showed a compliance with the law. The presiding judge was permitted to testify to the facts attending the selecting and listing of the trial jurors, from which it appeared that the proceedings of the judges were due and regular. Defendant’s objection that the original minutes of the secretary were the sole evidence admissible upon the question cannot be sustained. It was the inherent right of the court to correct its records to make them comport with verity. (Kaufman v. Shain, 111 Cal. 16; 52 Am. St. Rep. 139.) [194]*194The secretary’s minutes are not made exclusive evidence of the proceedings they undertake to record. It was the duty of the trial judge to determine the facts, and no better evidence could have' been offered than that of the presiding judge, himself an actor in and creator of them.

The further objection that the judges failed to comply with the law, in that of the jurors selected some did not possess the requisite qualifications, is equally untenable as a ground of challenge to the panel. (People v. Young, 108 Cal. 12.) To hold mandatory the provisions of section 205 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and thus to require- of the judges the strictest compliance with the law in the matter of the selection of jurors; would be, to the last degree, unreasonable. They would then be obliged to lay aside all other business and devote their time for days, and perhaps weeks, to personal inquiry, inspection, and examination of three thousand six hundred men (the number of jurors called for), and after this labor to decide, at the peril of a rejection of the whole panel, that to the final name upon the list each man possessed all the qualifications of a juror.. The provisions of the section are directory, and a substantial compliance with them is here shown, and is all that may be demanded.

Section 204 of the Code of Civil -Procedure provides that in counties and cities and counties of more than one hundred thousand inhabitants the judges of the superior court shall select and return trial jurors. Though the section was amended in 1881, and again in 1893, the provisions relative to cities and counties of over one hundred thousand inhabitants continued unchanged so far as affects this consideration. Before the present constitution went into operation, the jurors were selected by the district judges of the several judicial districts within the city and county of San Francisco, the county judge, the probate judge, and the judge of the municipal criminal court. The amendments to the section made after the adoption of the present constitution were [195]*195designed to meet the new judicial system provided for by that instrument. This section was a part of the code before the adoption of the existing constitution, and by that instrument (Const., art. XXII, sec. 11) all laws relative to the judicial system then in force were made applicable to the new system therein provided for. Section 204 of the Code of Civil Procedure was not unconstitutional under our earlier organic law, and did not become unconstitutional by virtue of the present one. To the contrary, the section was expressly retained in force.

The court summoned jurors by special venire. To the panel thus formed defendant objected. The objection was not based upon section 1064 of the Penal Code, but upon the ground that the regular jury list had not been exhausted. This is not a ground for challenge. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 226, 227; Levy v. Wilson, 69 Cal. 111; People v. Vincent, 95 Cal. 425.) The court may summon jurors by special venire without exhausting all of the names upon the regular list.

To the jurors Crocker and Nathan challenges were interposed for actual bias, under subdivision 2 of section 1073 of the Penal Code. The challenges were disallowed. Whether or not the jurors Crocker and Nathan, or either of them, were shown to be disqualified by actual bias against the defendant, and, therefore, whether or not the trial court erred in disallowing the challenges interposed to them, is not, under the facts presented by the record, a subject for consideration by this court. The challenges for cause having been disallowed, the defendant did not see fit to exercise his right of peremptory challenge upon either of the jurors, but accepted them both. When the jury was completed, defendant still had in reserve and unemployed eight of his twenty peremptory challenges. It has in this state been held in numerous instances that if the judge errs in disallowing a challenge for cause, and the defendant thereafter excuses the obnoxious juror under a peremptory challenge, and the jury is completed without the exhaustion [196]*196by the defense of all of its peremptory challenges, the error of the court will not be reviewed upon appeal, because no injury could have resulted to the defendant. (People v. Gatewood, 20 Cal. 146; People v. Gaunt, 23 Cal. 156; People v. Weil, 40 Cal. 268; People v. McGungill, 41 Cal. 429.)

The situation here differs somewhat from that presented by the cases last above cited. But the reasoning which governed those decisions is strictly applicable to present consideration. The defendant may not have reviewed an error which he has invited or has failed to avoid by the legal means at his command. If the defendant feared to put himself upon trial before the jurors whom he had challenged, it was his duty to have availed himself of the liberal aid which the law affords, and to have excused them from the box. If, in so doing, he lessened the number of his peremptory challenges to such an extent that it appears they were exhausted before the completion of the jury, he may well be heard to urge in argument that by reason of the erroneous ruling the number of his peremptory challenges was improperly curtailed, and he was deprived of a legal right; but, if it is shown, as here, that the two jurors in question were accepted and allowed to remain, when the defense could have exercised peremptorj'' challenges upon them, and, further, that at the time when the jury was completed there was still held in reserve by the defense nearly half of its petemptory challenges—if, under these circumstances, error was committed by the trial court, it was either permitted by the defense, or acquiesced in by its failure to exercise its legal right, and the ruling will not be reviewed.

There will be found in the cases some slight diversity of opinion upon the question, but the great weight of authority is in support of the view above expressed. Thompson on Trials, section 120, thus declares the principle: “It is a rule of paramount importance that errors committed in overruling challenges for cause are not grounds of reversal, unless it be shown an objec[197]

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

Related

People v. Lucas
333 P.3d 587 (California Supreme Court, 2014)
People v. American Contractors Indemnity Co. CA6
California Court of Appeal, 2014
People v. Superior Court (Zamudio)
999 P.2d 686 (California Supreme Court, 2000)
Gherman v. Colburn
72 Cal. App. 3d 544 (California Court of Appeal, 1977)
Dumez v. Houma Municipal Fire and Police Civil Service Board
341 So. 2d 1206 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1976)
People v. Hamilton
383 P.2d 412 (California Supreme Court, 1963)
People v. Bowley
382 P.2d 591 (California Supreme Court, 1963)
People v. Ketchel
381 P.2d 394 (California Supreme Court, 1963)
People v. Kuykendall
285 P.2d 996 (California Court of Appeal, 1955)
Dastagir v. Dastagir
241 P.2d 656 (California Court of Appeal, 1952)
People v. Holt
153 P.2d 21 (California Supreme Court, 1944)
People v. Planagan
150 P.2d 927 (California Court of Appeal, 1944)
United States v. Chaplin
54 F. Supp. 682 (S.D. California, 1944)
United States v. Ballard
35 F. Supp. 105 (S.D. California, 1940)
People v. Curtis
98 P.2d 228 (California Court of Appeal, 1939)
People v. Parman
92 P.2d 387 (California Supreme Court, 1939)
Jackson v. Superior Court
74 P.2d 243 (California Supreme Court, 1937)
People v. DuBois
60 P.2d 190 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)
People v. Glab
59 P.2d 195 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)
People v. Flores
58 P.2d 1311 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P. 75, 116 Cal. 179, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-durrant-cal-1897.