People v. Edgar

167 P. 891, 34 Cal. App. 459, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 64
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 24, 1917
DocketCrim. No. 673.
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 167 P. 891 (People v. Edgar) 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. Edgar, 167 P. 891, 34 Cal. App. 459, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 64 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

THE COURT.

The defendant was charged with and convicted of the crime of rape alleged to have been committed upon a female under the age of consent. He was sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary, and appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

As is quite frequent in criminal cases appealed from the county of Santa Clara (from which this appeal comes), the misconduct of the district attorney during the trial of the cause is the principal point made for a reversal of the judgment. It seems to be a pronounced proclivity of the district attorney of that county to endeavor, in the trial of a person charged with crime, to circumvent the well-settled and generally well-understood rules of evidence by willfully injecting into the case immaterial and prejudicial matters, through the medium of innuendo, bald assertions of his personal opinion as to alleged facts, and the poor pretense of arguing objections, all obviously intended for the ears and consideration of the jury. In the past similar misconduct, which has been brought to our attention in other recent cases, did not result in a reversal of the judgment, not, however, because it was not abundantly established, but because the evidence in the given case sufficiently showed the defendant to be guilty, *461 and we were satisfied that the verdict of the jury had not been controlled or materially affected by such misconduct. The situation in the present case is obviously different. Here the testimony of the prosecuting witness was not only uncertain and contradictory in matters of vital importance, but was shown to be willfully and absolutely false in certain particulars affecting a material phase of her story. Moreover, her story in part runs close to the border line of the fantastic.

No good purpose would be served by narrating in detail her testimony; but for the purpose of showing its improbability in an essential feature it will suffice to say that she testified in substance that the defendant prior to the commission of the particular act for which he was on trial had had sexual intercourse with her at regular intervals during a period of several months, but that on each occasion there was but slight penetration, and she undertook to state with exactitude its extent; and also testified that on each occasion the defendant was content to lie passively upon her for a period of fifteen minutes without engaging in the motions which ordinarily accompany an act of sexual intercourse.

The improbability of the testimony of the prosecuting witness in the particular stated is obvious. It was so to Dr. Beaty, a witness for the prosecution, who, referring to it, said: “I can conceive of an entering carefully, very carefully, and being withdrawn without causing a rupture of the hymen. I think it is very unnatural, very unusual. It is not common to carry on acts of sexual intercourse as described by the prosecutrix. I have a reasonable doubt as to whether that would be probable, but not as to its being possible. It is a possibility but not a probability.”

The defendant, testifying in his own behalf, denied the story of the prosecutrix; and a Mrs. Perry, a witness' called by him, corroborated him in the particular that he did not and could not have committed the offense charged on the day and at the place and time charged. This witness testified in substance that she and her husband had been particular and intimate friends of the defendant and his wife, and had frequently visited them at their home, and that after the wife’s death she, the witness, had been in the habit of visiting the defendant at his home for the purpose of gathering up and doing his laundry, and at one time after the death of his wife had attended him during an illness; that she was at the defend *462 ant’s home accompanied by her children on the day and during the hours that the prosecutrix testified the defendant had committed the act charged against him; that while there the prosecutrix called, but that the defendant told her to go home, and on that occasion at no time attempted and had no opportunity to commit any act of impropriety with her.

This witness was subjected to a very severe cross-examination by the district attorney. He was not satisfied to rest upon the results obtained by this examination, but resorted to what we must characterize as the grossest misconduct in a further effort to discredit her. His attitude and conduct will be best shown by excerpts from the record of the trial.

“Q. (By Mr. Free on Cross-examination:) You cannot say whether you went there [to the defendant’s home] once or several times that week [the week in which the offense was charged]?
“A. I never went several times in one week when Mr. Edgar was not sick.
“Q. Oh, I see.
“A. When Mr. Edgar was sick my husband as a rule would go with me, and sometimes I went alone, and my husband was a frequent visitor and visited Mr. Edgar very often, and I went with my husband’s consent.
“Q. Did your husband go there to visit Mr. Edgar or come to get you to bring you home?
“Mr. Blanchard (Counsel for the Defendant) : Just a second. I object to that on the ground- it is immaterial, irrelevant and incompetent, not proper cross-examination, and intended by the district attorney as an insult to this witness, and I assign the same as misconduct, and ask that -the jury be instructed to disregard it.
“The Court: The objection is sustained. Gentlemen of the jury,—whenever the court sustains an objection to a question you are to disregard the question as well as the answer— there being no answer in this case.
“Q. Haven’t you and your husband had frequent trouble about Mr. Edgar?
“Mr. Blanchard: That is objected to as immaterial, irrelevant and incompetent and not proper cross-examination, and intended by the district attorney as an insult to this witness, and I assign the same as misconduct of the district attorney, and I ask the court to instruct the district attorney to desist *463 from such misconduct, and I ask that the jury be instructed to disregard any statement of that character.
“Mr. Free: I want to answer that. This witness alleges that her conduct in this respect is agreeable to her husband, which is contrary to the fact, as we know, and the husband will so state; and I want the right to cross-examine her and lay the foundation for further testimony.
“Mr. Blanchard: I assign the statement of the distóct attorney as misconduct. I state that it is absolutely false, and the husband has visited Mr. Edgar frequently himself.
“Mr. Free: Will you consent to the husband being called and sworn and asked the questions ?
“Mr. Blanchard: I will waive none of my rights so far as that is concerned. The fact of a defendant such as Mr. Edgar being indicted on a charge of rape, and then deny him the right to have a lady come to testify without branding her as being guilty of every crime than that one you allege this man is guilty of.

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Bluebook (online)
167 P. 891, 34 Cal. App. 459, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-edgar-calctapp-1917.