People v. Frankovich

221 P. 671, 64 Cal. App. 184, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 152
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 19, 1923
DocketCrim. No. 719.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 221 P. 671 (People v. Frankovich) 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. Frankovich, 221 P. 671, 64 Cal. App. 184, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 152 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

*186 HART, J.

The district attorney of Humboldt County filed in the superior court of said county an information accusing the defendants of the crime of maintaining a common nuisance, as said offense is defined by section 21 of the Volstead Act, as adopted by the so-called Wright Act enacted by the legislature and later approved by the people of California under the power of referendum, for the purpose of enforcing within the limits of said state the mandates of the eighteenth amendment to the federal constitution. The defendants Frankovich and White were convicted and the defendant Gutenich was acquitted by the jury of the crime so charged. Frankovich and White have removed the ease to this court by an appeal from the judgment and the order denying them a new trial. They also make an attempt to appeal from the order denying their motion for an arrest of judgment. As has repeatedly been pointed out in the decisions, there is no authority for an appeal from the last-mentioned order, the points raised by a motion in arrest of judgment being reviewable on an appeal from tbe judgment.

The asserted failure of the information to state a public offense, alleged insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, and alleged errors in the court’s rulings upon the question of the admissibility of certain testimony and in the giving and refusing to give certain instructions, constitute the general grounds upon which a reversal is urged.

1. The contention first made as to the alleged insufficiency of the information to state a public offense is, grounded upon the proposition that there is no law in this state specifically denouncing as a common or criminal nuisance the act of maintaining a place or house, or building, etc., where intoxicating liquor is manufactured, sold, kept, or bartered, etc. The specific contention is, in effect, that the legislature, in enacting the so-called Wright Act, violated the mandate of section 24 of article IV of our state constitution, in that by said act it merely adopted by reference all the penal provisions of the law enacted by Congress for the enforcement of the terms of the eighteenth amendment to the federal constitution. The section of the state constitution referred to reads: “No law shall be revised .or amended by reference to its title; but in such case the act revised *187 or section amended shall be re-enacted and published at length as revised or amended.”

In the recent case of Ex parte Burke, 190 Cal. 326 [212 Pac. 193], the supreme court had before it the precise question now before us. In fact, the law involved in that case was the Wright Act, and the attack launched against it therein was upon exactly the same grounds as those upon which the validity of said act is questioned herein. The supreme .court held that the act was not obnoxious to the objection that the method of its enactment was contrary to section 24 of article IV of the constitution of this state, saying, among other things, that that provision of the constitution “refers only to the revision or amendment of some law already enacted by our state legislature, and has no reference to the enactment of a new provision. The principle that laws may be enacted in that fashion,” proceeds the court, “is well established.. In People v. Whipple, 47 Cal. 592, it was held that it was proper for the legislature, in creating an office, to define the duties of the incumbent by reference to an existing statute and to provide that those duties shall be the same as those required by the act referred to. The principle is that such legislation may consist in readopting by its title the provisions of another act adopted by another state, or by the United States.”

It is further contended that the information is bad because it does not conform to the requirements of sections 950, 951, and. 952 of the Penal Code. There was no demurrer to the information, but the objections challenging the sufficiency of the information were raised by the motion in arrest of judgment. Except in so far as the said motion may involve an attack upon the information on the ground that it does not state a public offense (sec. 950, subd. 2, Pen. Code), any defects therein were waived by the failure to demur. We think, however, that the information, with the requisite clearness and directness, charges the offense sought to be therein stated. It is substantially in the language of the section of the Wright Act or Volstead Act (sec. 21) upon which it is founded (see Fed. Stats. Ann., 2d ed., 1919 Supp., p. 212; U. S. Comp. Stats. Ann., Supp. 1923, see. 101381/2jj), and involves a statement of the acts constituting the offense denounced by *188 said section “in such manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended.” (Sec. 950, subd. 2, Pen. Code.) No more is required of a criminal pleading than that “it be direct and certain, and allege all the acts and facts which the legislature has said shall constitute the offense charged.” (People v. Fowler, 88 Cal. 136, 138 [25 Pac. 1110].) No language could be added to section 21 of the Volstead Act, adopted by the Wright Act, which would render its definition of the crime of maintaining a common nuisance clearer or more direct, and hence the general rule that it is sufficient if a crime be stated in an information or indictment in substantial agreement with the language of the statute applies here.

2. The contention that the verdict is devoid of sufficient evidentiary support to uphold it is without merit. The information alleges that the defendants, “on or about the 1st day of February, 1923, and on divers other dates between said 1st day of February, 1923, and the 22d day of March, 1923,” did “maintain a common nuisance, to wit: a room, building and place, at No. 238 Second Street, in the City of Eureka, said County and State, where intoxicating liquor, to wit: whiskey and brandy, was kept, sold and bartered,” etc. The defendant, Frankovieh, admitted that he was the owner of the business—ostensibly that of dispensing “soft drinks”—carried on at 238 Second Street, in the city of Eureka, and the lessee of said place, and that he had been such owner and lessee and conducted said business continuously from some date in the month of June, 1922, down to the date upon which the information herein „was filed, to wit, April 17, 1923; that the defendant, White, during the months of January, February, and March, 1923, was employed by him as a barkeeper at said place, and during all of said time worked therein in that capacity. Some eight or ten witnesses—most of them in the employ of the district attorney and engaged in the investigation of “bootlegging” and the apprehension of “bootleggers” prosecuting their illicit activities in Humboldt County and the city of Eureka —positively testified that on many different occasions in the months of January, February, and March, 1923, and prior to the date of the filing of the information herein, they purchased, were served with and drank whisky and *189 “jackass” brandy in the said place; that the defendant White, so some of these witnesses declared, waited on and served them with intoxicating liquors on some of the occasions referred to; that the price paid by them for the liquor so sold and served to them was twenty-five cents a drink.

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Bluebook (online)
221 P. 671, 64 Cal. App. 184, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-frankovich-calctapp-1923.