People v. Groves

219 P. 1033, 63 Cal. App. 709, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 324
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 19, 1923
DocketCrim. No. 969.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 219 P. 1033 (People v. Groves) 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. Groves, 219 P. 1033, 63 Cal. App. 709, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 324 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

CRAIG, J.

The defendants were convicted on December 26, 1922, of the crime of robbery, the specific charge being that on or about the nineteenth day of June of that year, in the city of Los Angeles, they took from one G. C. Knight personal property of the value of $16.65 in gold coin of the United States. For purposes of intelligible reference we may denominate this the oil-station case.

On October 3, 1922, the same defendants pleaded guilty to grand larceny under an information consisting of three counts charging, respectively, grand larceny, robbery, and burglary, in that these defendants and one William Allen stole $25,000 worth of diamonds and jewelry on or about June 1, 1922, in said city of Los Angeles. This will be referred to as the Rowan case.

Sentences were pronounced in the latter ease on October 10th and execution was stayed until the 17th, at which time defendants moved to dismiss the second and third counts, which motion was denied. The district attorney moved to set the cause for trial on said two counts, which was also denied, and he thereupon stated that the oil-station case was pending and had been set for trial on November 29th, and asked that execution in the Rowan case be stayed until December 1st, and the court so ordered. Through inadvertence and mistake of the clerk the order staying execution was not inserted in the minutes, and a commitment was issued and delivered to the sheriff, pursuant to which the defendants were removed to the penitentiary. November 25th an order was made directing thé sheriff to return the defendants *712 from the penitentiary and produce them in court on the 29th of that month for trial, and the warden was therein directed to deliver them to the sheriff upon the production of said order. Defendants were accordingly brought into court as ordered, and on said twenty-ninth day of November a further order was entered reciting the oversight and directing that the minutes of October 17th be corrected so as to set forth the facts and the order staying execution until November 29, 1922. Defendants thereupon moved for a continuance, which was granted, and on December 1st they prayed for a further continuance on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction, which motion was denied; however, they were given until December 20th to prepare for trial. On this latter date the trial commenced and resulted in a verdict of guilty against both defendants.

Prom the final judgment of conviction and from an order denying their motion for a new trial, the defendants have appealed to this court.

The first ground upon which the defendants seek to reverse the judgment is that the trial court exceeded its jurisdiction in ordering and removing them from the custody of the warden of the state penitentiary, and forcing them to trial.

The minutes of the trial court show several continuances granted at defendants’ request, and that on August 25th they consented to November 29th as the date of trial; when they appeared and pleaded guilty in the Rowan case, on October 3d, the district attorney’s motion for stay of execution appears to have been granted. That both defendants were therefore fully cognizant of the status of their case and were at least constrained to anticipate the probability of a trial, they cannot consistently gainsay. The record does not warrant the inference, nor do the defendants contend, that they otherwise than silently submitted to removal to the penitentiary and return therefrom. The authority - of the sheriff, or of the warden, was at no time questioned, and after such acquiescence in the execution by those officers of the court’s orders, they were too late to attack the validity of the removal proceedings or the jurisdiction of the court. In Ex parte Clark, 85 Cal. 203 [24 Pac. 726], it was determined that the court had jurisdiction to try the petitioner for murder, although to be so tried he was *713 "brought from the prison at Folsom, where he was serving a sentence upon conviction of felony. In passing upon the question the court used the following language:

“No matter whether the superior court of San Francisco had the right to order the petitioner out of the custody of the Warden of the state prison or not, he was produced. An information charging him with an offense within the jurisdiction of that court was filed, and the court thereby became and was vested with the power and jurisdiction to try him, and its judgment is valid and binding. Therefore he cannot be heard at this late day to claim, in a proceeding of this kind, that the sheriff has no right to hold him under such judgment. Conceding that the warden of the state prison might have asserted his right to hold the petitioner under the commitment from the superior court of San Diego County, it is clear to us that the petitioner cannot escape the consequence of a valid judgment rendered against him, by showing that another valid judgment had previously been rendered which had not been fully executed.”
“The jurisdiction of the court in which the individual is found is not impaired by the manner in which the accused is brought before it.” (Mahon v. Justice, 127 U. S. 708 [32 L. Ed. 283, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1208, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes].) “The defendant being before the proper court, which had jurisdiction of his offense, it matters not how he may have entered into the presence of the court, it was its duty to try him.” (People v. Pratt, 78 Cal. 345, 349 [20 Pac. 731, 733].) Section 1567 of the Penal Code, as construed in Ex parte McGuire, 135 Cal. 339 [87 Am. St. Rep. 105, 67 Pac. 327], gave the court full jurisdiction to set the case and try it. We quote from the case just mentioned, and which is cited by appellants, as follows: “A prisoner, whether confined in the state prison or in the county jail, may be brought before a court for any lawful purpose (Pen. Code, sec. 1567), and, among the purposes, in order that he may be tried for a criminal offense, as this prisoner was. In such a case the proceedings against him are regulated by the same statutory provisions that control the procedure in other trials upon similar charges.”

Section 1567 of the Penal Code provides: “When it is necessary to have a person imprisoned in the state prison *714 brought before any court, or a person imprisoned in a county jail brought before a court sitting in another county, an order for that purpose may be made by the court and executed by the sheriff of the county where it is made.”

Defendants next contend that they were induced to plead guilty to grand larceny, and to make statements, in connection with the Rowan case, by promises that they would not be prosecuted on any other charges, and that this constituted a bar to prosecution in the oil-station case. If the district attorney made such representations he clearly exceeded his authority in so far as binding his own office or the court was concerned. Defendants cite no authorities holding that a promise of leniency given by a prosecuting officer under such circumstances has ever been held to prevent prosecution for crime, and in determining this appeal we are not required to inquire into the ethics of the transaction, if, indeed, one took place of the character alleged.

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Bluebook (online)
219 P. 1033, 63 Cal. App. 709, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-groves-calctapp-1923.