People v. Hamet

159 P.2d 702, 69 Cal. App. 2d 546, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 692
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 12, 1945
DocketCrim. No. 2897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 159 P.2d 702 (People v. Hamet) 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. Hamet, 159 P.2d 702, 69 Cal. App. 2d 546, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 692 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

McCOMB, J.

From a judgment of guilty of violating section 337a, subdivision 2 of the Penal Code1, after trial before the court without a jury, defendant appeals.

The evidence2 being viewed in the light most favorable to the People (respondent), the essential facts are:

On April 23, 1944, Los Angeles City Police Officers entered an apartment at 329 South Cloverdale Street. The officers found defendant and his wife in the apartment. They also found a racing publication called Metropolitan Scratch Sheet, a telephone, a small order book and some order blanks upon which were notations. In the opinion of a duly qualified expert the latter constituted betting markers.

[548]*548Defendant relies for reversal of the judgment on two propositions which will be stated and answered hereunder seriatim:

First: There is not any substantial evidence to sustain the conviction.

This proposition is untenable. Defendant admitted to one of the police officers that he was engaged in bookmaking at the apartment. Officer Fisk testified as follows :

1 ‘ The defendant asked me if he could talk to me and I told him he could. We went out to the police car and he asked me where I worked and I told him where I worked. ... I then asked him how long he had been making book at this place and he said for about two months. I asked him if he had taken the bets or if he wrote the bets, and he said ‘No,’ that his wife did, ... he said all the papers I had found on that particular time—and I hadn’t found all of the papers as yet— were all of the papers for that day and they recorded all the bets he had taken that day. ’ ’

The foregoing admission of the defendant constituted substantial evidence to sustain each and every fact upon which the conviction was necessarily predicated. Further discussion of the evidence would not serve any useful purpose.

Second: The trial court committed prejudicial error in considering certain evidence contained in the preliminary tramscript.

This proposition is also without merit. The law is settled that a judgment will not be set aside in any case on the ground of improper admission or rejection of evidence, unless there has been a miscarriage of justice. (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 4%.) Therefore, conceding without deciding that the trial court’s rulings were erroneous, defendant may not urge them as error in this court, in view of his admission that “he had been making book at this place” for about two months. Such statement constituted a confession that he had participated in the crime with which he was charged. Thus no prejudice or miscarriage of justice resulted to him from the alleged erroneous rulings. (People v. Epstein, 21 Cal.App.2d 488, 490 [69 P. 2d 454].)

For the foregoing reasons the judgment and order are and each is affirmed.

Moore, P. J., concurred.

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Related

People v. Beverly
233 Cal. App. 2d 702 (California Court of Appeal, 1965)
People v. Oreck
168 P.2d 186 (California Court of Appeal, 1946)
State v. Skaug
161 P.2d 708 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1945)
State v. Lindsay
161 P.2d 351 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 P.2d 702, 69 Cal. App. 2d 546, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hamet-calctapp-1945.