People v. Hutchings

205 P. 480, 56 Cal. App. 397, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 554
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 1922
DocketCrim. No. 799.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 205 P. 480 (People v. Hutchings) 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. Hutchings, 205 P. 480, 56 Cal. App. 397, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 554 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

WORKS, J.

Defendants, by indictment of the grand jury, were charged with the larceny of fifty thousand dollars from one Norris. Trainor and Patterson were never apprehended, but Hutchings was tried and convicted. He appeals from the judgment of conviction.

The larceny charged against appellant and his eo-eonspirators was accomplished through trick and device, by means of a fake stock transaction through a fake stock broker’s office. [1] Appellant contends that the evidence fails to support the verdict of guilty, because of the alleged insufficiency of certain testimony introduced for the purpose of showing' that a telephone instrument pretended to have been used by the broker in his office was a dummy, that is, that it was unconnected with wires leading to the outside world. A number of witnesses were called to establish the point, but appellant’s insistence is that the subject was not entirely covered and that a reversal of the judgment on that account must follow. In support of his position appellant relies upon People v. Byrnes, 27 Cal. App. 79 [148 Pac. 944]. That case was one in which proof of the nonexistence of a certain alleged telephone connection with a telephone exchange was a necessary link in the chain of evidence. Appellant does not show us that such a condition exists in the present case. Granting that there was a partial failure to prove that no telephone wires ran into the alleged broker’s establishment—and a failure of proof in that regard is all that is claimed—there is no showing that without that proof there was no case made to the jury from which, properly, they might have inferred appellant’s guilt and declared it by their verdict. Further, it appears from appellant’s own statement of the facts proved at the trial and relied upon by the prosecution that the alleged fake telephone was used, during the bunco-steering of Norris, but once, and then for an inconsequential and immaterial purpose. In presenting this point counsel made no attempt *400 to satisfy the well-known rule that an appellant, to be relieved from the effect of a judgment, must show not only that there was error in some step leading to its rendition, but that the error was prejudicial. In respect of this point the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict.

[2] Appellant’s next contention is that certain unusual conduct of the district attorney makes necessary a reversal of the case. During the trial the principal counsel for appellant addressed to a witness a question which without doubt was a reflection upon the integrity - of the officer. The latter at once made strenuous objection to the query on the ground that it reflected upon him, a course which was entirely proper, at least until the court could be satisfied that the question was propounded in good faith. Not content, however, with this legitimate discharge of his duty, the district attorney awaited an opportunity later to take more decided action in the premises. As soon as the trial judge had left the bench at the time for the next recess of the court, but while the courtroom contained many who were spectators at the trial, and in the presence of some of the members of the jury, the district attorney approached the counsel for appellant and committed an assault upon him.

Notwithstanding the unseemly conduct of this public officer, we are precluded from examining the point made by appellant because of it on this appeal. We are to observe that the assault occurred after the hearing of the cause had been recessed and after the trial judge had left the bench. It was therefore an act with which the judge had no opportunity to deal at the time, either by rebuke of the district attorney in the presence of the jury or by way of admonition or instruction addressed to that body. The occurrence was called to the attention of the trial court only by means of a motion for a new trial, the record containing affidavits which were presented in support of the motion and which show the facts we have recited. The grounds upon which a new trial may be demanded in a criminal case are specified in Penal Code, section 1181, and there is not included among them such- a ground as was covered by the affidavits presented to the trial court (People v. Amer, 151 Cal. 303 [90 Pac. 698]). In the ease cited there was a reversal of an order granting a new trial on the ground of the misconduct of a district attorney, the misconduct *401 having been entirely apart from any error of the trial court. The supreme court said, in discussing the point before it, there being,, however, no appeal from the judgment in the case, that on an appeal from a judgment misconduct of a district attorney unconnected with error of the trial court could be considered “when presented by a proper record, and the point saved for review by exception.” This language was followed by the district court of appeal on a later appeal of the same case (People v. Amer, 8 Cal. App. 137 [96 Pac. 401]), and the court even went beyond it, as it was said in the opinion, the italics being ours, that “there is no authority whatever in the statute for holding that such misconduct of the district attorney, aside from any ruling of the court in reference thereto, can be properly reviewed on appeal from the judgment unless lit is a ground for a motion for a new trial.” It is significant to note that, after this decision by the district court of appeal, there was presented to the supreme court a petition for a transfer of the cause to that tribunal and that the petition was denied. Under the authorities noted it is plain to us that such a question as the one now presented cannot be reviewed upon an appeal from the judgment where the only record presenting it is to be found in affidavits attempted to be used upon a motion for a new trial, the question undoubtedly, under the first decision of People v. Amer, 151 Cal. 303 [90 Pac. 698], not being available upon a motion for a new trial. It must be manifest that, if such a point is not to be considered on motion for a new trial, affidavits attempting to present it for the purposes of such a motion are but so much paper and are not a “proper record” upon which it may be reviewed upon an appeal from the judgment. Respondent asserts, citing People v. Harrington, 42 Cal. 165 [10 Am. Rep. 296], and People v. Perez, 9 Cal. App. 265 [98 Pac. 870], that appellant might have availed himself of the misconduct of the district attorney on a motion to set aside the judgment. If that position is justified, appellant then, upon an unfavorable ruling, might have appealed from the order denying his motion (People v. Perez, supra), thus saving the question. We are not, however, concerned with what appellant might have done. What we do hold, following the two opinions in *402 People v. Amer, is that in merely offering to us the affidavits which would not have availed him on his motion for a new trial, appellant does not offer us a “proper record” for the consideration of the question presented by him upon an appeal from the judgment. We should not leave this question without mention of the fact that, in People v.

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Bluebook (online)
205 P. 480, 56 Cal. App. 397, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hutchings-calctapp-1922.