People v. Lawlor

131 P. 63, 21 Cal. App. 63, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 214
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1913
DocketCrim. No. 423.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 131 P. 63 (People v. Lawlor) 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. Lawlor, 131 P. 63, 21 Cal. App. 63, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 214 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of final conviction and from an order denying a new trial in a case wherein the defendant was charged with the crime of pandering as defined by a recent enactment of the legislature (Stats. 1911, p. 9), one clause of which provides that “Any person who shall procure for a female person a place as inmate in a house of prostitution or as inmate of any place in which prostitution is encouraged or allowed within this state . . . shall be guilty of a felony, to wit, pandering. ...”

This clause of the statute constituted the charging part of the information upon which the defendant was convicted. The defendant upon his arraignment interposed a demurrer *65 to the information based upon all of the statutory grounds, which was disallowed, and it is now insisted, as we understand the contention of counsel for the defendant, that the demurrer should have been sustained upon the ground that the information did not state a public offense in this: that the charging part thereof was not founded upon and did not include all of the acts and conduct which the statute enumerates and denounces in its definition of the crime of pandering. In other words, it is the contention apparently of counsel for the defendant that the doing of any one of the acts enumerated and denounced in the statute will not alone constitute the offense of • pandering; and that in order for the information in the present case to state such offense it would have been necessary to allege conjunctively the commission by the defendant of all of the acts and things enumerated in and denounced by the statute.

There is no merit in this contention. Clearly the statute in question contemplates that the commission, either separately or all together, of the series of acts enumerated therein may and will constitute the offense of pandering. As was said in In the Matter of Roberts, 157 Cal. 472, [108 Pac. 315], the statute in question “is written in the disjunctive throughout, and the several offenses therein described are apparently as distinct and independent of each other as if they had been enacted in separate sections. In general, when such form of expression is used, the effect of the language pertaining exclusively to each offense described is not affected or modified by the words used solely in describing the other offenses, but the description of each is to be considered as if it stood alone and were read in conjunction with the general words applying to all.”

The people elected in the case at bar to charge and prosecute the defendant upon that clause of the statute in question which declares every person guilty of the crime of pandering who “shall procure for a female person a place as inmate in a house of prostitution or as an inmate of any place in which prostitution is encouraged or allowed within this state.” This clause of the statute clearly contemplates and provides for a ease entirely distinct from those cases provided for and denounced in the remaining clauses of the statute; and it is *66 well settled that where, in defining an offense a statute enumerates and denounces a series of acts, the commission of a single enumerated act will constitute the offense. (People v. Frank, 28 Cal. 507; People v. Leyshon, 108 Cal. 440, [41 Pac. 480]; People v. Barnnovich, 16 Cal. App. 427, [117 Pac. 572].)

Counsel for the defendant complains bitterly of a rebuke administered to him by the trial judge during the course of the cross-examination of the complaining witness, and insists that the remarks of the trial judge, although directed to counsel personally, must have operated to the -prejudice of the defendant. The incident referred to is shown by the record to bé as follows:

“The Court: Don’t yell at the witness, Hr. Peery.
“Mr. Peery: That is one of the faults of my voice if your honor please.
“The Court: (to the witness) I don’t want you to be afraid of any one here. There isn’t anybody in this room that you need be afraid of, and, if necessary, we will have all the police force -to protect you. (To counsel for defendant.) And I don’t want any nonsense and I don’t want you to shout at this witness.
“Mr. Peery: I don’t want to shout at her. I have never browbeaten a witness in my life, but I am going to examine this witness.
“The Court: You are going to do it under the court’s direction.
“Mr. Peery: I was never guilty of yelling at a witness or of showing disrespect to the court.
“The Court: Your attitude is menacing and threatening and I don’t like it.
“Mr. Peery: I never acted otherwise than as a gentleman, and I resent those remarks of the court. I have a reputation as a gentleman at this bar for twenty years. If I have a witness that I think 'is unwilling and concealing something I have a right to bring it out.
“Mr. McNutt: (Assistant district attorney) You have not got her guessing now, so go on.”

It is the undoubted right of a trial court, within the limits-of a sound discretion, to control and regulate the conduct of a trial; and it is the duty of such court to promptly and *67 plainly exercise that right of its own motion for the protection of a witness under examination whenever it appears to the court that the conduct or attitude of counsel toward the witness is “menacing and threatening.” In the present case it .is apparent from that portion of the record hereinbefore quoted that counsel for the defendant, because of a “fault of his voice” and a commendable zeal in the cause of his client unconsciously provoked the interference and admonition of the trial judge; but whether such provocation was conscious or unconscious its effect upon the witness must have been the same, and therefore the trial judge is not to be censured for acting upon appearance.

While conceding the right of the trial judge to control the conduct of the trial, we do not wish to be understood as commending the propriety of employing the police force of a municipality for the purpose of subduing a single, belligerent lawyer. However warlike a lawyer may be in any given ease he may, it seems to us, be speedily subdued and readily restored to reason by 'Other means and methods within the power of the court which would be less spectacular and more in keeping with the dignity of the bench and the orderly administration of justice. “This, however, is a temperamental and ethical matter addressed to the court’s own sense of propriety, and its conduct in that respect is not subject to review by the appellate court save to consider whether it has tended to prejudice the defendant. ’ ’ (People v. Szafcsur, 161 Cal. 636, [119 Pac. 1083].)

We do not consider, and we are unable to conceive, that the jury could possibly construe the remarks of the trial judge ' as a personal reflection upon the defendant. Evidently the trial judge was directing his remarks solely to counsel for the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
131 P. 63, 21 Cal. App. 63, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lawlor-calctapp-1913.