People v. Mullen

252 P.2d 19, 115 Cal. App. 2d 340, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1665
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 14, 1953
DocketCrim. 2861
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 252 P.2d 19 (People v. Mullen) 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. Mullen, 252 P.2d 19, 115 Cal. App. 2d 340, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1665 (Cal. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

DOOLING, J.

On this appeal the appellant is represented by counsel appointed by the court at his request. The appeal is from a judgment of conviction on two felony counts and from an order denying a new trial. Appellant was convicted of violating sections 4501 and 4502 Penal Code consisting of a malicious assault with a deadly weapon and possession of the deadly weapon, a knife, while a prisoner of the state undergoing a sentence of less than life. The ease was tried before a jury after a plea of not guilty. The alleged errors sought to be corrected here involve the introduction of certain evidence and alleged misconduct of the prosecuting attorney. Appellant does not complain of the sufficiency of the evidence.

*342 The first two assignments of error involve testimony advanced on the part of the prosecution which tended to prove homosexual tendencies between appellant and a fellow prisoner. This is claimed to be immaterial and also to be prejudicial as violating the rule preventing* introduction of evidence of other unrelated crimes. It was the prosecution’s theory throughout the case that defendant and his coprisoner, Caskey, were friendly, or at least that defendant desired such a' friendship. This friendship of defendant for Caskey reached the point of unrequited love. The victim of defendant’s assault, Hunsaker, was a friend of Caskey’s and was obstructing the fulfillment of defendant’s desires. This caused enmity in defendant toward Hunsaker, the motive for the stabbing being Hunsaker’s interference with defendant’s “love” for Caskey. The prosecution introduced this theory in the opening statement. The particular testimony objected to came from Caskey. He stated that he had met defendant in the Sacramento jail and again at San Quentin. He later met Hunsaker and became friendly with him. A number of conversations between Caskey and defendant were related wherein defendant had made homosexual advances toward Caskey and asked that the latter stop “running around” with Hunsaker, that three people were too many. Defendant also had told Caskey there was more than one way to end a friendship.

On the immateriality issue appellant’s argument is that although motive may be a proper subject of proof in some cases, the evidence here involved does not, in fact, show a motive, but what appellant terms a “motive for the motive.” Appellant conceives that the only motive in a situation such as this is antagonism or enmity existing between defendant and his victim. Therefore, it is claimed, the reason for the real motive, or its basis, the secondary emotion, cannot be shown. It would have been sufficient for the prosecution to show merely the desire on the part of defendant to break up the friendship existing between Caskey and Hunsaker. If this is sufficient then going farther is prejudicial. Appellant cites a ease, People v. Lane, 100 Cal. 379 [34 P. 856], which indicates that motive can be shown to prove intention, and is the reason of that intention. It also states that any act of defendant may be admitted if it logically tends to prove some issue in the case, notwithstanding that it has an indirect bearing on an issue not in the case, except in unusual situations where that indirect bearing creates a danger which out *343 weighs the importance of the evidence in tending to prove the ultimate issue.

The general situation here is that the ultimate issue is a malicious assault by defendant, the latter’s identity as the assailant being crucial. Antagonism or enmity between defendant and the victim of the assault is admittedly relevant to the issue of defendant’s identity as the assailant. Evidence of the interference of the assailed party with relationship between defendant and a third person, shown to have been desired by defendant, and known, from experience, to create passions of desire and of envy or jealousy is relevant to prove the motive of enmity. This is not a “motive for the motive” as appellant states, but the production of circumstantial evidence to show the motive. Those circumstantial facts are two, (1) defendant’s affection for the third person; (2) the victim’s interference with this affection. The only remaining problem is whether the affection in (1) can be proved by showing an abnormal sexual tendency in defendant. If the third person in this case had been a woman there is no doubt that the attraction of defendant for the third person would be relevant and admissible. This is so even if that relationship were an illicit one. Such was the holding in People v. Santos, 134 Cal.App. 736, 746 [26 P.2d 522] and People v. Weston, 169 Cal. 393, 396 [146 P. 871]. The latter case is squarely [n point. Does the fact that the third person was a male and the attraction of defendant for him is abnormal make a difference? As far as the relevancy is concerned there is no logical difference.

With this out of the way the only question remaining is whether the abnormality of the relation was too highly prejudicial. In People v. Hall, 27 Cal.App.2d 440 [81 P.2d 248], a homicide case, where the plea was self-defense, it was held that motive is always material in such a case and any evidence having direct bearing on that motive is admissible however discreditably it may reflect upon defendant. In that case the decedent and defendant had been engaged in a homosexual relationship and this was the basis (not the motive itself) for the killing, the motive for which, properly speaking, was antagonism between the two parties growing out of their relationship. The court said. “ (Appellant’s voluntary declarations disclosing the prior immoral relationship not only served as competent evidence tending directly to prove motive and thus refute his claim of self defense, but that the matter of said immoral relationship *344 became an important factor in the case to be considered by the jury in determining . . . malice . . . and that being admissible for the purposes mentioned, the fact that such evidence reflected prejudieally upon appellant’s moral character did not, under the authorities cited, constitute legal grounds for its exclusion.” The fact that the relationship in appellant’s case does not go to an issue of self-defense, but instead to the issue of identity of the assailant would seem to be an immaterial difference.

As to appellant’s second point on this same evidence, that it violates the rule forbidding evidence of other crimes, it is enough to say that no other crime was shown, but only a degenerate tendency or character. The rules in the above cited cases are sufficient to cover this point as well as the first.

The second general objection is that certain redirect examination of prosecution witness Inman went beyond the scope of cross-examination, and that that excessive evidence was not relevant. This witness was merely a witness to the assault and was not involved therein at all. The evidence complained of is similar to that above: it indicated a homosexual tendency in defendant, this time towards witness Inman.

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Bluebook (online)
252 P.2d 19, 115 Cal. App. 2d 340, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mullen-calctapp-1953.