People v. Noon

81 P. 746, 1 Cal. App. 44, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 109
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1905
DocketCrim. No. 1.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 81 P. 746 (People v. Noon) 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. Noon, 81 P. 746, 1 Cal. App. 44, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 109 (Cal. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

HALL, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant in a criminal action from an order denying his motion for a new trial and from the judgment of imprisonment in the state prison for the term of twenty years.

The information charges the defendant with burglary, together with several prior convictions. The entry is alleged to have been of the “house, room, etc., of one C. Heuser, located at 503 Mason Street,” etc.

It is urged by appellant that the evidence was insufficient lo justify a finding of an entry of the premises by the defendant, or that such entry was with the intent to commit larceny. A careful examination of the evidence set forth in the bill of exceptions does not in our opinion sustain the contention of defendant in this regard. C. Heuser, the occupant of the room alleged to have been entered, testified in substance, among other things, that he left his room at 503 Mason Street at eleven o’clock in the forenoon of the twentieth day of January; that he did not light the gas at all that morning; that he returned to the room at a quarter to one in the night and found the room in the same condition as when he left it; nothing was disturbed. His room was the back room on the second story.

Edward Asher, who, according to the evidence, resided in the.same house in a room immediately under Heuser’s room, testified that on the night in question he heard a noise, and, *46 continuing, said: “I didn’t pay particular attention at first. I heard the window upstairs open. It came down with a bang. I heard somebody walking. I jumped up and ran upstairs. I knew Mr. Heuser never came home at that time. I knew where he was employed. I went upstairs immediately. I heard walking quickly around. I started to open the door, and I said ‘Who is there?’ and just as I said that ‘bang’ went the window. Then I ran into the bathroom and I said, ‘What is the matter down there?’ and I did not receive any response, and just then there was a crash.” He further testified that after getting a pass-key, and entering the room, he found nothing disturbed except that the gas was lighted.

Josephine La Fargue testified that she occupied the adjoining house, which was separated by a court from 503 Mason Street, the court being at the rear of 503 Mason Street. On the night in question she heard a noise and saw defendant in her house. He ran out of the house, but left an overcoat. She further testified that when she went to bed that night a step-ladder was against the house of 503 Mason Street. It was then unbroken, but when she saw it next morning it was broken.

The arresting officer testified that after the arrest of the defendant he said to the officer: “You can’t convict me of burglary because I did not take anything out of that room.”

From the foregoing statement of the evidence it is a fair deduction that the defendant did enter the room of Mr. Heuser, and on being interrupted escaped through the window into the court, and thence fled through the adjoining house.

Considering the time of the entry, the clandestine manner thereof, and the precipitate flight of the defendant, the jury were justified in finding that the entry was with the intent to commit larceny.

A more serious objection to the action of the trial court arises out of the following state of facts: Upon the arraignment of the defendant it was discovered that the original information contained one page more than the copy furnished the defendant. This irregularity, however, was at the time waived by the defendant. Defendant pleaded not guilty, *47 with privilege to withdraw plea. At the trial, after the jury had been sworn, the clerk read to the jury the information as the same now appears in the judgment-roll, omitting to read the prior convictions therein charged, and stated the plea of not guilty on behalf of the defendant thereto. A witness was called for the prosecution and sworn, but before any testimony was given defendant’s counsel called the attention of the court to the fact that the information that had just been read contained one page less than the information on file at the arraignment, and on which defendant had been arraigned, and in effect objected to the defendant being tried on the mutilated information. The court thereupon took testimony as to the alteration in the information, and overruled the objection, and the defendant excepted. The objection was in substance repeated upon the first question being put to the witness, and was overruled and exception reserved.

The testimony taken on the hearing of the objection shows that a page of the original information containing printed and written matter had been removed, or had become detached, and was missing at the trial. No evidence was given on the hearing of he objection as to what the missing page contained. The clerk of the court, the deputy district attorney, the judge of the court, and counsel for defendant each testified, but no effort was made "to prove the contents of the missing page, or to contradict the testimony that a page was missing. In the remarks made by the court in ruling on the objection, the court seems to have assumed that the missing page contained only a charge of a prior conviction.

Before judgment was rendered the same matter was again presented to the court upon a motion in arrest of judgment, and testimony was again taken. On this hearing the clerk did testify that the missing page contained a charge of prior -conviction, but that it might have contained something else. No effort was made to prove the precise contents of the missing page. The entry in the clerk’s register under date of February 26, 1904, is as follows: “Information for felony, to wit, burglary, and five prior convictions, presented by the district attorney and filed”; while the information now in the judgment-roll, from which confessedly one page is missing, still contains five charges of prior conviction. The *48 fair inference from this is, that the missing page contained something else than a charge of prior conviction.

However this may be, it certainly nowhere appears in the record that the missing page contained only a charge of prior conviction. As the information was signed by the district attorney, and was presumably drafted by some one connected with his office, the proof of the contents of the missing page may well be presumed to have been peculiarly within the power of the district attorney.

If it had been clearly shown that the missing page contained only a sixth charge of prior conviction, we are of opinion that defendant could not have been injured or prejudiced by the removal of such charge from the information. Indeed, counsel for defendant in his brief concedes this to be so, and cites us in that connection to People v. Carroll, 92 Cal. 568, [28 Pac. 600], in which case the defendants, together with one John Murphy, were charged m the information with the crime of robbery. The court said: “It appears that afterwards the information was withdrawn as against Murphy, and that some one-connected with the court erased the words ‘and John Murphy’ and the word ‘and’ where it occurred in another place, by drawing a black line through the same. This was certainly an unauthorized and dangerous act;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 P. 746, 1 Cal. App. 44, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-noon-calctapp-1905.