People v. Pantages

297 P. 890, 212 Cal. 237, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 621
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1931
DocketDocket No. Crim. 3398.
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 297 P. 890 (People v. Pantages) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Pantages, 297 P. 890, 212 Cal. 237, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 621 (Cal. 1931).

Opinions

THE COURT.

A hearing in this cause was granted in order that this court might give to the contentions of the parties, presented by extended briefs and on a voluminous record, more thorough consideration than was possible within the constitutional period. After oral argument and a careful consideration of the points involved and an examination of the record, we adopt as the opinion of this court in the main the opinion of the District Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division One, written by Mr. Justice Houser, as follows:

“Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction of the crime of rape of ‘a female person under the age of eighteen years’. He also appeals from each of three several orders by which was denied respectively his motion for a new trial, his motion in arrest of judgment and his motion for leave to file application for probation.

“It is first contended by appellant that the evidence adduced on the trial of the action was legally insufficient to support the verdict. It would serve no useful purpose to herein set forth the facts which were presented by the prosecution in substantiation of the charge made against defendant. In that regard it may suffice to state that after careful consideration of the evidence, even viewed in the light as presented by appellant, this court is of the opin *242 ion that the contention as to its legal insufficiency cannot prevail.

“ Misconduct of the district attorney and of his chief deputy is urged by appellant as a reason for the reversal of the judgment and the order by which the motion for a new trial was denied. In that connection, the first specification relates to comments made by the district attorney in his argument to the jury, particularly with reference to the failure of defendant to produce evidence in support of a statement made by one of the attorneys representing defendant in his opening statement to the jury as to what defendant expected to prove in defense of the accusation of the crime,- for the alleged commission of which he was then on trial. The history of such several errors of which appellant first complains is that in his argument to the jury the chief deputy district attorney made the remark that defendant’s attorneys had ‘failed to make good the fulfillment of their promise’, which represented only ‘a bunch of unredeemed pledges’; and that ‘you saw how the court repeatedly called for' an offer - to make competent these innuendoes — •’ After objection thereto by defendant, the court instructed the jury to disregard ‘any remarks of counsel about offers of proof’. Thereafter, in presenting his argument to the jury, the district attorney referred to the same matter as that which theretofore had been commented upon by the chief deputy -district attorney, to which remarks defendant again objected. Thereupon the trial court ruled that ‘the district attorney may call attention to the opening statement and may mention the fact that that was not sustained by evidence, and that there was no evidence to that effect’. On each of several other occasions following an objection by counsel for defendant to statements contained in argument presented by either the district attorney or his chief deputy — which statement injuriously reflected upon and criticized counsel for defendant for their failure to produce evidence in substantiation of designated portions of their opening statement to the jury, the judge of the trial court not only failed to rebuke the district attorney or his chief deputy, but indicated his approval of the remark in question. An illustration of objectionable remarks made by the district attorney is the following:

*243 “ ‘Now, ladies and gentlemen, the. only reason why I am stating this thing to this jury is this: They knew in their hearts they could not prove it, they knew they had no evidence and they knew in their hearts that there was no such evidence. They had to get something before this jury. They had intimated to you, they had insinuated it to you, they had to plant a seed in your mind, and the only way in God’s green world that they could get it in front of you, in the absence of some testimony, was to say it to you in their opening statement, hoping that, we would overlook it in closing argument. . . . They knew in their hearts they could not prove it, for they knew it was not true, but they had to get something of that type, they had to throw up a smoke screen, and that opening statement, ladies and gentlemen of this jury, is just about in keeping with the whole character of the insinuation, the innuendoes, the aspersions on the character of that old Mrs. Pringle as she sat on the witness-stand here. . . . His whole conduct, the whole conduct of the defendant, from the moment that W. I. Gilbert stood in front of this jury, has been the projection of a defense based on insinuation and innuendo and indirection without one single effort, or one single word of testimony coming from the lips of any human being to this jury to back up their insinuations. They could not do it and they knew it, any more than when Mr. Gilbert said, as a positive fact, in the same statement, that the spots on her clothing will be accounted for by her own physical condition — by her own physical condition! Where is your testimony ? . . . Has there been produced before this jury one single word that would account for the presence of spermatoza upon a dress of that girl other than from the organs of the defendant himself, Alexander Pantages? I say to you, with all the earnestness and all the candor that God has put in me, that they had no evidence, and they knew before they came here that they had no evidence as to- anything of that sort. • They had to implant it in your minds. They had to have it there in your mind when you heard the State’s case come in, instead of waiting, as they usually do in these cases, for their opening statement at the beginning of their case they implanted the seeds of innuendo and indirection into your mind, all through the case. They have not lived up to their promise to you. They could *244 not and they knew in their hearts that it was not true and they could not have lived up to it, and they knew when they stood here and made a positive statement of fact to this jury, and to this court, that they could not prove the things that they told you they were going to prove. . . . ’

“In People v. Stoll, 143 Cal. 689 [77 Pac. 818], the rule is stated that the only purpose of an opening statement by counsel is to apprise the jury in a general way of what is expected to be proved; but that it has no binding force as against the party in whose behalf it is made; nor can it be considered as evidence of any fact. In each of several cases where no evidence was offered in support of an opening statement made by a district attorney the court held that in the absence of a showing of ‘bad faith’ on the part of the district attorney in making such statement, no reversible error was present. (People v. Wong Hing, 176 Cal. 699 [169 Pac. 357] ; People v. Lewis, 124 Cal. 551 [45 L. R. A. 783, 57 Pac. 470] ; People v. Donaldson, 36 Cal. App. 63 [171 Pac. 442] ; People v. Davis, 26 Cal. App. 647 [147 Pac. 1184].)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 P. 890, 212 Cal. 237, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-pantages-cal-1931.