People v. Rambaud

248 P. 954, 78 Cal. App. 685, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 361
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 14, 1926
DocketDocket No. 895.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 248 P. 954 (People v. Rambaud) 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. Rambaud, 248 P. 954, 78 Cal. App. 685, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 361 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

The defendant was tried and convicted of the crime of rape on an information charging said offense under subdivision 1 of section 261 of the Penal Code and appeals from the judgment.

Upon this appeal the defendant assigns the following grounds for reversal: 1. That the court erred in refusing to allow the defendant’s challenge for cause in two instances; 2. That the court permitted the People to exercise peremptory challenges and excuse two prospective jurors after the defendant had exhausted his peremptory challenges; 3. That there is no evidence showing that Jennie Jackson, the rapee mentioned in the information, was not the wife of the defendant; and 4. That the court erred in refusing to follow the recommendations of the jury that the defendant be punished by confinement in the county jail and in sending the defendant to a state prison, notwithstanding the verdict of the jury.

The record shows that upon voir dire examination two of the veniremen were challenged for cause by the defendant, that these challenges were denied by the court, and that thereafter the defendant excused both of the challenged veniremen by exercising his peremptory chai *689 lenges. The record further shows that the defendant exhausted all of his peremptory challenges, but the record nowhere shows that any venireman was allowed to remain upon the panel and was sworn as a juror who had been challenged for cause or against whom the defendant had intimated the slightest objection. So far as the record shows^ every one of the twelve jurors finally sworn to try the cause against the defendant was wholly and entirely acceptable, free from bias and properly qualified to try the cause. Our attention has not been called to any objection urged by the defendant, or anything in the record whatever, intimating that the twelve jurors sworn to try the cause were not entirely satisfactory to the defendant. The only statement of counsel for the defendant in this particular is: “Our challenges are exhausted.”

This situation does not present any reversible error. Whether the trial court should or should not have allowed the challenges for cause is wholly immaterial. The objectionable jurors were not sworn to try the case and the defendant had just what he was entitled to, to wit: the judgment of twelve fully qualified jurors. While some of the earlier eases announce the rule that a disallowed challenge for cause will be considered upon appeal, under the circumstances here presented, all the later decisions and the ones which announce the correct rule, hold against the appellant’s contention. In 8 Cal. Jur., page 610, we find the following: “The rule, as laid down in the later eases, is that an erroneous disallowance of a challenge for cause is not prejudicial, even though the defendant finally exhausted his peremptory challenges, if it does not appear that he had occasion to or desired to use an additional peremptory challenge, or that the jurors finally accepted were not entirely satisfactory to him. In the earlier cases there is authority to the contrary. To warrant a reversal it must appear that an objectionable juror was forced upon the defendant and that he in some appropriate manner expressed his dissatisfaction with the jury as completed. ’ ’ See other cases there cited.

In People v. Schafer, 161 Cal. 573 [119 Pac. 920], the supreme court, in considering this question, says: “It is a rule of paramount importance that errors committed in *690 overruling challenges for cause are not grounds of reversal, unless it be shown an objectionable juror was forced upon the challenging party after he had exhausted his peremptory challenges; if his peremptory challenges remain unexhausted, so that he might have excluded the objectionable juror by that means he has no ground of complaint, ’ ’ and then adds further: “but the fact that he does exhaust them does not preclude the application of the rule above quoted.”

As was said in many of the cases, the important thing to be considered is whether the objectionable juror was forced upon the defendant and whether he had that to which he was entitled, a fair and impartial jury and not a jury composed of any particular individuals. (People v. Johnson, 57 Cal. App. 391 [207 Pac. 281]; People v. Kromphold, 172 Cal. 512 [157 Pac. 599]; People v. Schafer, 161 Cal. 573 [119 Pac. 920]; People v. Troutman, 187 Cal. 313 [201 Pac. 928].) Other cases might be cited to the same effect, but the list would only encumber the record.

After the defendant had exhausted all of his peremptory challenges, the court permitted the prosecution to exercise peremptory challenges upon two veniremen who had theretofore been passed for cause, 'and after the prosecution had declined to exercise, in turn, its peremptory challenges, as set forth in section 1088 of the Penal Code, which specifies “first the people and then the defendant, may take a peremptory challenge unless the parties’ peremptory challenges are exhausted; and each party shall be entitled to have the panel full before exercising any peremptory challenges.” Here again we are confronted with the situation previously considered. It does not appear that any objectionable juror was forced upon the defendant. Not the slightest intimation appears in the record of any dissatisfaction whatever relative to the jurors- who were sworn to try the cause in the places of the persons just referred to. Under such circumstances, we think that section 1404 of the Penal Code applies, which reads: “Neither a departure from the form or mode prescribed by this code in respect to any pleading or proceeding, nor an error or mistake therein, renders it invalid, unless it has actually prejudiced the defendant, or tended to his prejudice, in respect to a substantial right.” In People v. Majors, 65 Cal. *691 138 [52 Am. Rep. 295, 3 Pac. 597, 605], we find the following on pages 148 and 149: “In the case of People v. McCarty, 48 Cal. 557, it was held ‘that if the prosecution in a criminal case pass the jury to the defendant, who declines to make any challenge, the prosecution may then interpose a peremptory challenge to a juror before he is sworn.’ It is true the foregoing case differs slightly from this, inasmuch as in that case the defendant did not interpose any challenge, whereas, in this ease, he did; but we do not think that the difference between the facts of the two cases in any manner affects the principle applicable to both. It is there said that the prosecution had not accepted the jury by only passing them to the other side.

“At most, the action of the court was an irregularity, not affecting, so far as we can see, any substantial right of the defendant, and one which does not call for a reversal of the judgment.”

In that case a challenge was allowed to be exercised by the prosecution after it had previously passed the jury.

In 15 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 954, 78 Cal. App. 685, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rambaud-calctapp-1926.