People v. Swiggy

232 P. 174, 69 Cal. App. 574, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 84
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 12, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 811.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 232 P. 174 (People v. Swiggy) 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. Swiggy, 232 P. 174, 69 Cal. App. 574, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 84 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant was convicted by a jury in the superior court of Sacramento County under an indictment charging him with the violation of the terms of section 270 of the Penal Code and he has brought the case to this court on an appeal from the judgment.

The testimony upon which the People principally relied for the support of the indictment was that of the wife of the defendant. Prom her testimony it appears that, on the first day of November, 1922, she for the first time met the defendant. She was at that time within a few days of being fifteen years of age. A few days after she first met and became acquainted with the accused he took her for a ride over what is known as the Natomas Boulevard, a highway leading from the city of Sacramento and extending a considerable distance from and north of said city. After traveling several miles, the accused had sexual intercourse with her. On a subsequent occasion, about five days from the time of the commission of the first sexual act, he again had similar relations with her. The girl shortly thereafter discovered that she was in a condition of pregnancy. On the thirteenth day of August, 1923, approximately nine calendar months from the occasions on which the two several acts of illicit intercourse were committed by the parties, she gave birth to a female child at a lying-in .hospital or home, situated in near proximity to the city of Sacramento. On the twenty-sixth day of September, 1923, after being discharged from the hospital, she swore to a complaint before the justice’s court of Sacramento township, in the city of Sacramento, charging the defendant with the crime of statutory rape. (Pen. Code, sec. 261, subd. 1.) At the same time and before the same magistrate, she swore to a complaint, charging one A1 Hotter with a like offense, it bcin^ alleged that the said Hotter had sexual relations with her in the month of December, 1922. On the thirty-first day of October, 1923, the girl, then not quite sixteen years of age, intermarried with the defendant, and on the same day the proceedings *578 or complaints then pending before the magistrate against the defendant and Hotter were dismissed upon the motion of the district attorney. The facts so far stated are not disputed. In fact, the defendant admitted to a deputy sheriff that he had had sexual relations with the girl, but stated that he had so managed the malodorous business as to make conception impossible.

The prosecutrix, as we shall hereinafter refer to the wife of the defendant, testified that the defendant was the father of the child; that, from the date of her marriage with the defendant, they had not lived together or had anything to do with each other; that he never at any time furnished clothing for the baby or otherwise contributed anything toward 'caring for it; that, after the birth of the child, she had met him on the streets of Sacramento, but had not conversed with him, although, when thus they met, they would always exchange such salutations as, “Hello,” and “How do yon do”; that (on cross-examination) she never communicated with him in any way; that she never told the accused either before or after their marriage that he was responsible for her pregmacy or that he was the father of her baby, nor, until she caused him to be indicted by the grand jury on the present charge, had she ever asked him to contribute to the support and care of the baby; that she did not let him know that she was at the hospital and that he did not, while she was there, visit the hospital, so far as she knew.

The defendant did not testify in the case, but his attorneys rested their defense entirely upon the claim that the intermarriage of the defendant with the prosecutrix was the result of an arrangement and understanding entered into between one of the attorneys for the accused and the mother of the prosecutrix, involving an agreement, the terms of which, so it was sought to be shown at the trial, were communicated to the prosecutrix and assented to by her, to the effect that the marriage was not to be understood as implying an admission on ./the part of the accused that he was the father of the child, but that the sole motive and the purpose of the marriage were merely to “give the child a name” with the understanding or agreement that the parties were never to live together and that the defendant was to be wholly relieved from any obligation to support the child.

*579 One of the nurses at the hospital where the child was born, testifying in behalf of the defendant, and as in impeachment of the testimony of the prosecutrix, stated that in a conversation with the prosecutrix at the hospital, just before the birth of the child, she said that she would not be able to determine which of the persons with whom she had had relations' was the father of the child until she knew the precise date of the birth thereof; that if it was on a certain day the father would be a certain person, naming him, if on another or different date, it would be someone else, naming him; that she also stated that she would prefer to put it upon the defendant, because she liked him better than she did the other party.

It is not seriously contended, nor could it well be at all, notwithstanding the testimony of the nurse referred to, that the verdict does not derive sufficient support from the evidence. The undisputed testimony of the prosecutrix that she was sexually violated by the defendant in the early days of November, 1922, is borne out by the uneontroverfed fact that parturition occurred on the thirteenth day of August, 1923. Thus it will be noted that the interval between the time of insemination and the date of parturition was nine calendar months, and that period of time, according to the consensus of medical authority, is, with humankind, the average interval between the two events mentioned. 'There may be, and no doubt there have been, found exceptional cases, or eases in which the intervals between the two events referred to were either longer or shorter, a fact which medical men have been able, in particular cases, to rationally account for upon the peculiar conditions existing in such eases. But however that may be, the general medical opinion, founded upon applied experience, is as is above stated, and, therefore, in the absence of a showing based upon a scientific hypothesis that the exception has arisen in a given ease, it must be presumed that gestation and the birth of the infant occurred according to the ordinary course of nature. (Code Civ. Proc., see. 1963, subd. 28.) There was no showing- or attempt to show that the period of gestation in this case was of a shorter duration than is natural or usual in such cases. Hence, the jury, giving, as we must assume that they did give, full credit to the testimony of *580 the prosecutrix as to the time at which sexual relations took place between her and the defendant, were warranted in discrediting the rather vague claim of the defendant that Hotter, whose sexual relations with the girl happened in December, 1922, was or might have been the father of the ehild.

It will be observed from the foregoing that if the only question submitted on this appeal was whether the verdict was or was not sufficiently supported by the evidence, there ■would be nothing else to do but to affirm the judgment. It *is clear, however, that there must be a reversal because of serious and prejudicial errors committed by the court in ruling upon questions involving the admissibility of certain evidence.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Farley
33 Cal. App. 3d 1 (California Court of Appeal, 1973)
People v. Farley
33 Cal. App. Supp. 3d 1 (Appellate Division of the Superior Court of California, 1973)
People v. Díaz Breijo
97 P.R. 62 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1969)
Pueblo v. Díaz Breijo
97 P.R. Dec. 64 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1969)
People v. Sorensen
437 P.2d 495 (California Supreme Court, 1968)
Patterson v. Municipal Court
232 Cal. App. 2d 289 (California Court of Appeal, 1965)
Wells v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
131 S.E.2d 634 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1963)
People v. Loeper
334 P.2d 93 (California Court of Appeal, 1959)
State v. Parish
310 P.2d 1082 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1957)
People v. Clarke
304 P.2d 271 (California Court of Appeal, 1956)
Upton v. State
52 So. 2d 820 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1951)
In Re Trombley
193 P.2d 734 (California Supreme Court, 1948)
People v. Agnew
176 P.2d 724 (California Court of Appeal, 1947)
People v. Edland
93 P.2d 180 (California Court of Appeal, 1939)
People v. Odom
66 P.2d 206 (California Court of Appeal, 1937)
People v. Kovacevich
65 P.2d 807 (California Court of Appeal, 1937)
People v. Johnson
58 P.2d 211 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)
People v. Armentrout
1 P.2d 556 (Appellate Division of the Superior Court of California, 1931)
People v. Calvert
269 P. 969 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
People v. Hamil
238 P. 1075 (California Court of Appeal, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 P. 174, 69 Cal. App. 574, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-swiggy-calctapp-1924.