People v. Tinnen

192 P. 557, 49 Cal. App. 18, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 149
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 3, 1920
DocketCrim. No. 530.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 192 P. 557 (People v. Tinnen) 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. Tinnen, 192 P. 557, 49 Cal. App. 18, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 149 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant was informed against by the district attorney of Tehama County, in the superior court thereof, for the crime of administering poison to another person maliciously and with intent to kill said person. He was tried and convicted by a jury under said information, and he brings this appeal to this court from the judgment and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The point first made by the appellant is that the court below erred in denying his motion to set aside the information on the ground that he had not been legally committed by a magistrate and that he had not been committed by the magistrate for the offense charged in the information.

The information is founded on section 216 of the Penal Code, which is in language as follows: " Every person who, with intent to kill, administers or causes or procures to be administered, to another, any poison or other noxious or destructive substance or liquid, but by which death is not caused, is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison not less than ten years.”

The point that the accused was not legally committed is founded upon the theory that there is a variance between the offense for which the defendant was committed and the offense set forth in the information. In fact, both of the two grounds upon which the motion to set aside the information was based involve practically the same question, to wit: whether the information states a different offense from that for which the defendant was committed by the magistrate.

Preliminarily, we may consider the point made by the attorney-general on the threshold of his discussion of the question now in hand, that there is not presented here a properly authenticated record upon the motion to set aside the information and that, therefore, this court cannot *20 review that question. The contention is that the complaint filed before the magistrate and the commitment issued are not authenticated according to the requirements of the law and the rule respecting such records on appeal, hence, so it is argued, it does not appear from or in this record whether the court below, in hearing and deciding the motion to set aside the information, had before it and considered the documents named. The record discloses that, in the proceeding on the motion, the complaint and the commitment were introduced in evidence, and we think it is sufficiently made to appear that the court considered said documents at the hearing and in the decision of the motion. But if it were necessary to concede that there is some doubt whether the record upon the motion to set aside the information fully •complies with the rule, we shall, nevertheless, consider the merits of the question growing out of said motion and urged here on the order of the court denying the same.

The commitment is indorsed on the back of the complaint or deposition upon which the warrant of arrest was issued and the charge examined, and, therefore, as will later be better understood, the decision of the question in hand will require a consideration of said complaint or deposition. That document reads: “That said John Doe on the 6th day of February, 1918, and before the filing of this complaint at and in the City of Corning in the said County of Tehama, State of California, did wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously and with malice aforethought, administer to one Margery Cockcroft a certain deadly poison to wit: chloroform, with the unlawful and felonious intent then and there and thereby to willfully and with malice aforethought to kill and murder the said Margery Cockcroft, all of which is contrary to the statute in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the people of the State of California.”

The commitment is in the following words, the same being indorsed on the back of the complaint: “It appearing to me that the offense of assault with intent to commit murder as charged in the within complaint has been committed, and that there is sufficient cause to believe the within-named Albert Tinnen charged’as John Doe in the within complaint is guilty thereof, I order that he be held to answer the same, and committed to the sheriff of the county of Tehama, *21 and that he he admitted to hail in the sum of five thousand dollars, and he is committed to the sheriff of Tehama County, until he give such bail.”

It will be observed that the complaint or deposition charges the crime of administering poison to one Margery Cockcroft with the intent to “kill and murder” said Margery Cockcroft. This is substantially in the language of section 216 of the Penal Code. The word “murder,” it is true, is not in the section, and it is wholly unnecessary to use that word in charging the offense, but if used even in an indictment or an information, it could not change the offense from that denounced by section 216 to that of assault with the intent to commit murder if the accusatory pleading otherwise charged the offense defined by section 216. The commitment, however, specifically declared that the accused was held for trial for the crime charged in the “within complaint.” This was sufficient as a commitment for the crime so charged. The words in the commitment immediately preceding that language, to wit, “assault with intent to commit murder,” merely involved an ineffectual or a futile attempt on the part of the magistrate to characterize genetically the character or nature of the crime charged in the complaint and for which he had committed the accused. If a complaint or deposition filed before a magistrate were to charge, in legally appropriate language, a person with murder and, that crime having been shown, the magistrate should in his commitment state: “It appearing to me that the crime of assault with intent to commit murder has been committed, as charged in the within complaint,” etc., no one would for a moment contend that the commitment was not for murder and that the erroneous designation in the commitment by the magistrate of the crime so charged would control or modify the general words indicating the crime for which the accused was held or justify the conclusion that the commitment was not for the crime specifically charged in the complaint on which the commitment was indorsed. The commitment and the so-called complaint on which it is indorsed must be read together to ascertain for what offense the accused is committed where the commitment itself does not attempt to define the crime for which the accused is held but merely in general language states that the accused is held for the crime as it is charged in the complaint. In *22 other words, in such case, the complaint itself becomes an essential part of the commitment, and necessarily we must look tó the complaint to ascertain for what specific offense the accused has been committed. The information in this case is, as the counsel for the defendant concedes, substantially in the language of the complaint or deposition, on the back of which the order of commitment is indorsed. It, therefore, follows that, since the said complaint is made a part of the commitment or is by virtue of the language of the order of commitment an essential part thereof, the information sets forth the crime for which the defendant was committed.

It is next contended that the information does not state the offense defined by section 216 of the Penal Code, and that, therefore, it was error to overrule the demurrer thereto.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 P. 557, 49 Cal. App. 18, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-tinnen-calctapp-1920.