People v. Truesdell

12 P.2d 476, 124 Cal. App. 360, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 775
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 16, 1932
DocketDocket No. 1210.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 12 P.2d 476 (People v. Truesdell) 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. Truesdell, 12 P.2d 476, 124 Cal. App. 360, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 775 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PLUMMER, Acting P. J.

On the fourteenth day of March, 1932, an information was filed in the Superior Court of Placer County containing three counts, charging the defendant with three different acts constituting the crime of rape perpetrated upon the person of a girl of the age of fifteen years, not the wife of the defendant, and, also, charging the defendant with a prior conviction of a felony.

The defendant upon arraignment plead guilty to the prior conviction of a felony, not guilty as to the three charges contained in the information, and went to trial thereon, which resulted in a verdict of guilty on all three of the counts contained in the information.

This appeal is prosecuted from the denial of the defendant’s motion for a new trial and the judgment of conviction based upon the verdict of the jury.

A considerable portion of appellant’s brief relates to acts and circumstances not set forth in the transcript, such as the attitude of the court, the demeanor of counsel for the People, and what we may call the adverse atmosphere in the courtroom attendant upon the trial. We have carefully read every word contained in the reporter’s transcript and fail to discover anything therein in support of appellant’s contention in the foregoing particulars. We have not been able to find a single remark of the trial court indicating a disposition to give the defendant other than the fairest possible trial, nor do we find any remarks of the trial court to which the defendant objected and to which any tenable *363 objections could be made. In fact, the transcript is singularly clear from any adverse comments by the trial court or any words contained in the rulings upon the admission of' testimony, which in the slightest, reflect upon the character of the defendant or indicate any adverse prejudice or preconceived notions or intimations as to the guilt of the defendant by the judge presiding at the trial.

We may admit that all fair-minded men have a natural and an instinctive aversion toward a defendant charged with polluting the person of a young girl. In this particular we may state that the evidence shows that the acts of the defendant were consummated by the use of some degree of force and always with threats of bodily injury, in case of resistance or subsequent disclosures of the offenses. Notwithstanding what we have said as to such natural aversion, we have not been able to find a single word or sentence used by the trial court indicating any hostile feeling toward the defendant, or which can be construed to indicate that a fair and impartial trial was not being accorded the defendant, although charged with a loathsome offense.

Although the argument of the appellant specifies a number of errors committed on the part of the trial court, an examination of the testimony shows that only in one or two particulars, which we will examine hereafter, was there any objection made to the introduction of testimony, or any motion made to strike out the testimony after it was admitted. The record shows that during the course of the argument for the People, reference was made to the contents of a certain letter, or rather as to the testimony of the defendant concerning the contents of a letter, which was written, as testified by the prosecuting witness, upon the dictation of the defendant asking an aunt for the sum of $50. The letter itself was denied admission, but the testimony as to the writing of the letter, for the purpose for which it was written, and the request for the sum of $50, $25 to be given to the defendant, $25 to the prosecutrix and the plan to go to San Francisco all appear to have been introduced in testimony without objection, which laid the basis for the reference to these facts, even though the letter itself was not admitted in testimony.

Again, it is argued that the jury was summoned by an officer who was adverse to the defendant, and who was *364 biased or prejudiced by reason of having collected some of the testimony or subpoenaed witnesses adverse to him. This objection, however, was not made until after the trial had been concluded.

The clerk’s record shows that both the prosecution and the defendant announced that they were satisfied with the jury after it had been examined upon voir dire; whereupon the jury was sworn to try the cause, and having announced that he was satisfied with the jury and, also, that he was ready to proceed with the trial, it is too late now to raise any questions as to its competency.

Following these objections, appellant urges the following grounds for reversal: 1. That there is no direct evidence that the prosecutrix was not the wife of the defendant; 2. That the court erred in giving forms of verdict to the jury; and finally, defendant is entitled to. a new trial by reason of an alleged separation of the jury after the cause was submitted for consideration. •

The prosecutrix was not asked the direct question as to whether she was the wife of the defendant, nor do we find that this question was propounded to any other witnesses. However, we think the testimony in the case sufficient to enable the jury to draw a correct conclusion upon this question, although it would have been better had the prosecution asked the direct question, and thus saved the consideration of this technical objection. The law is well settled as to what an information must contain and the authorities cited by appellant all show that the information or indictment must charge the offenses as having been committed upon the person of a female, not the wife of the defendant. However, we have found no decision nor has our attention been called to any cases which hold that the omission to ask the direct question cannot be supplied by testimony which evidences the fact that such relationship did not and does not exist.

The testimony in this ease is to the effect that the defendant was employed in doing odd jobs at the home of the prosecutrix; that the prosecutrix was requested to bring water and beer to the defendant while he was working, that on several different occasions he seized the prosecutrix and accomplished his purpose against her will and wish. It shows that at the time of the accomplishment on several *365 occasions, the defendant threatened to kill the girl if she told her parents what had occurred, also told the proseeucutrix if she told her mother or father he, the defendant, would be sent to jail. The language used by the witness is as follows: “Don’t tell your mother and father. You know it will mean twelve years in jail for me if they find it out”, and being told by the prosecutrix that she thought her mother and father ought to know about it, the defendant threatened to kill the prosecutrix if she told.

Again, when there was some conversation between the defendant and the prosecutrix relative to the condition of the prosecutrix, and that she was probably pregnant, the prosecutrix was again warned not to tell her mother and father.

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Bluebook (online)
12 P.2d 476, 124 Cal. App. 360, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-truesdell-calctapp-1932.