People v. Tyree

132 P. 784, 21 Cal. App. 701, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 254
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1913
DocketCrim. No. 202.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 132 P. 784 (People v. Tyree) 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. Tyree, 132 P. 784, 21 Cal. App. 701, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 254 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Defendant was convicted of the crime of grand larceny. He moved for a new trial, which motion being denied, he was sentenced to imprisonment for the term of five years. He appeals from the judgment.

*702 It is claimed that “the whole case against the appellant rests upon the credibility of the complaining witness, C. G. Engblom, ’’ who, it is further claimed, “was insane and not mentally responsible” and that “the jury should have been permitted to hear the evidence relating to his mental condition, as bearing on his credibility.”

It is also contended that the superior court of Mendocino County did not have jurisdiction to try the case.

1. The information charged that the defendant, “on or about the 16th day of June, 1912, at the said Mendocino County, state of California, . . . did then and there feloniously steal, take and drive away” certain cattle, the property, etc. There was evidence that the cattle were owned and were running in Trinity County when taken and were driven to Mendocino County and there sold. There is no averment in the information that the cattle were stolen in or taken from Trinity County and driven into Mendocino County.

In People v. Mellon, 40 Cal. 648, the defendant was indicted and convicted in the county of Yuba for the larceny of certain cattle. The evidence was that the cattle were stolen in Sacramento County and were afterward driven to the county of Yuba. The provisions of the Practice Act (sec. 92) were the same as section 786 of the Penal Code—where property feloniously taken in one county by larceny, etc., has been brought into another, the jurisdiction of the offense shall be in either county. The court said: “The venue was properly laid in Yuba County. It was unnecessary to state in the indictment the facts showing the commission of the larceny in Sacramento County. We are also of the opinion that it was proper for the prosecution to prove that the property was stolen in Sacramento County, before it was taken into Yuba County.” Similarly held in People v. Scott, 74 Cal. 94, 96, [15 Pac. 384], under section 786 of the Penal Code. In People v. Jochinsky, 106 Cal. 638, [39 Pac. 1077], the charge was burglary with intent to commit larceny. The ease seems to hold that, where the stolen property is taken in one county and removed to another, the latter county has jurisdiction, but that the facts showing that the larceny was committed and that the property was taken and carried to the said county must be set out. People v. Scott, was cited with approval, in which the court said the true rule was found in Haskins v. People, 16 N. Y. *703 344. In that case the court said: “The fact must, therefore, be set out which brings the case within the statutes; but, in the case of one indicted for a simple larceny found in a county into which the thief has carried the property stolen in another county, the law adjudges that the offense was in truth committed there, and hence there is no occasion for a statement in the pleading of what occurred in the other county.”

In People v. Prather, 134 Cal. 386, [66 Pac. 483, 724], the larceny was thus charged: that the defendant, on a certain day, at the county of Sacramento, “did then and there . . . steal . . . from A. D. Miller and Adolph Jean, in the county of Yolo” certain sacks of buckwheat . . . and did “then and there bring said personal property so . . . stolen . . . into the said county of Sacramento.” The court quoted from Bishop’s New Criminal Procedure, volume 1, section 59, where the author states that “if, after one has taken what completed the theft, he continues traveling away with and still intending to steal them (the goods), each step may be treated as a new trespass and fresh larceny; so that he may be indicted either in the county where he first took the goods, or in any other into which, the intent to steal continuing, he carries them. . . . But it must be felonious in the new county.” Said the court, in the case cited: “This principle of law is elementary and involves the proposition that a new larceny is committed in every county to which the thief takes the property ; and the correct information in such a case should charge the commission of the crime of larceny in the county where the person is to be prosecuted. Under such circumstances, the first larceny is more matter of evidence and should not be alleged.” (Citing People v. Mellon, 40 Cal. 648; People v. Scott, 74 Cal. 94, [15 Pac. 384].)

People v. Jochinsky, 106 Cal. 638, [39 Pac. 1077], was the case of burglary with intent to commit larceny, which was regarded as different from the case of simple larceny, as was pointed out in the New York case cited approvingly.

In the present case it is contended by defendant that “if any crime was committed, it was entirely begun and completed in Trinity County . . . long before the cattle ever saw Mendocino County”; it is hence claimed that “there is a fatal variance between the charge and the proof.” The evidence tended to show that the intent to steal the cattle was as maní *704 fest when the defendant brought them a short time after they were stolen, into Mendocino County and there sold them, as when he first stole them in Trinity County. No objection was made to the information by demurrer or otherwise and no objection was made to the testimony on the ground of variance. We think the information was sufficient to give the jurisdiction to the superior court of Mendocino County and the evidence was sufficient to support the charge as laid.

2. Only one other point is raised by the brief of defendant. When the complaining witness, C. G-. Bngblom, was called, and before he was sworn, defendant objected to his competency on the ground that he was “insane and not mentally responsible and that the jury should have been permitted to hear the evidence relating to his mental condition, as bearing on his credibility.” Over defendant’s objection the jury was excused and, in their absence, witness Charlton was called by defendant and testified that Bngblom came to his place of business that morning and the witness undertook to testify to what Bngblom said, in his presence and the presence of the witness’s father. It was a statement about a horse, a cart, a creek, a set of harness and a line and in the course of which the witness testified that he said: “ -‘My head was hurting me, I had pains in the back of my head this morning, I was almost crazy,’ ” or “ ‘I was crazy,’ or something similar to that; I says that’s all right, you go get the line, so he went up the creek; he had it up the creek, and brought it back. Then we come on down to the shop and he wanted me to be sure, and thought it was father’s place, and wanted me to be sure and make it all right; he didn’t want to make any trouble, and I told him it was all right, it seemed to be with all of us. That’s about all I know. ’ ’

Cross-examination by Mr. Duncan, district attorney; “Q. This man is a foreigner, you discovered that? A. Well, I thought so. Q. He talks a very broken English, it’s very difficult to understand him, isn’t it? A. Yes, sir. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 P. 784, 21 Cal. App. 701, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-tyree-calctapp-1913.