People v. Vann

61 P. 776, 129 Cal. 118, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 938
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1900
DocketCrim. No. 624.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 61 P. 776 (People v. Vann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Vann, 61 P. 776, 129 Cal. 118, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 938 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

*119 COOPER, C.

Defendant was convicted of an assault with intent to commit rape. He appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The evidence shows that the person upon whom the alleged assault was made was a girl under sixteen years of age; that she went voluntarily to the room of defendant by previous appointment, and made no resistance.

1. It is claimed that the verdict is contrary to the evidence. The argument is, that although under the statute a girl under the age of sixteen is incapable of consenting to the crime of rape, yet if she consents to the attempt it is no assault, because an assault implies that the party assaulted was not soliciting but resisting the assault. This question has been decided as contended for by defendant by several decisions of able courts. It has also been held by many decisions of the highest courts of the states that where the female under the law is incapable of consenting to rape she is equally incapable of consenting to an attempt to commit it. The latter view has been adopted in this state. (People v. Gordon, 70 Cal. 467; People v. Verdegreen, 106 Cal. 211; People v. Gomez, 118 Cal. 327; People v. Roach, ante, p. 33.) The rule is well stated in People v. Verdegreen, supra, where it is said: “It is true that an assault implies force by the assailant and resistance by the one assaulted; and that one is not, in legal contemplation, injured by a consensual act. But these principles have no application to a case where under the law there can be no consent. Here the law implies incapacity to give consent, and this implication is conclusive. In such case the female is to be regarded as resisting, no matter what the actual state of her mind may be at the time. The law resists for her.”

2. It is claimed that the court under defendant’s objection admitted in evidence an entry in the family Bible for the purpose of proving the age of the person assaulted, and that such ruling was error. Upon a careful examination of the record we do not find that the family Bible or any entry therein was admitted in evidence. The mother of the girl testified that her daughter was born on the second day of August, 1884, and that on the fifteenth day of October, 1899, she was fifteen years and three months old. She was then asked if at the time of the *120 birth of her daughter she made any data or memoranda, and answered: “Yes, sir; shortly after Neva was born, as soon as convenient, I made an entry, in my own handwriting, in the family Bible.”

“Q. And your testimony as to the time of her birth is from the memoranda which you made at the time in the Bible? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. And your memory is, that this is also your recollection, from the facts as you have already testified, and from the fact that you made this memoranda at the time? A. Yes, sir.”

These questions were objected to by defendant upon the ground that “no sufficient foundation had been laid and as hearsay.”

We think the witness only referred to the entry to refresh her memory. Neither the Bible nor the entry was offered or received in evidence. No objection was made as to the time of the entry, nor-that it was not in the handwriting of the witness.

,A witness may refresh his memory by a written entry or memorandum made at the time, and it is not necessary that the writing itself be admissible in evidence. (1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 436; People v. Le Roy, 65 Cal. 613.)

The case of People v. Mayne, 118 Cal. 517, 1 is not in conflict with the views herein expressed. In that case the Bible was admitted in evidence under defendant’s objection. It is said in the opinion: “It was not competent for the prosecution to introduce as a piece of substantive evidence in support of this' issue her written declaration made several years previously.”

For the reasons above stated it was not error to allow Dr. Gray to refresh his memory as to the date of the birth of the girl by an entry in his cash-book August 2, 1884. He stated that he attended the mother at the birth of the child, and that he made the entry at the time in his cash-book, and that by the entry he knew the date to be August 2, 1884.

3. The court, under defendant’s objection, allowed evidence showing that defendant, in company with the prosecutrix, and another young girl of about seventeen and a young man in company with her, were in the parlor of the Farmers’ Hotel in the *121 town, of Colusa on the day of, and about an hour before, the assault. That while there the four were engaged in drinking and did drink wine. That defendant went downstairs to the bar-room of the hotel and brought up the drinks to the party. Defendant’s counsel contends that this was evidence tending to prove that defendant administered intoxicating narcotics with intent to prevent the prosecutrix from resisting, under subdivision 4 of section 261 of the Penal Code, and that he is not charged with any such acts. He puts the proposition in this form: “Where a defendant is charged with rape under subdivision 1 of section 261 of the Penal Code, is evidence that the crime of rape was committed by him under subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 admissible to prove the charge?”

The proposition has been squarely passed upon and answered in the affirmative by this court in People v. Snyder, 75 Cal. 324, where it is said: “We think the true construction of section 261 to be that thereby the legislature meant merely to put beyond doubt the rule that on an information for rape the things mentioned in the subdivisions could be proven, and would establish the crime. It is not intended to alter or establish a rule of pleading, or to create six different kinds of crime.” Under the decision in the above case the evidence was properly admitted.

4. It is claimed that the conduct of the district attorney in making certain statements and repeating certain questions was error. We have examined all the matters alleged to be error in this regard, and find therein nothing which would warrant us in reversing the case. One of the matters most strongly urged to be error is that when the prosecutrix was called as a witness the district attorney asked the defendant to consent to an order of court that all bystanders be excluded from the courtroom. The defendant refused to give his consent, and the order was not made. The district attorney then said: “I will ask all bystanders, then, in the name of common decency, if they have daughters or sisters of their own, to absent themselves from the courtroom during the testimony of this little girl.”

The defendant, without objecting to the statement or asking to strike out the request, saved an exception thereto. The judge *122 remarked: “It is improper for the district attorney to make this demand.”

We do not think the request could have injured the defendant. It was not the statement of any fact not in evidence, nor was it any statement as to the character or motives of defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 P. 776, 129 Cal. 118, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-vann-cal-1900.