People v. Warr

136 P. 304, 22 Cal. App. 663, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 93
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 15, 1913
DocketCrim. No. 288.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 136 P. 304 (People v. Warr) 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. Warr, 136 P. 304, 22 Cal. App. 663, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 93 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Appellant was convicted upon an information charging that he did. “willfully, unlawfully, feloniously and maliciously place, deposit and attempt to explode at, in and near a certain building, to wit: the Central Police station in the city of Los Angeles, a certain nitroglycerine explosive, commonly known as giant-gelatine or dynamite, with intent then and there to injure, intimidate and terrify Richard H. Hilf and other human beings.” He appeals from the judgment by which he was sentenced to serve twenty years in the state prison, and” from an order denying a motion made on his behalf for a new trial.

On the morning of November 19, 1912, defendant, who was disguised by wearing a yellow mask over his face, and green goggles, entered the outer offices of the chief of police of Los Angeles, bearing a large parcel or box. He approached an officer and demanded to see the chief of police. Upon being told that he must state his business before he could be permitted to see that official, he said that he had enough dynamite in the package which he carried to blow up the police station and ordered the officer to produce before him immediately the highest official of a railroad company, whom he could find in the city of Los Angeles. He insisted upon his demand being complied with and showed to the officers, others having gathered in the mean time, that he had his box of dynamite all arranged ready to explode. A glass panel had been placed in the top of the box and a musket hammer could be seen through it, the hammer being held back in a position to be .dropped, with caps and fuses attached. It was at first thought that the claim that there was dynamite in the box was false, and that defendant was perpetrating some sort of a hoax. However, two men familiar with dynamite were, permitted by defendant to examine some of the sticks, of which the box contained about sixty, and they found that it really was dynamite and of very high explosive quality. Defendant all of this while held one hand inside the box, and told *666 the onlookers that the moment he withdrew it the hammer would descend and set off the cap which in turn would fire the fuses and dynamite. The problem as to what was to be done with the visitor had become a serious one. The prisoners in the jail and the occupants of rooms upstairs were ordered out of the building. A pretense had been made to telephone to the railroad official whose presence the defendant demanded, and defendant was told that the man would come in twenty minutes. He stated that they must produce the highest official who happened to be in the city; that “they must go down the line” until they found one. A member of the city detective force and an officer attached to the district attorney’s office, decided to put an end to the suspense. One approached defendant as he sat in a chair and struck him on the head with a policeman’s billy, knocking him to the floor where he lay unconscious. The other watched the box. As defendant fell, the hammer of the infernal machine descended and lighted the fuse. Grabbing up the sputtering box the officer ran with it to the street where he tore it into pieces and disconnected the fuses. No explosion occurred. Defendant upon recovering consciousness expressed surprise that the dynamite had not exploded—also regret. He said that he had intended to scare the police officers and “scare them good and plenty.” He told how he had obtained the dynamite in San Bernardino County by substituting a lock of his own for one just like it which he found on the magazine door of a rock quarrying company, and taking the dynamite out at pleasure. He talked freely and voluntarily about the whole episode, both before and at the preliminary examination, and at the trial no facts were left in dispute at all. This latter condition of the evidence is referred to hereinafter in connection with a consideration of the points contended for as grounds entitling defendant to another trial.

The district attorney, in his examination of the persons summoned to serve as jurors inquired of them whether they believed in the doctrine, of members of a certain political party, known as 11 direct action, ’ ’ which signified that physical force was approved as a means to secure desired ends. These questions were objected to and misconduct of the prosecutor is assigned because of the asking of the questions. Conceding that the matter of the alleged misconduct was properly presented *667 to the trial judge and in such a way as to entitle the question to be here reviewed, which may be doubted for the reasons appearing later in this opinion where similar objections are dealt with, yet it must be said that the interrogatories were within the scope of a reasonable examination of the veniremen. It was not shown that defendant belonged to the particular political party referred to, and the questions should be considered as only requiring the veniremen to say whether they believed a person justified in using physical force in redressing his own injuries, real, or fancied. The questions were proper in order that the matter of actual bias if any existed in the minds of the prospective jurors should be brought out.

It was irregular practice to allow the stenographer who produced a transcript of his shorthand notes taken at the preliminary examination of the defendant, to read directly from that transcript to the jury. But the only objection urged to that evidence was that it did not appear that the witness needed to thus refresh his recollection. The trial court determined that it was apparent that the reporter could not recollect the exact terms of the evidence given without referring to the transcript. The district attorney offered to use the shorthand notes, instead of the transcription thereof, but defendant’s counsel stated in effect that the objection made would be the same to the notes as to the transcript; in other words, they conceded that the transcript furnished as competent evidence as the notes themselves. Where particular and specific grounds of objection are stated, other grounds, however available or pertinent, will be held to be waived. The trial court here determined that the witness needed to use the transcript to refresh his recollection, and that matter was one peculiarly within the province of the trial judge to decide. At the out-. set the reporter, when asked to tell whether a certain section of the Penal Code had been read to defendant at the preliminary examination, replied that he could not tell without examining his notes. This answer of the witness, taken in connection with the fact that the record of the proceedings had at the preliminary examination was of some considerable length, which condition was made apparent to the trial judge from an inspection of the transcript exhibited to him, and which sufficiently appears here from the quantity of matter which was read into the record from the reporter’s transcript, certainly *668 afforded some ground for allowing the witness to refresh his recollection by the use of his notes or some transcription thereof made by him and which he verified as being correct. The testimony given by the stenographer was as to what was stated by the defendant who testified as a witness at the preliminary examination. It is not contended that defendant was not fully instructed by the magistrate as to his right not to testify, and as to the testimony so given being used against Mm in that event, arid it sufficiently appears that the section of the Penal Code bearing upon that subject was read to him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 P. 304, 22 Cal. App. 663, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-warr-calctapp-1913.