People v. Wells

202 P.2d 53, 33 Cal. 2d 330, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 199
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1949
DocketCrim. 4840
StatusPublished
Cited by362 cases

This text of 202 P.2d 53 (People v. Wells) 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. Wells, 202 P.2d 53, 33 Cal. 2d 330, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 199 (Cal. 1949).

Opinions

SCHAUER, J.

Wesley Robert Wells appeals from a judgment entered upon a jury verdict that he is guilty of violation of section 4500 of the Penal Code, and from an order denying his motion for new trial. Section 4500 provides that certain kinds of assault committed by life-term prisoners “with malice aforethought” are capital offenses. Defendant contends: (1) Section 4500 was never intended to apply to persons, such as he, serving an unfixed, indeterminate sentence for a maximum term of life imprisonment, and to apply it to him is to deprive him of equal protection of the laws in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal Constitution. (2) The indictment was returned upon insufficient evidence and is therefore void. (3) The trial court erred to his prejudice by admitting evidence of misconduct of defendant prior and subsequent to the offense charged. (4) The trial court erred to his prejudice by excluding evidence of medical experts offered to show that he did not act with “malice aforethought.” For the reasons hereinafter stated we conclude that contentions (1), (2) and (3) are not sustained; as to contention (4) we conclude that the proffered evidence should have been received but that the error in rejecting it is not prejudicial.

(1) Applicability and Constitutionality of Section 4500 of the Penal Code

Section 4500 provides, in material part, that “Every person undergoing a life sentence in a State prison of this State, who, with malice aforethought, commits an assault upon the person of another ... by any means of force likely to produce great bodily injury, is punishable with death.” Defendant at the time he allegedly violated section 4500 was undergoing an indeterminate sentence for violation of section 4502 of the Penal Code (which proscribes the possession of weapons by inmates of state prisons). The minimum term of [335]*335imprisonment for violation of section 4502 is five years; the statute provides no maximum term of imprisonment and none had been fixed by the Adult Authority. Therefore, under the settled law of this state, defendant was, in effect, “undergoing a life sentence” within the meaning of section 4500. (People v. McNabb (1935), 3 Cal.2d 441, 456-458 [45 P.2d 334]; People v. Williams (1945), 27 Cal.2d 216, 219 [163 P.2d 441].) Defendant urges that the reasoning of the McNabb case is faulty and that the problem should be reexamined and the McNabb and Williams cases should be overruled.

In 1901, the statute now numbered section 4500 was enacted as section 246 of the Penal Code. The contention that the statute denied to life-term prisoners the equal protection of the laws was rejected in People v. Finley (1908), 153 Cal. 59, 62 [94 P. 248], affirmed in Finley v. California (1911), 222 U.S. 28, 31 [32 S.Ct. 13, 56 L.Ed. 75]. This court pointed out, as reasons for separately classifying “life-termers,” that their term of imprisonment could not be shortened by virtue of their good conduct and that the offenses for which life sentences were imposed were usually more serious and showed “more abandoned and malignant hearts” than the offenses of those sentenced for terms of years. The Supreme Court of the United States added that “life-termers” could not be further punished by increasing their terms of imprisonment and the Legislature could fix death as appropriate additional punishment for offenders in such class.

Thereafter, in 1917, this state, in furtherance of the policy of placing before prisoners the incentive to do well, adopted the indeterminate sentence law (In re Lee (1918), 177 Cal. 690, 692-693 [171 P. 958]). The prisoner whose term has not been fixed by the Adult Authority has since been regarded as, in effect, serving the maximum term—in defendant’s case, life—in order that the sentence be not void for uncertainty (id.). According to the McNabb (1935) case, supra, page 457 of 3 Cal.2d, the question whether an unfixed term such as defendant’s “is in law a life sentence . . . was definitely settled by In re Lee, . . . and has been the pronounced law of the state since. Every person is charged with a knowledge of its existence. The fact that section 246 of the Penal Code was adopted in 1901, at a time trial courts pronounced a fixed term of imprisonment, can in nowise affect the operation of the present rule of law as declared in In re Lee, supra.” This holding is approvingly referred to in People v. Jones (1936), 6 Cal.2d 554, 556. [59. P.2d 89]; People v. Ralph (1944), 24 [336]*336Cal.2d 575, 578 [150'P.2d 401]; In re Quinn (1945), 25 Cal. 2d 799, 803 [154 P.2d 875]; and In re Cowen (1946), 27 Cal. 2d 637, 648 [166 P.2d 279]. In 1941, section 246 was repealed and reenacted, in identical wording, as section 4500. People v. Williams (1945), supra, 27 Cal.2d 216, 219, reiterates the holding of the McNabb case that such statute applies to one in defendant’s situation.

Defendant urges that the holding of the McNabb case does not take into consideration the change in the composition of the class known as life-term convicts which occurred in 1917 with enactment of the indeterminate sentence law. No longer, defendant says, is the class composed of the hopeless and therefore dangerous men to whom the Finley opinions refer and whom the Legislature had in mind when it enacted section ,246.1 It is true that inclusion in the life-term class of those whose terms are in maxima life imprisonment but which terms the Adult Authority has power to ultimately fix in spans of years, means that the class must be regarded as containing at least some persons who will have the incentive of hope for reward of good conduct, as well as the fear of death as punishment, to deter them from committing the offense defined in section 4500. But we cannot agree that enactment of the indeterminate sentence law, as construed and applied, destroys the rationality of the classification originally made by section 246 and continued by reenactment as section 4500. The purpose of that section—prison discipline and protection of guards and inmates—still constitutes a cogent reason for its enactment. Adding the hope of reward for good conduct to the fear of punishment for evil, does not destroy the cogency of the reason for the legislation. The validity of the classification is to be presumed. (Lelande v. Lowery (1945), 26 Cal.2d 224, 232-233 [157 P.2d 639, 175 A.L.R. 1109].) It may also be observed that the Adult Authority, when it determines and redetermines the length of time a person is to be imprisoned or when, as in defendant’s case, it considers the matter and acts by refraining from reducing such length of time to a term of years, acts with knowledge of the person’s conduct as a prisoner as well as the conduct which led to his imprisonment and his social background. The actual working basis for the classification of persons as life-term prisoners today,' therefore, in cases wherein the ^Authority has acted, has even [337]*337more substantial relation to the purpose of section 246 than it did when the prisoner was sentenced to a life term by a judge who could not foresee how the convicted man would, react to his imprisonment.

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Bluebook (online)
202 P.2d 53, 33 Cal. 2d 330, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wells-cal-1949.