Risdon v. Yates

78 P. 641, 145 Cal. 210, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 571
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1904
DocketS.F. No. 3049.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 78 P. 641 (Risdon v. Yates) 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
Risdon v. Yates, 78 P. 641, 145 Cal. 210, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 571 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

COOPER, C.

This action was brought to recover damages for an assault and battery committed upon plaintiff by defendant. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff, upon which judgment was duly entered. Defendant prosecutes this appeal from the judgment on the judgment-roll and a bill of exceptions. The bill of exceptions shows that the evidence was conflicting, and it is conceded that there is sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict. Several errors are claimed as to rulings of the court and in giving instructions. This discussion will be confined only to the matters deemed material.

More than ten days after the defendant had served his *212 original answer, and on the day set for trial, the defendant filed with the clerk and served upon plaintiff’s attorney an amended answer, in which he set forth affirmatively an additional defense, that the alleged assault and battery was committed in self-defense. After the ease was called for trial and the jury impaneled, the court, on motion of plaintiff’s attorney, made an order striking the amended answer from the files, upon the ground that it had been filed without permission of the court.

Defendant contends .that he had the right under section 472 of the Code of Civil Procedure to amend his answer once of course without permission of the court. It is not necessary to decide the question as to the ruling in striking out the answer. If any error was committed, it was cured by the court upon defendant’s request making an order permitting the amended answer to be filed. It was filed, the case was tried upon the issues raised by it, and it is now in the record. We cannot hold, as contended by defendant, that the fact of defendant having to ask the court in the presence of the jury for leave to file his amended answer injured his case in the eyes of the jury. The jurors are not supposed to know or interest themselves with questions of law raised before the court during the trial. If every ruling made by the court in the presence and hearing of the jury could be investigated as to whether or not it might possibly have injured the rights of one of the parties, and thus be made the ground for reversing a case, there would be few verdicts that would stand. We must presume that the jury did its duty and decided the question of fact under the instructions of the court upon the pleadings as they are. Verdicts are not to be set aside for light, trivial, or imaginary errors.

The plaintiff called one Palmer, a justice of the peace, for the purpose of identifying the record in a criminal case of the People v. Defendant herein, and introduced the complaint in the criminal action and the docket of the justice showing that defendant had pleaded guilty and suffered a fine for the same assault and battery for which damages were recovered in this action. Defendant sought by cross-examination of the justice and by his own testimony to prove the entire statement made to the justice at the time defendant pleaded guilty concerning such plea and the reasons why defendant *213 made it. In other words, defendant sought by several questions to prove the entire statement in connection with the oral plea, as made to the justice at the time and entered in his docket. The court sustained the objections of plaintiff to each of the questions by which it was sought to elicit the full statement. In this the court erred. The evidence was sharply conflicting, the defendant introducing evidence which if true shows that plaintiff was the aggressor and struck the first blow, while the plaintiff introduced evidence which if true shows that the defendant, without provocation, willfully assaulted and beat him. It Was thus for the jury to determine where the truth lay, and they were to do this from seeing and hearing the witnesses and from all the competent facts and circumstances in the case. Now, the record of the plea of guilty and judgment of conviction in the justice court was not conclusive, and did not estop the defendant in the civil case. If defendant had been acquitted in the justice court on a plea of “Not guilty” he would not have been permitted to introduce the record or prove such fact in this case as a bar. This for the reason that the criminal proceeding was by the state, and this plaintiff was not a party to it. Therefore, the judgment in a criminal suit cannot be used in a civil action to establish the facts on which such judgment rests. But where a defendant has pleaded guilty in a criminal ease the plea and judgment are received in evidence as an admission, but not as conclusive. “It is therefore to be treated according to the principles governing admissions, to which class of evidence it properly belongs.” (1 Greenleaf on Evidence, 16th ed., sec. 527a.) If an admission is testified to by a witness against a party, such party has the right in cross-examination to bring out the whole of what was said in direct connection with and pertaining to the admission. In this ease the plaintiff was in effect allowed to prove that defendant-said or admitted that he was guilty of an assault and battery upon plaintiff. This admission may have turned the scale and caused the jury to disregard all the defendant’s testimony. The plaintiff was allowed to put in evidence the part of the conversation or declaration to the justice which in law amounted to an admission. The defendant was not allowed to show that he stated other facts at the time which showed that it was not an unqualified admission. The state *214 ment of defendant in the form of an admission to the justice was allowed for the purpose of corroborating the evidence of plaintiff; the statement of defendant, if such statement was made, that plaintiff struck the first blow, was not allowed to go to the jury. It is certainly evident that this was receiving evidence only on one side of the controversy. The plaintiff was not bound to offer in evidence the admission made before the justice, but having done so the defendant was entitled to the whole of the declaration or admission. The fact that the justice wrote down part of it in his docket makes no difference. It was, after being written in the docket by the justice, but an oral admission of defendant. The entry by the justice was only the conclusion or opinion of the justice as to the effect of what defendant said. The question is, Did the defendant in words admit his guilt before the justice? If he did, what were the words and what did he say? When a part of a declaration or conversation is given in evidence by one party, the whole on the same subject may be inquired into by the other. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1854.)

It is said in Greenleaf on Evidence (vol. 1, sec. 201): “We are next to consider the effect of admissions when proved. And here it is to be first observed that the whole admission is to be taken together; for though some part of it may contain matter favorable to the party and the object is only to ascertain that which he has conceded against himself, for it is to this only that the reason for admitting his own declaration applies,—namely, the great probability that they are true; yet, unless the whole is received and considered, the true meaning and import of the part which is good evidence against him cannot be ascertained. . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 P. 641, 145 Cal. 210, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/risdon-v-yates-cal-1904.