People v. Oates

This is an appeal from the judgment of conviction upon an information charging the commission of the infamous crime against nature. The verdict was guilty of an attempt to commit the crime charged. Defendant appeals from the judgment, and contends that his motion in arrest of judgment, which was refused, should have been granted.

1. It is claimed that the act approved April 9, 1880, is unconstitutional and void. It is entitled "An act to amend sections [then follow one hundred and eight sections of the Penal Code, numbered consecutively as they there occur], and to repeal sections 969 and 1025 of the Penal Code, and to add a new section thereto, to be known as section 809, to provide for prosecutions by information, and to adapt the provisions of said code thereto." (Amendments Pen. Code, 1880, p. 10.)

The contention is, — 1. That the act is a revision of the Penal Code, and hence required a republication of the entire code; 2. That section 809 added another subject to the code, making two subjects treated of in the amendment, only one of which is expressed in the title; and 3. That section 1159 (one of the amended sections) is inoperative and void so far as it relates to prosecutions by information, because the act itself is void. The provision of the constitution involved is section 24 of article IV: "Every act shall embrace but one subject, which subject shall be expressed in its title. . . . No law shall be revised or amended by reference to its title; but in such case the act revised or sections amended shall be reenacted and published at length as revised or amended." We do not think the act before us is anything more than what its title declares it to be, — viz., "An act to amend" the sections named and "to repeal" certain sections named and "to add a new section" to the Penal Code. It is in no sense a revision of the entire code. Beach v.Von Detten, 139 Cal. 462, is not unlike the present case, and is decisive of it. Here each section of the act amending any one section reads: "Section [giving the number] of the Penal Code is hereby amended so as to read as follows:" The repealing sections of the act referred also to the said code, and so in adding the new section 809. In Lewis v. Dunne, 134 Cal. 291,1 the attempt made was *Page 14 a revision of the Code of Civil Procedure. That case does not aid appellant.

2. The point that the title does not embrace the subject of the act seems to be met by People v. Parvin, 74 Cal. 549, referred to and commented upon in Beach v. Von Detten, 139 Cal. 462. It was there held that an act entitled "An act to amend section 3481 of the Political Code" sufficiently expresses the subject of the act and meets the requirements of the constitution. The act of May 12, 1881, is entitled "An act to amend section 3713 of the Political Code, and to provide for the levy of the tax for state purposes. . . ." Held, in San Francisco etc. R.R. Co. v. StateBoard, 60 Cal., at p. 34, to express the subject of the act. From what has been said it follows that section 1159 amended by the act is operative.

3. It is contended that sections 663 and 664 of the Penal Code "apply exclusively to prosecutions for attempts to commit crime, and not for the crime itself," and that the court erred in instructing the jury that "a person who attempts to commit a crime, but fails, or is prevented or intercepted in the perpetration thereof, is punishable for said attempt." The instruction is in the language of the code (sec. 664) and the case falls within one of the classes of offenses mentioned therein, — namely, an offense punishable by imprisonment in the state prison. The instruction was not error.

4. It is urged that an attempt to commit the offense involved an assault, and must be directed against a person. (Citing People v. Hickey, 109 Cal. 275.) In that case the trial court refused to instruct the jury that the defendant might be convicted of a simple assault.

The court held here that the instructions should have been given. In that case it was held that the offense of assault is an element of the crime when committed on a human being, but not so when the victim is not a human being. If, therefore, assault is not an element of the crime here charged, it must follow that it is not an element of the offense involved in the attempt to commit the crime. It was not error to refuse the instruction.

5. The instructions asked by defendant and refused were based upon the erroneous assumption that defendant could not be convicted of an attempt to commit the crime charged. *Page 15 Besides, the court elsewhere fully instructed the jury upon the doctrine of reasonable doubt, and also upon the remaining question involved in the rejected instructions.

We advise that the judgment be affirmed.

Smith, C., and Gray, C., concurred.

For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment is affirmed. Shaw, J., Angellotti, J., Van Dyke, J.

1 86 Am. St. Rep. 357.