[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 269 Many allegations of error are made by the appellant. Some of these are not well founded, and others do not have as a necessary basis any proper exception taken at the trial. The result is that we should be able to affirm the judgment appealed from except for the unjustifiable methods, savoring too much of pettifoggery, employed by the assistant district attorney who tried the case, for the purpose of producing on the minds of the jury the impression that defendant had been guilty of various *Page 270 misdeeds when as a matter of fact the evidence did not justify any such inference.
As has been stated, the charge against the appellant is that he procured money from the complainant by false representations in connection with his claim that he could synthetically produce camphor from spirits of turpentine. The case was very closely contested on the facts, and if the People could convince the jury that the appellant was in the habit of obtaining money from people by virtue of dishonest schemes of this nature, it can readily be seen that this would substantially influence the jury in their final conclusion. The attempt was made to produce this impression by improper methods.
While he was being cross-examined the appellant was asked whether he had not entered into an arrangement with one Weir to manufacture rubber synthetically, and he answered that he had. Then he was asked whether he had not represented that he could produce rubber synthetically for him, and pursuant to that representation had secured several thousand dollars. This question he answered in the negative, but being asked further did admit that on such a representation he had procured money from Weir to the amount of about eight hundred dollars, and then being asked whether he had ever returned that money to him, he responded in the negative.
Next he was asked whether he did not represent to one McKinley that he could manufacture rubber synthetically and under that representation procure from him an amount in the neighborhood of twenty thousand dollars. He answered this in the negative, but did admit that upon such representation he had procured some money from Mr. McKinley.
He was then asked whether he had not represented to one Lockhurst falsely that he had a plant equipped for the manufacture of a patented device by virtue of which representation he procured several thousand dollars and he answered in the negative. *Page 271
Finally he was asked whether he had not procured money from one Jarvis by representation of ability to manufacture rubber synthetically and responded in the negative.
Subsequently Jarvis and Lockhurst were called to the stand by the prosecution and after being asked trivial questions allowed to depart. Weir had been called to the stand before this cross-examination and asked questions of a similar character and each of the witnesses stated that he knew the defendant and two of them that they had met him during the period covered by the questions making up the cross-examination heretofore referred to.
It is perfectly apparent that the only object of this cross-examination and the only purpose of parading these witnesses before the jury was to create the impression that the defendant had been engaged in fraudulent schemes similar to the one charged against him in this case and to challenge him before the jury either by his own testimony or by a cross-examination of the witnesses referred to, to go into the details of those transactions. As it was conducted, it was an entirely unjustifiable proceeding. The evidence as it was actually produced did not show that the appellant had been guilty of any dishonest conduct and there was nothing in the answers which he did give which properly called for further testimony or explanation by him. On this theory the evidence at best would be utterly immaterial and inadmissible, and under the circumstances I have no doubt that it was worse than immaterial. The entire series of questions as they were framed, his admissions that he had received certain sums of money, and the presence of the individuals from whom it was insinuated by the district attorney's questions he had improperly collected money, inevitably must have combined to produce in the minds of the jury the conclusion that appellant had been guilty of misconduct. He was forced to submit his case to the jury either under this false impression thus improperly created, or else enter on the trial of issues involving foreign transactions which had no part *Page 272 in the trial. Either burden was one which the court had no right to impose upon him. While of course the court has the power to allow much latitude in the cross-examination of a witness, and while the district attorney many times may be led in good faith and legitimately to enter upon a cross-examination of a witness which proves fruitless and discloses no circumstances impeaching his credibility, there must be a limit to these practices. One of these limits should be that a district attorney shall not deliberately, by questions really containing no element of misconduct and by parading witnesses as a challenge to the defendant, create false impressions that he has been guilty of misdeeds when the evidence does not sustain any such conclusion.
The judgment of conviction should be reversed and a new trial granted.