People v. Lightner

By the Court, McKinstry, J.:

As a general rule a defendant may waive any statutory right or proceeding. It is true that where there has been neither arraignment nor plea, the Court cannot supply an issue, even after verdict. But it has been suggested by this Court that a plea will cure the defects of an arraignment, and it has never been decided that a formal arraignment can be waived only by plea. (People v. Corbett, 28 Cal. 329.) We entertain no doubt that a prisoner may expressly waive all the formal steps and plead when called up for arraignment; and there can be no good reason why a defendant (present personally and by counsel), should not be held to have waived any detail of the proceedings which constitute the arraignment, when, as in this case, he asks for time to plead; which of itself admits the existence of the indictment, and knowledge, or opportunities for acquiring knowledge, of its contents. He asks for time to plead, and obtains the delay on an implied stipulation that he will plead at the expiration of the time.

Under our system of practice, the common law continuances have no place, and in the case where a jury have failed to agree,' and been discharged for that reason, the defendant may be tried again at the same or next term without any order of postponement. The power to discharge a jury, on Sunday, includes the power to adjudicate the fact that the jury cannot agree.

The indictment charges the defendant with an assault with intent to commit murder, committed “with a certain large knife.” The verdict was to the effect “ Guilty of assault with a deadly weapon, with intent to inflict upon the person of another a bodily injury without cause or excuse.”

Defendant claims that this verdict was unauthorized,- as the offense of which the defendant was found guilty, is not included in that charged in the indictment.

The defendant was charged with an assault with a deadly *229weapon. If he was guilty of an assault with a deadly weapon, “ without cause or excuse,” the jury were justified in finding—as the Court would have been justified in charging as a matter of law—that his intent was to do bodily harm. The crime of which the defendant was found guilty, therefore, was the crime for which he was indicted—less the specific intent to murder. (People v. Davidson, 5 Cal. 133; People v. English, 30 Cal. 214; State v. Robey, 8 Nev. 312.) In People v. Murat, 45 Cal. 284, this Court said: “We are of opinion that under an indictment for an assault to commit murder, a conviction of an assault made with a deadly weapon to do bodily harm, cannot be supported unless it sufficiently appears from the face of the indictment, that the assault was made with a deadly weapon.”

Judgment and order affirmed.

Mr. Justice Rhodes did not express an opinion.