The defendant was convicted of arson in the second degree; and has appealed from the judgment.
1. The property which he is charged with having burned is described in the information as “a building belonging to the firm of Noonan and Towey, a partnership composed of P. H. Noonan and Peter Towey.” At the trial it was shown that Noonan and Towey were in partnership, engaged in business as butchers, and that the building was used by them in their business at the time it was burned; that the property had been bought by Noonan some years previously, and that he had afterwards conveyed an undivided half of it to Towey. *386This was sufficient to identify the property destroyed with that which was laid in the information. (People v. Shainwold, 51 Cal. 468.) It was immaterial for the purposes of the trial whether the building was held by Noonan and Towey as cotenants or as joint tenants. Real property may be owned by a partnership (Civ. Code, sec. 684), and the conveyance to the individual partners in which they are styled as composing a firm will be operative to vest in them the title according to the terms of the deed. (McCauley v. Fulton, 44 Cal. 355.)
2. While the defendant was in the county jail after his arrest, he made certain statements to the district attorney and sheriff, which were taken down in shorthand by a stenographer, and afterwards written out in longhand. The stenographer was called as a witness at the trial, and in his testimony gave these statements at length, refreshing his memory from his shorthand notes. He also had the longhand notes that he had written out, and stated that they were a true and correct statement of what the defendant had said. During the argument to the jury the district attorney proceeded to read to the jury from this statement written out in longhand, to which the defendant’s counsel objected upon the ground that the paper had never been introduced in evidence, whereupon the court said: “It appearing to the court that the paper which the district attorney holds in his hands is the paper the reporter of this court has testified to as being a copy of the statements made by the defendant, as testified to by him, although the paper or copy is not in evidence, the objection is overruled.” To this the defendant excepted. The record does not show what was read to the jury, or that the longhand statement was in any respect different from the testimony given by the stenographer, and, as he had testified that it was “ a true and correct statement ” of what the defendant had said, it does not appear that any error was committed.
3. The defendant visited the house of one Staley dur*387ing the evening prior to the fire, and while there, after drinking a quantity of wine, proposed to Staley to burn the barn, to which Staley apparently assented, and accompanied him for that purpose along the railroad track to a place opposite the barn, when the defendant got over the fence, and set the building on fire. After this was done Staley fired a pistol, which was a concerted signal between him and the officers, upon which they were to arrest the defendant. At the trial the defendant sought in cross-examination of Staley and other witnesses for the prosecution to show certain conversations between them and the officers prior to the burning of the building to the effect that the officers had been informed that the fire was to occur, and that, in consequence of such information, they were near the place of the fire for the purpose of arresting the defendant. What took place between the officers and these-witnesses could neither bind nor exculpate the defendant, and the fact that the defendant’s intention to commit the offense was known to the officers beforehand would not palliate his crime. Even if it be conceded that the court committed a technical error in refusing to permit this cross-examination, we think that, in view of the undisputed evidence that the defendant admitted that he set fire to the building, this error did not affect any of his substantial rights. (Pen. Code, sec. 1258.)
The instructions to the jury were fully as favorable to the defendant as he could ask, and the exceptions thereto do not deserve further consideration.
The judgment is affirmed.
Garoutte, J., De Haven, J., Fitzgerald, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.