People v. Eaton

SMITH, C.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of rape, and sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison for the term of forty-five years. Objections are made to certain rulings of the court in the exclusion of testimony and in an instruction to the jury, but none of them, we think, are tenable. We subjoin the several questions excluded, with the instruction objected to, adding such comments as may be necessary.

1. The following questions were asked of the prosecuting witness: “You had the night before agreed to meet Bert Chattel, and attend the Portuguese celebration with him? That is so, is it not? You knew when you left your home, *908upon the night of the 2d of June, that you were going to meet Bert Chattel ? That is a fact, is it not ? ’ ’ These questions referred to a dance which the witness had attended in company with Chattel on the night of the crime, and from which she was returning when the crime was committed; and she had just testified that she had “agreed to go with Bert Chattel, but .... did not intend to keep [her] engagement”; and that “when [she] left the house upon the evening [in question she] did not expect to meet” him. Both questions had thus been already answered, and the repetition of her testimony on this point could have been of no advantage to the defendant. Nor was there any error in.refusing to permit it: Davis v. Baugh, 59 Cal. 568.

2. The witness was also asked the following question, which was excluded by the court: “Those blows were powerful, solid blows with the fist? Isn’t that true?” But the witness had just testified that she had been struck by the defendant and his participants in the crime “with the fist,” and she had also described the injuries thereby inflicted, from which it appeared, better than by any numbér of adjectives, that they were “powerful, solid blows.” There was no error, therefore, in excluding the question.

3. The following question to the witness Anderson was excluded : “You know you are testifying to what was physically impossible? Isn’t that so, sir?” The witness had just testified to certain facts as actually seen by him. From this it sufficiently appeared that what he had seen was not physically impossible, and the question was therefore, in effect, whether the witness did not know that he had testified falsely. The court, therefore, was quite right in excluding it: Code Civ. Proc., secs. 2044, 2066.

4. The witness was also asked or informed as follows: “You have taken a great deal of interest in this case, and want to see this defendant convicted?” To which the court said, “That is not a question,” but added: “You may ask him as to his interest.” This was, in effect, simply to require of the counsel to put his assertion in the form of a question, which was not an unreasonable requirement”: Code Civ. Proc., sec. 2044.

5. The following question was asked of the witness Hammerton, and excluded: “Do you still testify, in view of your *909action with reference to making this experiment, that you have no more interest in these cases, including the one upon trial, than you have in eases which ordinarily come under your observation as a police officer ? ’ ’ The witness to whom the question was addressed had, as a police officer, participated in the preparation of the case for the prosecution, and had testified to an experiment made by him, at the request of the attorney of one of the parties to the crime, with a view of proving the physical impossibility of facts testified to by the witness Anderson. But the witness had already testified that he was no more than ordinarily interested in the case, which was the material fact. Nor was there anything in the circumstance referred to in the question tending to show that he was wrong, or requiring him to say whether or not he was still of the same opinion. Nor was it error in the court, in response to the claim of the counsel to the contrary, to inform the jury “that [the] officer was under no obligation to assist the defense in the Keating case, or in this case in making any experiment.”

6. After the case was submitted, the testimony of the witness Smart was read to the. jury by the reporter at their request; and upon the completion of the reading, “without any request from any one of the jurors, and without asking the defendant’s or his attorney’s consent thereto, the court, of its own motion, said to the reporter: ‘What is that last questionÍ Read it again’ ”—and the question and answer were accordingly read. It is now objected that this was error. But if so, there was no objection made or exception taken, and on that account the error, if any, cannot be reviewed. We do not, however, see any impropriety in the judge having re-read to him matter that had escaped his ear.

We advise that the judgment and order appealed from be affirmed.

We concur: Gray, C.; Chipman, C.

PER CURIAM.

For the reasons given in the.foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.