People v. Davis
Before: Kingsley
KINGSLEY, J.
Pursuant to section 3100 et seq., of the Welfare and Institutions Code, proceedings were instituted looking to the commitment of defendant as a narcotic addict. At the first hearing, held under section 3106, defendant was found to he a narcotic addict and was ordered committed to the California Rehabilitation Center. A jury trial was
[258]
demanded and the case was set for such a trial. At the opening of that hearing, defendant, personally, his counsel, and the deputy district attorney, waived jury trial by a procedure that followed explicitly the procedure for waiver of a jury trial in a criminal ease. As the hearing progressed, the trial court’s attention was called to the fact that while, before 1965, section 3108 of the Welfare and Institutions Code had provided for a second hearing “by judge or jury,” the 1967 revision of that section provided only for a jury trial on the occasion of the second hearing. The court ruled that, a jury trial having been waived, there was thereafter no provision for a second hearing and that the only procedure available was to carry out the commitment order theretofore made. The court and counsel engaged in a long discussion, during which the court several times offered to allow defendant to withdraw his jury waiver and have a jury trial. The offer was refused. Defendant was thereupon committed pursuant to the original order. A motion for new trial was made and denied.
He has appealed from the judgment and from the order denying a new trial. We dismiss the latter appeal, since an order denying a new trial is not appealable.
(Rodriguez
v.
Barnett
(1959) 52 Cal.2d 154 [338 P.2d 907].) We affirm the judgment.
As counsel points out, the result is that defendant stands committed solely on the evidence adduced at the first hearing and at that hearing, insofar as the .issue of addiction was concerned, the only evidence was the examining physician’s certificate, received in evidence by stipulation. But section 3107 expressly permits the waiver of a hearing where, as here, the waiver is expressed in open court; if a hearing may be waived in its entirety, it can be waived in part. While there were minor defects in the form of the certificate, we are not convinced that they amounted to prejudicial error. We see no defects in the original hearing or in the commitment order there made.
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