People v. Emmons
Before: Tyler
TYLER, P. J.
Defendants were accused of the crime of robbery in the first degree. The information in substance alleged that on August 21, 1925, they unlawfully took and carried away from the person and possession of one George F. Neely, an agent of the Standard Oil Company, money and other personal property of the approximate value of $1,240 and that such act was accomplished through putting said Neely in fear.
. Subsequent to the commission of the act defendants were taken into custody and both made statements admitting their guilt. Upon the trial they both pleaded not guilty. They were convicted and sentenced to the state prison. They appealed from the judgment and order denying a new trial. The appeal as to Emmons has been dismissed. It is urged on behalf of Richardson, as ground for reversal, that the district attorney was guilty of prejudicial misconduct resulting in a miscarriage of justice. It is also claimed that the trial court erred in instructing the jury. The evidence upon which the prosecution relied for a conviction was the positive testimony of the victim of the robbery in identifying both defendants as the perpetrator’s of the crime, the extrajudicial confession of appellant and the extrajudicial confession of appellant’s co-defendant, together with evidence showing that it was read to appellant and that in the face of such accusation ho stood mute. The
[657]
misconduct relied upon for a reversal consisted of questions relating to appellant’s former conviction of various offenses, and his escape from certain penal institutions. The record shows, however, that the alleged misconduct was not objected to nor assigned as prejudicial. Under these circumstances it cannot be reviewed upon' appeal.
(People
v.
Brittan,
118 Cal. 409 [50 Pac. 664].) Nor is there any merit in appellant’s claim that the court committed error in instructing the jury. The jury was charged with regard to the confession of appellant’s co-defendant as follows:
“A
statement of one defendant is not proof of facts concerning another. For instance, if the defendant whose statement was first read to you has made certain statements regarding the codefendant, that in itself is not independent of any evidence which is binding upon his codefendant. However, another principle of law invokes itself. One who is confronted by án accusatory statement, it is the well-settled law of this state, if he stands mute when so confronted under circumstances which afford him an opportunity to reply, the fact of his standing mute may be taken by you as an admission of the truth of the statements or the facts in the statements which may have been read to him.”
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