People v. Mullen
Before: Shaw
Synopsis
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, and from an order denying a new trial and from an order denying a motion in arrest of judgment. B. N. Smith, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
SHAW, J.
Defendant was charged by information with the crime of manslaughter alleged to have been committed
[548]
upon one Patrick Connelly. Upon his plea of not guilty a trial was had, wherein a verdict of guilty of involuntary manslaughter was returned, upon which he was adjudged to serve a term of five years in state prison. He prosecutes this appeal from the judgment and an order denying his motion for a new trial, and also from an order of the court denying his motion in arrest of judgment.
There is no law authorizing an appeal in arrest of judgment, and, therefore, the attempted appeal from this order must be disregarded.
(People
v.
Matuszewski,
138 Cal. 533, [71 Pac. 701].)
Appellant bases his right to reversal of the order denying his motion for a new trial upon the ground of insufficiency of evidence to support the verdict in that: first, there was no evidence of the death of Patrick Connelly, the person whom defendant was charged with killing; and, second, that the evidence failed to establish the elements constituting the crime of involuntary manslaughter.
1. As regards the first point, Dr. Campbell, a witness called on behalf of the people, testified that he saw the defendant at the inquest over the body of Patrick Connelly, and that the cause of the death of Connelly was fracture through the temporal bone. The Patrick Connelly alleged to have been killed by defendant is, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, presumed to be identical with the person of that, name upon whose body the inquest was held and whose death was caused by a fracture of the temporal bone. Identity of person is presumed from identity of name. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1963.) While the presumption is a disputable one, there is no evidence in the record here tending to controvert it.
(People
v.
Riley,
75 Cal. 100, [16 Pac. 544] ;
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