Capistrano law was different
ROBERT GARDNER
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Daily Pilot has agreed to republish The Verdict,
the ever-popular column written for many years by retired Corona Del
Mar jurist and historian Robert Gardner, in exchange for donations to
the Surfrider Foundation. This column was originally published Feb.
19, 1994.
Judge John Landell, justice of the peace of San Juan Capistrano
Township during the ‘20s and ‘30s, was one of the most delightful men
I have ever known. To understand him, one has to understand the
Capistrano of the old days.
It was a tiny village clustered around the mission and connected
with the rest of Orange County by a two-lane road that ran over the
hills to Tustin. It was inhabited almost entirely by descendants of
the original mission Indians plus some refugees from the Mexican
Revolution of 1911.
Judge Landell was, for all intents and purposes, the alcalde, a
combination judge, mayor, chief of police and ombudsman. He was a
rather small man, dignified, with a wonderful thatch of white hair
and a flowing white mustache.
One day in 1937 when I was a very young and very new deputy
district attorney, I had my first exposure to Judge Landell. It was
an education.
I was sent down from Santa Ana to prosecute a disturbing-the-peace
case. It seemed that one lady had charged another lady with
disturbing the peace because the other lady had called her a bad
name.
I arrived at the tiny courtroom located in an ancient adobe
building that must have been built about the same time as the
mission. The complaining witness and the defendant were both there,
two rather rotund ladies who were glowering at each other across the
courtroom.
Judge Landell introduced me to the two ladies and asked me to put
on my case.
I called the complaining witness as my first witness and promptly
lost control of the proceedings. She began to yell at the defendant
in Spanish. The defendant screamed back at her in Spanish. I sat
there in bemused bewilderment, not having the slightest idea of what
was going on.
However, with my primitive border Spanish I could catch a phrase
once in a while.
The decibel count was high and from time to time Judge Landell
would say something to the ladies in Spanish that seemed to keep them
from clawing each other.
Finally, the ladies ran down and Judge Landell took over, all in
Spanish of course.
It was plain that he was reading the riot act to them. When he had
finished, the two ladies left the courtroom, considerably chastened.
I asked the judge whether I had won or lost.
“Oh, I found them both guilty,” he said. “I sentenced them both to
jail and suspended the sentences on condition they behave themselves
in the future.”
I rose to my feet and in my best
brand-new-lawyer-who-knows-more-than-anyone-else-in-the-world tone
told him he had no jurisdiction to find the complaining witness
guilty because she hadn’t been charged with anything. I launched into
a scholarly speech about due process, the rights of the accused,
threw in a few references to the Magna Carta and, in short, made a
complete ass of myself.
Judge Landell heard me out. Then in a quiet, kindly tone he said:
“Young man, don’t try to tell me what the law is in Capistrano.
All that law you are expounding may be all right for Los Angeles or
even Santa Ana but not down here in Capistrano.
“This is a tiny enclave, cut off culturally and geographically
from the rest of the world. I make my own rules.
“If I had found just the defendant guilty, that would have caused
more hard feelings, with one of those women crowing over the other.
The same thing would have happened if I had found the defendant not
guilty. This way, because I have found both to have been at fault,
both are now frightened and will behave themselves in the future. So,
Mr. Gardner, you must remember that when trying cases in my court, I
am the law.”
Judge Landell was a wonderful old man. The people of Capistrano
worshiped him and I never saw him be anything but fair and just --
even if he did bend the law just a teeny bit once in a while -- but
always for a good reason.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a resident of Corona del Mar and a longtime
observer of life in Newport Beach.
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