THE VERDICT -- Robert Gardner
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Many moons ago, more moons than I want to remember, I attained a kind
of instant judicial immortality when I tried the then-famous case of
Spreckles vs. Spreckles.
Young Adolph Spreckles of the San Francisco sugar Spreckles was living
on Balboa Island with his good-looking wife, Kay, who, incidentally,
later became Mrs. Clark Gable. She was a beauty and a very, very nice
woman.
While she was still Mrs. Adolph Spreckles, a difference of opinion
arose between her and her husband. The police were called and, by some
bizarre miscarriage of justice probably brought on by the publicity
generated by the names attached to the case, Adolph Spreckles was charged
with assault with a deadly weapon, to wit, a slipper.
The case went before a magistrate who, overcome by the publicity
connected with the case, sustained the charge and bound the defendant
over for trial on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon -- the
slipper.
It came before me as the Superior Court trial judge. I immediately
called the attorneys into chambers and asked a very pertinent question:
“You don’t really want to try this turkey, do you?”
The publicity-happy deputy district attorney insisted that a dismissal
would be a miscarriage of justice, and so we went to trial. I think that
the high point of the trial was when the defense attorney held up before
the jury the slipper, which was, according to the prosecution, the deadly
weapon, and said, “Ladies and gentleman, this is the deadly weapon. The
only way it could be deadly would be if I tried to swallow it and
choked.”
Needles to say, Adolph Spreckles was acquitted of the charge of
assault with a deadly weapon.
A nice O’Henry touch to this tale is that after Adolph Spreckles was
released, he bought more than 300 T-shirts, which he distributed to all
of the prisoners with whom he had been in jail. The T-shirts bore a
message in large letters across the chest that read, “I served time in
the Orange County Jail with Adolph Spreckles.”
All of which proved that although Adolph Spreckles may have been
somewhat less than an ideal husband, he had a nice sense of humor.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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