2902.Damaging Phone or Electrical Line (Pen. Code, § 591)
The defendant is charged [in Count ] with (taking down[,]/ [or]
removing [,]/ [or] damaging[,]/ [or] disconnecting/ [or] cutting/[or]
obstructing/severing/making an unauthorized connection to) a (telegraph/
telephone/cable television/electrical) line [in violation of Penal Code
section 591].
To prove that the defendant is guilty of this crime, the People must
prove that:
<Alternative 1A - removed, damaged, or obstructed>
[1. The defendant unlawfully (took down[,]/ [or] removed[,]/ [or]
damaged[,]/ [or] obstructed/ [or] disconnected/ [or] cut) [part of] a
(telegraph/telephone/cable television/electrical) line [or mechanical
equipment connected to the line];]
<Alternative 1B - severed>
[1. The defendant unlawfully severed a wire of a (telegraph/telephone/
cable television/electrical) line;]
<Alternative 1C - unauthorized connection>
[1. The defendant unlawfully made an unauthorized connection with
[part of] a line used to conduct electricity [or mechanical equipment
connected to the line];]
AND
2. The defendant did so maliciously.
Someone acts maliciously when he or she intentionally does a wrongful
act or when he or she acts with the unlawful intent to annoy or injure
someone else.
[As used here, mechanical equipment includes a telephone.]
New January 2006; Revised August 2015, September 2019
BENCH NOTES
Instructional Duty
The court has a sua sponte duty to give this instruction defining the elements of the
crime.
The statute uses the term âinjure.â (Pen. Code, § 591.) The committee has replaced
the word âinjureâ with the word âdamageâ because the word âinjureâ generally
refers to harm to a person rather than to property.
The statute uses the phrase âappurtenances or apparatus.â (Pen. Code, § 591.) The
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