8 N.M. 496 | N.M. | 1896
Lead Opinion
The rule heretofore granted is made absolute.
Opinion on the Merits
OPINION ON THE MERITS.
Scipio Aguilar, the plaintiff in •error, was indicted in the district court for the Fourth judicial district, in the county of San Miguel, on the twenty-ninth of September, 1894, for the murder of one Hilario Martinez and Juan Jimes. At the April term, 1895, he was tried in said court for the killing of Juan Jimes, and was discharged by the court. At the April term, 1896, he was tried under the other indictment for the killing of Hilario Martinez, and was found guilty of murder in the first degree. After unsuccessful motions for a new trial" and in arrest of judgment, he brings the case here by appeal.
It appears from the record in the case that the •defendant on or about the eighteenth of September, 1894, was traveling from a place called “Cochiti,” in New Mexico, to his home, in San Miguel county; that while so traveling he came up with Hilario Martinez and Juan Jimes, who were freighters going in the same direction. He traveled with these parties daring the remainder of the eighteenth, camped with them during the night, and traveled with them until late in ^ the afternoon of the nineteenth, when they all stopped for dinner. After dinner they separated, the defendant going in the direction of his home, which he reached that night or the next day. Some four days after this the bodies of the two freighters were found dead in their wagons, some miles from the place where the defendant left them, and about four hundred yards from the road. He was never seen with them after leaving-them on the evening of the nineteenth. They were never seen after that time until their dead bodies were found. The defendant was arrested, indicted, tried, and convicted, as above stated. It will be seen Horn this statement of facts that there was no eyewitness of the murder, and that there were no facts whatever developed upon the trial showing the circumstances-under which the crime was committed. The killing was established, and the condition in which the bodies were found showed that death was produced by a dangerous weapon; but how, or under what circumstances, or what was done or said by the deceased or the slayer at the time of the homicide, does not appear. At the close of the evidence the court instructed the jury as to ■murder in the first degree only, and did not charge as to murder in the second or third degrees: In this failure of the court to instruct the jury as to murder in the second and third degrees, it is insisted by the plaintiff, there was error.
Other grounds of error have been assigned by the appellant for reversal, among which is the action of the court in permitting testimony to be offered by the territory as to the contents of a certain letter supposed to have been written by the defendant. 'While we do not agree with the court below that a foundation was sufficiently laid to permit some of the witnesses to testify as to the contents of this letter, we deem it unnecessary to consider that question in the case. We think the court, under the state of facts presented in the record, should have given an instruction for murder in the second degree, and its failure to do so is error, for which the case must be reversed and remanded, and new trial granted, and it is so ordered.