58 Ind. 530 | Ind. | 1877
The appellant was indicted for the murder of John W. Sewell, tried by a jury, found guilty as charged, and is now under sentence of death. He appeals to this court.
1. Without noticing the proceedings in detail, we will
There is a proper mode of correcting a bill' of exceptions, but it is not by attacking it collaterally, in this court, by affidavits. We know of no practice that will warrant such a proceeding. A court is not bound to sign a bill of exceptions as the attorneys prepare it, even though they agree to it; nor is it improper for the judge to correct a bill of exceptions, without the consent of the attorneys.
We must hold the bill of exceptions, signed by the judge, as importing the truth, instead of the affidavit which attacks it. The motion is overruled.
2. It is insisted, that “ The record does not show that there was a grand jury empanelled, or that the indictment was found, or returned into court, by any legally authorized grand jury. ”
The record, as to this point, is as follows: “ Be it remembered, that heretofore, to wit, on the 22d day of November, 1877, the same being the third juridical day of the November term, 1877, of said court, the regular grand jury for
Here follows the indictment upon which the prisoner was tried.
This sufficiently shows the proper presentment of the indictment, and that it was found by a legal grand jury. Bowe v. The State, 25 Ind. 415; Wall v. The State, 23 Ind. 150; Bailey v. The State, 39 Ind. 438.
3. There was no motion made to quash the indictment, but the question of its sufficiency is raised in the record, by a motion in arrest of judgment, and an assignment .of error in this court. The objection taken to the indictment is, that it contains no averment that the killing was “ unlawful;” but it is alleged, that the prisoner “ did feloniously, purposely, and with premeditated malice, kill and murder John W. Sewell,” etc. This is sufficient. Neither the word “unlawful” nor “unlawfully” is used in our statutory definition of murder; nor need either of them be used in an indictment for murder. Besides, the word “feloniously” includes all the meaning that can be expressed by the word “ unlawfully.” The authorities support this rule. Jerry v. The State, 1 Blackf. 395.
4. The prisoner moved the court for a continuance of his cause. The motion was founded upon two affidavits, made by himself. The first affidavit states, that.“ Ida M. Beavers is a material and competent witness on his behalf, on the trial herein; that he has had a subpoena issued for said witness, directed to the sheriff of Marion • county, this State; that said subpoena has not yet been returned, and said witness is not now in attendance; that he expects to prove by said witness, that, within the last past year and a half, George M. Hammell, a witness on the part of . the prosecution, had serious difficulty with her, growing out of an attempt on the part of said Hammell to have illicit intei’course with her, and she communicated the fact to affiant (her brother),
This affidavit is defective in several respects. It does not state where the witness Ida M. Beavers resides. A subpoena, issued to Marion county, if the witness did not reside therein, of course would be fruitless; besides, the evidence sought to be obtained by her is remote and collateral. It cannot be fairly supposed that a difficulty between the witness and defendant, had a year and a half before, could have much, if any, continuing effect at the time of the trial. The evidence sought to be obtained from the witness Patterson is loosely stated. He might have been with the prisoner “ on the night of the alleged murder” a very short time, and yet have allowed abundance of time to the prisoner to commit the deed charged against him. They might have been “ not in the vicinity of the place alleged as the place of the murder,” and yet not so remote as to tend to show that the prisoner could not have committed the crime on that night. It does not sufficiently show that the absence of the witness was not “procured.” The statutory requisites of an
The second affidavit states, that the defendant is not prepared to go to trial; that his imprisonment has prevented him from making his defence as he could otherwise have done; that the public mind, and the people throughout the county, are excited, biased and prejudiced against him; that the press of the city has been engaged in publishing articles relative to affiant, which have been and are being read by the citizens generally, greatly tending to affect the minds of the citizens against him; that, by the next term of the court, “ he can and will be fully able to bring before the court the person actually guilty of this grave brime now charged against him, and be able fully to acquit himself.” But who it is that has committed the crime, how he can acquit himself, what his defence, if any, is, he does not state. Perhaps a successful motion for a change of venue might have been founded upon this affidavit, but it is insufficient to obtain a continuance of the case. Dickey v. Morgan, 8 Blackf. 533; Fleming v. The State, 11 Ind. 234; Jones v. The State, 11 Ind. 357; Ward v. Colyhan, 30 Ind. 395.
5. The court allowed a certain photograph, and evidence touching it, to go to the jury, for the purpose of identifying the deceased; evidence touching a spot on the coat of the prisoner, supposed to be a blood spot, and the test of the. physician in reference to the same spot; evidence as to the dodging, trembling and confusion of the prisoner, when met by the witnesses, before and at the time of his arrest; evidence of a witness as to his having seen a man in Ripley county, some time before the commission of the homicide, who resembled the prisoner, evidence touching a satchel and its contents, found near the church where the dead body was found, as belonging to the deceased; the admission of
6. It is also claimed that the court did not properly instruct the jury, as to the fact that the prisoner did not testify in his own behalf. We find the following instruction in the bill of exceptions : “And the court then and there, at the request of the defendant’s attorneys, charged the jury orally, that the defendant’s failure to testify must not be referred to in the argument of the cause, nor commented upon, referred to, or in any manner considered by the jury, in determining the case.” We áre of the opinion, that this instruction is correct, and a sufficient discharge of the court’s duty upon that point.
7. The counsel for the prisoner complain of the instructions given to the jury, by the court, generally, but point out no specific objection to any of them, except to the 13tb, in which, they say, “ The court assumes that John W. Sewell was the person found dead.” We do not so understand the instruction. The part complained of is in the following words: “ The first question for you to consider is, was John W.. Sewell killed at or near Liberty church, in Jefferson county, Indiana, on the 3d or 4th of November, 1877? and, if so, was the killing murder or manslaughter? If you find he was not so killed, you will find the defendant not guilty.” The instruction does not assume that John W. Sewell was the person found dead, but assumes, as the indictment charges, that it must have been John W. Sewell that was killed, or the defendant should be found not guilty. This is right. The prisoner has nothing to complain of in this instruction.
8. As to the evidence: It is claimed that the venue was not sufficiently proved. We think it was. The prisoner and the deceased left Scott county, on the evening of the 3d of November, 1877, by railway, going towards Jefferson county; on the next day the prisoner was in Jefferson county; and the body of the deceased was found in Jefferson county.
9. The indictment alleges, that the killing was done by “ kicking and stamping the said John W. Sewell with his feet, and striking, beating, bruising, pounding, and mortally wounding said John W. Sewell with his fists and with certain stones, clubs, sticks, bricks, billets of woods, bars of iron, sling-shot, and other missiles and weapons, to the grand jurors unknown,” etc. The counsel for the prisoner contend, that “ It is just as much a part of the allegation that the death was in part produced with rweapons to the grand jury unknowm, as that he was killed at all; and it was necessary to prove this allegation.” The evidence shows that the dead body was found in a church, with the head bruised and broken, and fatally injured; and a stone, suitable to accomplish the deed, was found with the body. The jury would have no trouble in fairly concluding that the killing was done by some of the means charged in the indictment. We are constrained to say, that there is nothing in this point.
The counsel do not discuss the question of the sufficiency of the evidence, generally, to establish the guilt of the prisoner; and we think they very properly waived it. It is all circumstantial. No witness saw the killing done, but the evidence is very convincing. We can conceive of no hypothesis, by which, in the order of natural causes and effects, the facts proved can be explained consistently with the innocence of the prisoner; and this is the true test of circumstantial evidence. It excludes all reasonable doubt of the prisoner’s guilt.
It appears to us that the prisoner has been tried properly, according to law, and found guilty upon sufficient evidence, and we know of no judicial reason why he should not suffer the penalty of his crime.
The judgment is affirmed.