126 P. 698 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1912
The plaintiff in error, John Bethel, was convicted in the district court of Seminole county at the January, 1911, term, on a charge of assault with intent to kill one Frank Barker, and his punishment fixed at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a term of two years. It appears that the difficulty out of which this charge arose occurred at the home of Justice of the Peace Ashbrook, in Seminole county, where the Bethels and Barkers were engaged in a civil lawsuit. The trouble came up between a brother of the accused and a brother of the prosecuting witness. The accused and prosecuting witness started toward the trouble, and became engaged in a difficulty of their own; the state contended that the accused assaulted Barker with his fist and then with a knife, pursuing him several times around the house, and inflicting a severe wound in the side, which it required a dozen stitches to close. The accused contended that the prosecuting witness, who weighed about 115 pounds, assaulted him with a knife, cut a hole in his clothes, and stabbed his brother. The testimony is to some extent conflicting, but the verdict of the jury is amply sustained.
It is urged by counsel for the accused that the judgment should be reversed upon the ground that the court improperly overruled a motion for continuance. We have carefully gone over the record and the motion, and find no reason to criticise the ruling of the court. The motion for continuance was properly overruled. At most the testimony sought would have been cumulative, and proper diligence was not shown to have the witnesses on hand. *63
It is next urged that the judgment should be reversed because Geo. C. Crump, Esq., was permitted to appear on behalf of the state and prosecute this cause in the trial court without having first qualified as special county attorney. Counsel rely upon the holding of this court in Dodd v. State,
It is next urged that the judgment should be reversed because the information upon which the prosecution was based did not bear the filing mark of the clerk. This contention is without merit. The filing mark has nothing to do with the validity of the information. There is no contention that the information was not in fact filed. The record is not offered to show that it was never filed. It is the duty of the clerk to mark the papers filed, enter them of record, and properly preserve them; but his failure to attach the filing mark does not vitiate the information. This case was called for trial and continued by agreement of counsel at a prior term of court, the accused entered his plea of not guilty to the charge, the jury was impaneled, and the evidence taken before it was discovered that the filing mark was not on the papers. The court was then asked to set aside the information and discharge the accused, which motion was overruled, and properly so.
We have read the entire record, and find no errors sufficient to justify a reversal of the judgment. It is therefore affirmed.
FURMAN, P.J., and DOYLE, J., concur. *64