3 Indian Terr. 27 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1899
There are no assignments of error in this case. The motion for a new trial is as follows: “The defendant moves the court to set aside the verdict of the
The second exception is that the court erred in excusing jurors on its own motion The record before us fails to show the grounds upon which the court excused the jurors. The only record before us relating to this is as follows: “After the jury had been impaneled, but before the witnesses were sworn, Mr Wood, of counsel for defendant, said: ‘I desire to save exceptions to the court excusing certain jurors. The record will show who were excused for cause by the court on its own motion.’ Mr. Johnson, U. S. Attorney: T want the record to show that the exception comes
The third exception is that the verdict of the jury is not sustained by the evidence. If the court committed no error in its charge, the facts, as proven, were amply sufficient to sustain the judgment. It is not necessary here to analyze the evidence. We have set it out in brief. The defendant’s own testimony is sufficient to sustain the verdict.
The fourth exception is that the court erred in not instructing the jury as to the difference and distinction between murder in the first and second degrees.
In the Case of Cyrus A. Brown (decided by us at our present term, the opinion in which was handed down in June)2Ind. Ter. 582 this question was fully considered, and decided against the contention of appellant. The question was again presented to us in the case of Helms vs United States, 2 Ind. Ter. 595 in which the decision in the Brown Case was adhered to. In the latter case, alluding to the Brown Case, we say: “In that case we decide that in this jurisdiction the statute of the United States relating to the crime of murder prevails; and as by that statute the crime is not divided into murder in the first and second degrees, as is done by Mansfield’s Digest, juries here are not required to, and cannot by their verdict of guilty, find either of these degrees of murder, but must find either that
The fifth and sixth exceptions go to alleged misconduct on the part of the United States attorney and his assistant, in certain remarks made by them during the argument to the jury. While the language used may appear somewhat harsh, we cannot say that it constitutes reversible error, even if it had been excepted to at the time when uttered; but in this case no objections were made at the time, or exception saved. The objection is taken for the first time in the motion for a new trial, and this is too late.
Defendant’s counsel, in their brief; confine themselves exclusively to a criticism of the charge of the court. The exception to.the charge taken at the trial is as follows: “Defendant excepts specially to paragraphs 7, 8, and 15 of the court’s instructions, for the reason that the act intended by the defendant is not confined by said paragraphs to felony. Death resulting, when the act is a misdemeanor, is not murder. ’ ’ ‘ ‘Defendant excepts specially to paragraph 25 of the court’s instruction, for the reason that said paragraph implies that a person threatened with danger must retreat to the wall before taking a human life.” “Defendant excepts to the entire charge given by the court, for obvious reasons.’’ From the foregoing it will be seen that the only parts of the charge legally excepted to are paragraphs 7, 8, 15, and 25.
An exception “to the entire charge, for obvious reasons, ” is no exception at all. It is merely trifling with the courts, and presents no question for review.
For a proper understanding of paragraphs 7, 8, and
We cannot see but that paragraphs 7 and 8, taken either by themselves, or in connection with the balance of the charge, are a proper statement of the law. The seventh instruction is almost in the very language of Shaw, C. J., in the celebrated case of Com. vs Webster, 5 Cush. 304, which has been almost, if not quite, universally held by the courts and by the text-books to have been a proper enunciation of the law; and the eighth instruction is but an application, and a proper one, of the principle of law relating to malice, which the court was then expounding to the jury.
The fifteenth instruction, on involuntary manslaughter, was given by the court on the theory, we presume, that there was some evidence that the deceased might have come to his death by the blow from the club inflicted before the cutting of his throat with the knife. While the testimony to establish such a condition was exceedingly slight (so slight, indeed, that, had the instruction been omitted as inapplicable to the case, we would not have held it error), yet the testimony of one witness, relating to the contused wound on the head (the one evidently made by a club,) showed such a severe wound that the jury might possibly have concluded that it was the cause of the death of deceased, and that he died before the throat was cut, although the cutting immediately followed the blow; and to meet this proof the instruction was properly given, and, under the facts sought to be proven, the instruction properly gave the law. Blackstone defines “involuntary manslaughter” as follows: “Involuntary manslaughter differs also from homicide excusable by misadventure, in this: that misadventure always happens in consequence of a lawful act, but this species of manslaughter in consequence of an unlawful one. As if two persons play at sword and buckler, unless by the king’s command, and one of them kills the other, this is
Upon the question of exceptions in a case of murder, there seems to be upon the part of the bar a prevailing idea that courts of appeal will notice and pass upon errors, whether exceptions are saved or not. Some of the cases before us, which otherwise seem to be ably tried, in this particular are in an infinitely worse condition than others involving property rights of not more than $50 or $100 in value. We know of no law which makes a difference