13 Pa. Super. 461 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
The appellant was tried upon an indictment containing two counts, the first of which charged him with inflicting upon the prosecutor bodily injury dangerous to life, with intention to
The first assignment of error is based on the admission of evidence as to the kind of jackknife which the prosecutor carried at the time of the alleged assault. The prosecutor had testified that when the defendant attacked him in the public road he, the prosecutor, drew his pocket knife and told the defendant to keep away, but that he did not use the knife. There was testimony that after -the fight was over there was a severe cut in the cheek of the prosecutor and some slight cuts on the hand of the defendant. A knife was found upon the ground, which was stained with blood, and it cannot be said that the identity of this knife was an immaterial matter. The testimony which is the subject of complaint tended to establish that the blood stained knife was not the knife of the prosecutor, and was properly admitted. The second assignment of error complains that the court instructed the jury to disregard the evidence as to the lands of the prosecutor and the lairds of the defendant. This instruction was entirely proper. The practice of trying ejectment suits, or attempting to try them, in the court of quarter sessions ought not to be encouraged. There was no evidence whatever that either the prosecutor or the defendant was at the time this fight occurred attempting to prevent or defend against a trespass upon his lands; the fight occurred in the public road and the minds of the jury ought not to have been confused by considering questions of title to land not involved in the issue.
The learned counsel for the appellant in his printed argument suggests that the assignments of error from three to nine, inclusive, may be considered together, and he frankly concedes that no one of - them taken separately would be sufficient to reverse the judgment. In this we entirely agree with him. The contention of the appellant is that the entire charge, taken as a whole, is misleading, and its general tenor against the defendant. The only instruction as to the law, which is the subject of any of these assignments of error, is the seventh, in
In this assault and battery case we have one hundred and fifty-five pages of testimony. The learned court below was not required to repeat all this testimony to the jury; it was only required in so far as it did present the testimony to do so accurately and impartially: Burke v. Maxwell’s Administrators, 81 Pa. 139. It is well settled that it is not error for a judge, in his charge to the jury, to express his opinion upon the facts, if done fairly; in some cases it may be his duty to do so, provided he does not give a binding direction or interfere with the province of the jury; it may be the duty of the judge to call the attention of the jury to the interest of witnesses, or other matters affecting their credibility, or as to the impossibility of their having definite and positive knowledge upon the subject with regard to which they testify: Commonwealth v. Johnston, 133 Pa. 293; Johnston v. Commonwealth, 85 Pa. 54.
In the present case the court in its charge accurately defined the offenses with which the defendant stood charged, told the jury the essential elements which they must find in order to constitute either offense, and that they must be satisfied of the existence of such elements beyond a reasonable doubt, and then proceeded to define the rights of a party when acting in his own defense against an assault. The instructions of the court upon these questions of law were so satisfactory to the appellant that he has not assigned error in any one of them. When a defendant has not assigned error as to a pure question of law, we must assume that the instruction was correct. The only question in this case, therefore, Is whether the court erred in its presentation of the facts to the jury.
The assault out of which this prosecution grew occurred in a public road. No witnesses were actually present at the fight
Judgment affirmed. And now, April 23, 1900, it is ordered that Louise V. Warner, the appellant, surrender himself to the court of quarter sessions of the county of Bradford, to the end that the sentence of the court below be executed, and that he be confined, according to said sentence, for the residue of the term which had not expired on January 3, 1899, at the time this appeal became a supersedeas, and that the record be remitted that the sentence and this order be carried into effect.