12 N.E.2d 266 | Ind. | 1938
Appellant, together with Harry Peats, Emmett Williams, and Gerald Haygood, was indicted for murder. The indictment is the same under which Harry Peats, appellant in Cause No. 26852, ante 560,
The errors assigned and presented are that the court erred in overruling appellant's motion for a new trial, and in overruling his motion to quash the indictment.
As to the sufficiency of the indictment against a motion to quash, nothing need be added to what has been said in the Peats case. The indictment is sufficient.
The evidence for the state is substantially the same as in the Peats case. In addition, there was the testimony of a police officer that Crickmore had made a statement to him in all substantial respects conforming to Haygood's testimony. He testified that Crickmore told him that he had been hired "to go out and rock trucks of non-Union men." There was also the testimony of Haygood and two women that Crickmore was in the car with them, and threw "rocks" through the windshield of the car in which Penny was riding. Appellant's *589 defense was an alibi. He testified that he was not present when the offense was committeed; that he was elsewhere.
He complains of the admission of evidence of other crimes. The evidence complained of was substantially the same as that described in the Peats case. A prima facie case was made, 1. showing that he was a party to a conspiracy or a plan to systematically stone trucks driven by non-union drivers. The evidence was competent.
Complaint is also made of the admission of testimony concerning the surroundings at the place where the offense was committed, and of the admission of photographs for the purpose of 2. showing the condition of the truck before and after the stones were thrown. We are not impressed with the objections to this testimony, but at most it only tended to prove that stones were thrown, and that one of them inflicted the injury upon Penny from which he died. By his defense, appellant made no contention that Penny had not been killed in the manner charged. His defense was that he had no part in the transaction, and that he was elsewhere. It follows that, even if the evidence had been improperly admitted, it could not prejudice appellant's rights.
One of the causes assigned in the motion for a new trial is that the verdict and judgment are not supported by the evidence. As we understand appellant's contention, it is that, 3, 4. although the intentional and premeditated throwing of stones from an automobile, running at seventy miles an hour, into the windshield of an approaching truck, if such an act is reasonably calculated to produce death, is sufficient evidence of an intention to kill, it is also sufficient to establish premeditation and malice; that if the jury believed there *590
was an intention to kill, their verdict should have been for murder, and not manslaughter; that, since the verdict was for the lower offense, the jury must have assumed that appellant only intended the unlawful act, consisting of throwing the stones, and that the verdict should have been for involuntary manslaughter. It is difficult to understand how the jury concluded that appellant was guilty of voluntary manslaughter, which implies an intentional killing, since it is clear from the evidence that, if he intended to kill, it was a planned and premeditated killing, which would be murder in the first degree, whereas, if the killing had been unintentional, and only the unlawful act of throwing the deadly missiles had been intentional, it would have been involuntary manslaughter. But it will be seen that the objection to the evidence supporting the verdict is that it is too much, and not that it is too little. In Hasenfuss v.State (1901),
The indictment charged that Penny died on March 9th. The evidence showed that he died early in the morning of March 10th. Time is not of the essence of the crime of murder. There 5, 6. are offenses of which time is the essence; where it is an offense to do a thing upon a certain day, but this is not such. Where time is not of the essence, proof of time as charged is not necessary. It is sufficient to show that the crime was committed before the return of the indictment, and within the statute of limitations. It has been held that in a murder case it is sufficient if the indictment shows, and the proof establishes, that death occurred within a year and a day after the injury was inflicted; and that, where the indictment was returned within a year and a day, and it is shown that death occurred before the indictment was returned, it is sufficient. Alderson v. State
(1924),
It is also suggested that the indictment recites that the nature of the missile used was unknown to the grand jury, and that there is no evidence that the grand jury was not 7, 8. acquainted with the nature of the missile. Recitals in an indictment as to the grand jury's knowledge, or want of knowledge, must be accepted as true, unless the contrary affirmatively appears upon the face of the indictment. Miller
v. State (1937),
Appellant testified as a witness. On cross-examination he was asked if it was not a fact that in the trial of Peats he took the witness stand, but refused to answer a question upon the 9. ground that it might incriminate him. There was an objection *593 by appellant, which was overruled by the court. The witness answered: "No, I don't think I said that." The prosecuting attorney referred to the fact in argument. Appellant contends that the state is not permitted to sully or prejudice his defense or character by referring to his refusal to testify; and it is contended that the statement of the prosecuting attorney, commenting upon the fact that appellant had refused to testify in the other case, was misconduct and prejudicial. But there is no validity in this argument. If the defendant had not tendered himself as a witness, it would have been improper to comment upon his refusal to testify in this case, or in any other case, but, since he tendered himself as a witness, it was proper to cross-examine him as fully as any other witness. By becoming a witness, he waived his right not to be required to give evidence against himself.
Appellant assigns as independent error that the court erred in overruling his motion to declare the jury panel irregularly drawn, in overruling his motion to declare the second 10, 11. jury panel illegally drawn, and in overruling his motion to discharge the second special venire drawn by the jury commissioners. There is a serious question as to whether appellant has presented any question with respect to the legality of the jury. In Durst v. State (1920),
Judgment affirmed.