delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a writ of error sued out under the. sixth section of the act of Congress of February 6, 1889, 25 Stat. 655; 656, c. 113, § 6, to review a.judgment of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Arkansas, imposing a sentence of death upon the .plaintiff in error for the murder of Sam. M.-Morgan, “at the'Cherokee Nation, in the Indian country.”- The plaintiff in error relied for a reversal of the judgment upon the following grounds:
1. That the verdict was contrary to the evidence:
2. That the court erred in permitting the district attorney to refer'in his argumеnt to matters not in evidence:
3. That the.court erred in refusing to grant the prisoner
(1) It is clear that the question, whether the verdict was. contrary to the evidence, which is the first error assigned, is not one which can be considered in this court, if there were-any evidence proper to'go to the jury in support of the verdict.
The testimony on behalf of the government tended- to show that deceased had, on the 3d of November, about fifty dollars on his. person; and that on the morning of that day, which was Sunday, after having slept together the night before, the • prisoner and the deceased, riding two horses belonging to the-deceased, started out from the house of Mrs. Harris, to visit-some yоung women by the name, of Davis, who lived about four miles away. The prisoner was armed with a pistol.
About noon of that- day shots were heard. by a witness for thе .government in the neighborhood of the hole where the body of the deceased was afterwards found, and in 'a short, time the defendant was seen riding one horse and leading the' other away from this place. Toward evening of the same day the defendant returned to a house in the neighborhoоd, of Mrs.. Harris’s, with the two horses. When inquired of as to the-deceased he said that- they had met a man riding in a buggy on the prairie, who had induced the deceased to go with him. to the Pawnee Agency. He stated that the deceased had directed him to bring the horses 'back, to take charge of all his effеcts, and to pay his debts in case he did-not return by a certain time.
Three days before Christmas the body of the deceased was-found in the hole above referred to, which was some six or seven feet d^ep, on the bank of Goody’s Creek, and some three miles' from Mrs. Harris’s. His hat had a bullet hole in it, and his broken skull showed where the bullet had entered it and caused his death. There was no doubt, from what was found on his person, as to whose corpse it was, though the face and front part of-his skull had been battered so as to prevent recognition of'the features. No morrey/was found in. his pockets.
¿It appeared from, other evidence, and was- admitted by the
The evidence for the defendant was confliсting. One man testified that he saw a government witness, Burt by name, in a carriage with the deceased, on the Sunday in question, going toward the place where the body was found, and that later he saw him returning without the deceased. This evidence was at variance with the statement of the' defendant himself, who swore that .the man in whose buggy the deceased drove away was not Burt.
There is no doubt that this testimony was sufficient to lay before the jury, and it.would have beеn improper to direct a verdict for the defendant. The weight of this evidence and the' extent to which it was contradicted or explained away by witnesses on behalf of the defendant, were questions exclusively for the jury, and not reviewable upon writ' of error. If the verdict were manifestly against the weight of evidence, defendant was at liberty to move for a new trial upon that ground; but that the granting or refusing of such a motion is a matter of discrеtion is settled in
Freeborn
v.
Smith,
(2) The second assignment of error is clearly untenable... appears that during the argument of the case the defendant’s
In the present case it is by no means clear that the district attorney transcended the proper limits of an argument. Counsel for the defendant had tendered the issue to the jury, that either his client or Burt was guilty of the crime, and we perceive no imрropriety in the district attorney accepting the challenge and attempting to demonstrate that Burt was not guilty, and arguing that the jury, upon the issue thus prеsented. ■had a right to infer that the defendant was guilty.
-, (3) The third assignment is based upon the refusal of the court to grant an application by the prisoner fоr process for three witnesses, such process to be served at the expense of the government. The trial was begun on the 27th of May, 1890 ; the application was not made until the 31st day of May, just before the defendant was called as the last witness in his own behalf. It would probably have delayed the trial a number of days to send the process into the Indian Territory, make service of it there, and bring in these witnesses to testify. Whether the trial should be delаyed for the production of these witnesses was clearly a matter of discretion and not reviewable upon a writ of error. The testimony of
There is no error in the proceedings in the court below, and the judgment must be Affirmed.
