165 Ind. 148 | Ind. | 1905
Appellant was convicted in the court below of murder in the first degree, and it was adjudged that he suffer death.
In addition to the above objections, a'number of objections relative to the grand jury are urged upon our consideration.
It is unnecessary to consider appellant’s assignment based on his motion in arrest of judgment, but, formally to dispose of the assignment, we announce our conclusion that the motion was properly overruled.
But one question remains: Did the court below err in overruling appellant’s supplemental motion for a new trial ? It is claimed by his counsel that the affidavits filed in support of this motion made a case of newly-discovered evidence which not only warranted, but required, the granting of a new trial. There were two affidavits filed on appellant’s
The affidavit of said attorney disclosed that he assumed the defense of said cause about five weeks before the trial; that he had three or four consultations with appellant before the trial commenced; that appellant appeared perfectly sane and fairly intelligent; that he claimed he was innocent of the crime charged, and that in said consultations the affiant sought information from which to find evidence to corroborate appellant’s claim of innocence; that affiant went to Illinois and had a twenty-minute consultation with said Grace He Paola, with reference to other subjects than insanity ; that affiant went from there to Hobart, Indiana (the date is not fixed), and he heard at that place from four or five persons that there was a man living there—-one Carleson—who had been a guard at the state prison at Michigan City, who had said that he had known appellant while the latter was confined in said prison, and that he (Carleson) believed that appellant was crazy; that upon interviewing Carleson the latter said that' appellant at times was very melancholy, and acted rather strange, but that said Carleson expressed himself as unwilling to testify that appellant was insane. It further appears from said affidavit that affiant wrote to the warden of said prison, asking him to' endeavor to obtain information concerning appellant’s mental condition while in prison, and that said warden answered that he had been unable to gain such information. It also appears from said affidavit that affiant inquired of persons at the jail concerning appellant’s sanity, and that they said they had observed no traits of insanity in him. Said affiant further deposed that he made no inquiry of appellant concerning his mental condition until after judgment; that he (affiant) had no information upon the subject, other than as above disclosed, until after that time, and that all of the facts tending to show insanity had developed since that
The State filed three counter-affidavits. The first one set out is by the court reporter, who took notes of the evidence during the trial. He deposed that throughout the trial appellant suggested questions to his counsel which were asked by them of the witnesses. Said affiant further deposed that he did not notice any traits of insanity in appellant, and that in all of his actions he appeared to be a person of sane mind and ordinary intelligence. There was an affidavit by the deputy prosecuting attorney to the effect that he cross-examined appellant upon the trial for a period of about six hours; that affiant did not notice any traits of insanity in appellant, and that he was apparently a bright
7. 8.
There was no plea of insanity in the case, and, so far as the special defense of insanity is concerned, it is clear that appellant was not entitled to a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence in order to interpose that defense. Davis v. Cleveland, etc., R. Co. (1894), 140 Ind. 468; Swift v. Wakeman (1857), 9 Ind. 552. As was said in the case last cited: “Clearly the evidence discovered should relate to the issues made, and not to matters which were not involved in the suit.” • It is true that under the plea of not guilty evidence as to the mental condition of appellant would have been competent as matter in mitigation, but, as the evidence which was introduced upon the trial is not before us, we are not able to determine, or even conjecture, whether an injustice was done by the verdict. Waiving, however, all considerations of the appropriateness of the motion for a new trial, we are of opinion that it may be affirmed, on at least two grounds, that it does not appear that the court below erred in overruling appellant’s motion:
(1) The affidavits filed on appellant’s behalf do not suf-ficiently rebut the inferences of negligence and want of good faith which in such applications inevitably present themselves as obstacles in the path of the moving party where
The authorities assert that in applications of this kind the failure to discover the evidence must be so broadly excused as to dissipate all surmise to the contrary. Hines v. Driver, supra; Keisling v. Readle (1891), 1 Ind. App. 240; 3 Graham & Waterman, Tew Trials, 1026. Giving to appellant the benefit of all presumptions to which his alleged condition entitles him, we can not say that such a showing has been made in this case. Indeed, if responsibility for the gathering of evidence in a case of this kind is to rest anywhere, it seems to us that the showing made falls far short of overthrowing the hostile inference, of a want of diligence which must be indulged in every such application in the absence of a clear showing to the contrary.
It is our conclusion that it is not shown that the court helow erred in overruling appellant’s supplemental motion for a new trial. The judgment is affirmed.