113 So. 186 | Miss. | 1927
The only grounds for a reversal of the judgment of the court below which are argued by counsel are that the court erred, first, in overruling a motion for a continuance; and, second, in granting the state an instruction submitting to the jury the issue of manslaughter. The evidence in this record would support a verdict of guilty of murder, but, in order to dispose of the two assignments of error, it will be unnecessary to here detail the evidence.
The motion for a continuance was based upon the absence of four witnesses for the defendant, and for whom process had been issued. One of these witnesses, Mrs. Red Waters, appeared and testified at the trial. The affidavit accompanying the motion for a continuance did not set forth what the witness, Roy Jones, would testify to if he were present, and, consequently, no error was committed in overruling the motion in so far as it is based upon the absence of this witness, and we do not understand counsel to so contend. Counsel bases this assignment solely upon the ground that the continuance should have been granted on account of the absence of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Woods.
These two witnesses resided in Attala county, and were served with process, and, on the hearing of the motion for a continuance, a certificate of a physician was offered to the effect that Mrs. Woods would be unable to *574 attend court during the term on account of having recently given birth to a child, and that she needed the constant attention of her husband. The affidavit set forth what these witnesses would testify to, if present, in the following general language:
"That they personally know of the acts committed by the deceased, things said by him that brought on the altercation, that his daughter, over which the trouble arose, was taken by the said deceased from the home of the said witnesses, and the facts and circumstances surrounding the taking and takings said and done, including threats of said deceased against the defendant by the deceased in taking the minor child of fourteen years from the said home of the said witnesses, can be proved and testified to only by the two absent witnesses, and that the said witnesses further tried to persuade the said deceased not to carry out his purpose and design in violating the home of the said defendant, and the reply and threats made by the said deceased which was communicated to the said defendant can only be testified to by the said absent witnesses."
This motion was heard and overruled by the court on the 20th day of September, 1926, and, when the cause came on for trial on the 24th day of September, 1926, the motion was renewed on account of the absence of Mrs. Woods only, and this was, in effect, a waiver of the motion so far as it was based upon the absence of the witness Arthur Woods.
We think, however, that this motion for a continuance was properly overruled for two reasons. In the first place, the facts to which the witnesses Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Woods would testify, if present, as set forth in the application for a continuance, are entirely too vague and indefinite to require a continuance of the cause. In the second place, neither the witnesses nor their affidavits showing what they would testify to if present were produced on the motion for a new trial, and there was no showing that it was impossible to then secure the presence *575
of these witnesses or their affidavits, and it has been repeatedly held that it is necessary to make such a showing to warrant a reversal for the overruling of a motion for a continuance on account of the absence of a witness. Lamar v.State,
The doctrine that a defendant cannot complain of the giving of a manslaughter instruction on a trial for murder, where the evidence would sustain a verdict of guilty of murder, although there may be no elements of manslaughter involved in the evidence, is too well established in this state to require further discussion thereof or the citation of authority. Huston
v. State,
The judgment of the court below will therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.