102 Ind. 260 | Ind. | 1885
On the 18th day of May, 1885, the appellant Charles Richards was arrested upon a warrant issued by the coroner of Perry county, charging him with the murder of one Reuben Johnson, at such county, on the 17th day of May, 1885. He was taken before a justice of the peace of the county, and, upon an examination then had, he was committed to the county jail upon such charge without bail. On the same day he presented his verified petition to the Honorable George L. Reinhard, judge of the Perry Circuit Court, in vacation, alleging therein that his killing of Reuben .Johnson was in his own just and proper self-defence; that the proof of his guilt of murder was not evident nor the presumption strong, and that he was entitled by law to be let to bail, and praying for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus, and a hearing thereon. The writ was issued accordingly, and, upon the hearing had thereon, the honorable judge aforesaid refused to let the prisoner Richards to bail.-
From this decision Richards has appealed to this court and has here assigned, as error, the refusal of the judge of the Perry Circuit Court to let him to bail.
On behalf of the State, the attorney general has interposed
In section 17 of the Bill of Rights, in our State Constitution, it is provided that murder or treason shall not be bailable, when the proof is evident or the presumption strong. In this case, as we have seen, Richards admits in his petition that he killed Reuben Johnson, but he alleges that, in so doing, he acted in self-defence, and that the proof of his guilt of murder, in killing Johnson, was not evident nor the presumption strong. The burden of proving the truth of these allegations in his petition, under the decisions of this court, was on the appellant Richards. Ex Parte Heffren, 27 Ind. 87; Ex Parte Jones, 55 Ind. 176.
The evidence adduced, upon the hearing of appellant’s petition, is in the record by a proper bill of exceptions. No good purpose could be subserved by our setting out, in this opinion, even the substance of the evidence, and it would
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.