29 Fla. 500 | Fla. | 1892
The first allegation of error in the assignment of errors, furnished under the requirement of the statute, sec. 4, p. 455, McClellan’s Digest, is the refusal of the circuit judge of a motion, made in open court October 21st, 1890, for the issuance of a commission to take the testimony of one E. C. Spitzka, residing at 712 Lexington avenue, New York, on interrogatories filed five days previously at the same term.
The statute of March 11th, 1879, secs. 41 el seq., p. 466, McClellan’s Digest, enacts that when any person is arraigned before a circuit court upon indictment or information, charged with crime, which is by law a felony, and he shall satisfy the court by his oath in writing, or by affidavits of other credible persons, that the testimony of absent persons is material and neces
If we are permitted to consider the interrogatories in the absence of a bill of exceptions duly incorporating them, we see that their purpose is to prove by the proposed witness, as an expert, that there is such a thing as transitory or impulsive insanity, and also its nature and effect; and that certain assumed or supposed conditions and acts of a person were symptoms of his being the victim of such insanity and that, in the opinion of the witness, a person acting in a described supposed manner under described supposed conditions, was insane and irresponsible.
The affidavit presented in support of the application for the commission was made by Mr. Hugh E. Miller, one of the prisoner’s counsel. The substance of Mr. Miller’s affidavit is that he “is acquainted with the case of the defendant and what is necessary and material to his defense ; that he verily believes that the tes ■ timony of” Hr. Spitzka, residing at 712 Lexington avenue, in the city of New York, “is necessary, mate
It is also assigned as error that the court altered instructions asked for by the prisoner, and in charges given in lieu of those asked, and in refusing to give charges as requested. We have already stated that there is no bill of exceptions ; and not only is this so, but it is also a fact that there is not in the transcript before us anything which can be recognized or treated as a charge requested, or given, or refused. ■ There is upon no paper incorporated in the transcript before us, and purporting to be a charge offered, given, refused or “ altered,” any evidence that the same, or the original thereof, was ever signed, sealed and filed by the
In the absence of a bill of exceptions and of the entire testimony, no review can be made of the refusal of the motion for a new trial, the grounds of which, other than the matters considered above, were that the verdict was contrary to the charge of the court, and against the weight of and without evidence to support it, and alleged error of the court both in admitting and in rejecting evidence.
It is also objected that the verdict was rendered on Sunday. The jury returned into court on Sunday, November 2d, 1890, the case having been submitted to them the previous day, and rendered their verdict and were discharged, and thereupon the court adjourned until the next day at nine o’clock, on which latter daj the prisoner moved for a new trial, and the same having been overruled, he was sentenced by the court to-imprisonment in the State Penitentiary at hard labor for two years and a half. No valid judgment can, at
In reaching the conclusion announced in the above paragraph we have not invoked the aid of the written agreement appearing in the record, bearing date Saturday, November 1st, 1890, signed by the State Attorney and counsel for the prisoner, in which it is recited that the cause had been submitted to the jury under the charge of the court at a late hour of that day, and by which it is agreed that in the event the jury may be ready to render their verdict at any time on the following day, it may be received as if rendered on any other day of the week, and that no advantage or exception “ can be taken by defendant by reason of such verdict having been rendered on the Sabbath day under this agreement.”
The only other error assigned is, that it does not ajj pear that the prisoner was asked by the circuit judge, upon being sentenced, if he had anything to say why sentence should not be passed upon him. In Keech vs. State, 15 Fla., 591, 609, where it was urged that there was error in not asking the defendant why sentence of death should not be pronounced against her, Randall, C. J., speaking for the court said : ‘,‘It is laid down by Bishop that it is indispensably necessary that this ceremony should be observed in capital cases* and that it should appear of record that it was observed,” and
The judgment is affirmed.