72 Colo. 552 | Colo. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendants were convicted under an information charging them with manufacturing for sale and gift intoxicating liquors. Each of them was sentenced to pay a fine of $300.00. Of the numerous errors assigned only four are argued, and these only are determined.
1. It is said that the jury which tried the case was, over defendants’ objection, unlawfully impaneled. Six days before the time set for trial, counsel for defendants, to whom, at his request, the clerk had, as our statute requires, furnished the list of the regular jury panel summoned for the term, said to the court'that if, because of its depletion, which then was apparent by reason of the failure to serve some jurors, and the order of the court excusing others, it became necessary to issue an open venire to supplement the regular panel, he would object to the service of the same by the sheriff and his deputies on the ground of disqualification, these officers being witnesses for the State and against the defendants. Whereupon the court asked if there were any objections to Mr. Watson, the court bailiff, serving thát venire, to which question defendants’ counsel said that there would be no objection. In other words, the defendants consented that Watson might serve it. During the time between this colloquy and the trial day, several open venires were issued and directed to the sheriff, some of which were served by that officer, and some by Watson. On the trial day, and after the case was called and the jurors, including about six brought in by these open venires, were ordered into the jury box, and before they were sworn, the objection was made by defendants to these
It is said in defendants’ brief, and it seems to be true, that it was not until the jurors were directed to take their seats in the box, that their counsel discovered, from the list which the clerk had previously given him, that about six of them were not on the regular panel, but had been thus summoned by open venire. It was at this juncture, and not before, that a disqualifying affidavit on the ground stated was made by one of the defendants and filed with the clerk. The contention is, in light of the foregoing that the court grievously erred in overruling defendants’ motion to disqualify the sheriff and to substitute the coroner. If the facts were as defendants wrongly assume them to be, the denial might have been error. There is in the record what purports to be an order overruling in its entirety the motion. A supplementary certificate of the clerk, and one by the trial judge incorporated in the record, show that the entry of the order was the result of a mistake by the clerk, he supposing that the court had actually made it. Both supplementary certificates, however, show that the court, in denying the motion, specifically restricted application of the order to the venires previously issued and served, but as to any further open venires that might be issued, the process would run to the coroner and not to the sheriff. This ruling was upon the ground that jurors already brought in by open venires served by the sheriff, or by a person agreed upon by the parties, were not subject to the disqualifying affidavit which was not made until after the jurors alleged to have been improperly served were in the box.
For several reasons we think there was no error in this ruling. Section 1299 R. S. 1908, provides that when a party makes and files with the clerk an affidavit stating that he believes that the sheriff will not by reason of partiality, prejudice, consanguinity or interest, faithfully
Even if the disqualifying application had seasonably been made, it is doubtful if it operated as such. In the motion for a new trial, the objection to the sheriff was said
For another reason this assignment of error is not well taken. When defendants’ counsel, in effect, consented to the serving of an open venire by Watson, defendants should not be heard now to say that he was not a proper officer to act in place of the sheriff. True, the coroner is the officer designated by the statute to act in such a contingency. We do not even indirectly insinuate that learned counsel is acting in bad faith in here alleging the incompetency of Watson. His reason for doing so is evidently because he believes that Watson was incompetent. We might concede that he would be, were it not that the trial court was led to believe, and we think rightly did conclude, that the defendants consented that Watson might serve the process. When the objection of defendants’ counsel was made to the jurors brought in by Watson, the trial court did not decide, and had no occasion to decide, the abstract question as to whether or not Watson, as court bailiff, might lawfully serve an open venire. This appears not only from the colloquy between the presiding judge and the defendants’ counsel six days before the trial, but also on the day of the trial when the defendants first specifically objected to the jury. Defendants’ counsel then said: “If Mr. Watson did serve it, (the open venire), he is not qualified to serve a special venire, unless he is agreed upon.”
With that implied admission that Watson was competent, if agreed upon, considered in connection with the previous consent to Watson acting in lieu of the sheriff, the trial court was justified in its ruling, since it was rightly led to believe that it was agreeable to the defendants. Even though we are wrong as to this conclusion, the proper prac
2. The second assignment is that a proper list of the jurors was not furnished to the defendants, or their counsel. Section 1955 R. S. 1908, makes it imperative that every person charged with murder shall be furnished, previous to his arraignment, with .a copy of the list of jurors. In all other cases such a list must be furnished at the request of the defendant or his counsel. In Giano v. People, 30 Colo. 20, 69 Pac. 504, which was a misdemeanor case like the one before us, the court construed this same section. The defendant there, two days after his arraignment, made a request that the list of jurors and witnesses be furnished him. The court denied the request, and the defendant excepted. In the Supreme Court the defendant assigned this ruling as error, and it was held that the request should have been made before formal arraignment; otherwise it was waived, citing Kelly v. People, 132 Ill. 363, 371, 21 N. E. 56, our statute being substantially the same as that of Illinois. In the present case a réfusal of the request of these defendants would have been justified, because the request therefor was not made in apt time. The request of counsel here was not denied, but a list of the jurors on the panel, at the time the request was made, was furnished. Thereafter no further request was made by the defendants for such a list until the day of the trial, when
3. The trial court permitted the district attorney to ask one of the defendants if he had not been convicted in the state of Kansas of a misdemeanor, and the defendant, in answer to the question, said that he had been. Defendants say, since our statute (section 1608, R. S. 1908) reads, “A crime or misdemeanor consists in a violation of a public law”, this definition indicates that in the minds of the lawmakers there is a distinction between a crime and a misdemeanor in our state; and since section 7266 of our revised statutes says: “The conviction of any person for any ‘crime’ may be shown for the purpose of affecting the credibility of such witness”, by necessary implication, his conviction for a misdemeanor may not be shown. We do not agree with this contention. The language of section 1608 is itself against it, for there the definition of a crime is the same as that of a misdemeanor, each consisting of a violation of a public law. In City of Greeley v. Hamman, 12 Colo. 94, 20 Pac. 1, this Court, after quoting our statutory definition of a crime, said: “Since felonies are defined in the constitution to be offenses punishable by death or imprisonment in the penitentiary, it follows that, under the foregoing statute, misdemeanors are violations of the public laws not thus punishable.”
In McInerney v. City of Denver, 17 Colo. 302, 29 Pac. 516, at page 312, it was said that our statutory definition of a crime or misdemeanor is the same as that given by Blackstone, and generally adopted elsewhere. Webster, in defining crime, uses this language: “Crime includes all grades of public offenses, which at the common law are often classified as treason, felony, and misdemeanor.”
In defining a crime, Blackstone, Book 4, p. 5, says: “A crime, or misdemeanor, is an act committed, or omitted, in violation of a public law, either forbidding or commanding it. This general definition comprehends both crimes and
Citing Blackstone’s definition of crime, Black, in his law dictionary, at page 299, says: “But the better use appears to be to make ‘crime’ a term of broad and general import, including both felonies and misdemeanors.”
In Chase v. People, 2 Colo. 509, 512, this Court said: “By the common law all offenses below the degree of felony are denominated misdemeanors.”
In Missouri, New Jersey and Massachusetts, under statutes similar to ours, their courts say that the conviction for a crime might be shown to impeach a defendant, and that the word “crime” in the impeaching statutes is used in the sense of a public offense and includes misdemeanors. State v. Blitz, 171 Mo. 530, 540, 71 S. W. 1027; State v. Henson, 66 N. J. L. 601, 50 Atl. 468, 616; Commonwealth v. Hall, 4 Allen, 305; Commonwealth v. Ford, 146 Mass. 131, 132, 15 N. E. 153.
In United States v. Zarafonitis, 150 Fed. Rep. 97, 101, 80 C. C. A. 51, 10 Ann. Cas. 290, the court adopted Blackstone’s definition that crime and misdemeanor are', properly speaking, synonymous terms.
In Callan v. Wilson, 127 U. S. 540, 549, 8 Sup. Ct. 1301, 32 L. Ed. 223, the court said the term “crime” as used in the third article of the Constitution, was broad enough to include misdemeanor. There was no error in the ruling complained of.
4. The defendants’ counsel asked the court to instruct the jury to the effect that the defendants be found not guilty because the only evidence of guilt was the uncorroborated testimony of an accessory or co-defendant. Such is not the law in this jurisdiction. Solander v. People, 2 Colo. 48, 67; Roberts v. People, 11 Colo. 213, 219, 17 Pac. 637; O’Brien v. People, 42 Colo. 40, 42, 94 Pac. 284; Moynahan v. People, 63 Colo. 433, 167 Pac. 1175; Wharton on Criminal Evidence, p. 926.
Aside from this, however, there were at least three witnesses for the People in this case who corroborated, in substantial and important particulars, the testimony of the alleged accomplice.
None of the errors assigned are well taken, and the judgment is accordingly affirmed.