70 Ind. 375 | Ind. | 1880
— This was a prosecution against Jackson Knight, the appellant, upon an indictment for an assault
Afterward, at what was called a special term of the court below, begun and held on the 12th day of January, 1880, the following proceedings were had:
“ Comes now William II. Trippet, prosecuting attorney, prosecuting the pleas of the State, and i't is ordered that the following entry be entered of record : * * * Now tor the foui’th day of the present term of this court, it (that) being the 4th day of September, 1879, to wit, the same being the proceedings at that time:
“‘The State of Indiana v. Jackson Knight. Comes now the prosecuting attorney, prosecuting the pleas of the State, and also comes the defendant, and said defendant being arraigued in open court, the indictment in said cause being read to and in the hearing of said 'déferidant by the said prosecuting attorney, the said defendant says, for his plea to the indictment herein, that he is not guilty as charged in the indictment"; and this cause is set for trial the 9th day of the present term of this court.’ ”
Two objections are made to this nunc ¡wo tunc order:
First. That the record does not show any notice to, or appearance by, the defendant;
Second. That it is not affirmatively shown that the order was made upon sufficient evidence.
The proceedings connected with this order show it to have been made at a term of court which must be, and
In the case of Burnsides v. Ennis, 43 Ind. 411, this court held, and we think correctly, that courts have full and complete control of the records of their proceedings during the entire term at which such proceedings are had, and that, when a party is once rightfully in court, the jurisdiction of the court thereby acquired over him continues, without further notice, so long as any steps remain to be taken in the cause. It was further held, in the same case, that, where the record does not disclose upon what ground the court acted in correcting, modifying or vacating a judgment, this court will presume that the action of the court was based upon some good and sufficient reason. The rules of practice thus recognized in that case are, in our opinion, as applicable in criminal as they are in civil cases, except that they can not be construed to mean that any important step can be taken at the trial in a criminal cause in the absence of the defendant, unless when otherwise expressly provided by law.
The ease of Schoonover v. Reed, 65 Ind. 313, cited by counsel for the appellant, has reference more particularly to nunc pro tune entries made in a cause after the close of .the term at which the trial was had, and to the kind of evidence upon which only that class of entries can be lawfully made, and not to entries like the one .before us, made before the close of the term at which it was to take effect, and where the proceedings are still “ in the breast of the court.”
There is a manifest distinction between the two classes of entries. 3 Bl. Com. 406. If, however, the entry complained of in this case had been made after the close of the term, we would still have to assume that it was made
At the trial, the court, upon its own motion, gave to the jury fourteen separate and somewhat elaborate instructions in writing. In its second instruction, the court said, that, “ Although the charge in the indictment is that of assault with intent to commit a felony, yet the indictment contains a charge simply of an assault, and the defendant, though presumed to be innocent of either offence, may, under the indictment, be found guilty either of an assault simply, which is but a misdemeanor, or he may be found guilty of the felony charged therein, accordingly as the evidence may justify and require.”
The appellant objects to so much of this instruction as is above set out, upon the- ground that it did not distinctly inform the jury that he could not be convicted of the felony, unless he was also found guilty of the assault charged in the indictment, but we are unable to sustain that objection. In the first place, the language used by the court fairly implies what the appellant insists ought to have been distinctly expressed. In the next place, the jury had already been told by the first instruction, in sufficiently explicit terms, that the felonious conduct charged consisted of an assault, connected with the intent to commit murder. A further and more comprehensive definition of what was necessary to make out the felony, charged was given in instruction No. 8, thus supplying any possible defect there may have been, if any, in that respect, in the second instruction.
The third instruction gave the statutory definition of an assault, and fm-ther explained what was necessary to constitute an assault, and to convict the appellant of that offence.
The fourth instruction referred to the various proposi
The thirteenth instruction gave a more formal definition of a reasonable doubt,'which was as follows :
“A reasonable doubt is not excluded from the mind of a juror, unless he is so convinced by the evidence, of the defendant’s guilt, that he would act on that conviction in matters of the highest concern and import to his own interest, and his conviction from the evidence, as to the truth of defendant’s guilt, must be such that a pru'deut man would feel safe to act upon it under any circumstances, when 'there was no compulsion resting upon him to act at all. This reasonable doubt may arise upon the issue as to whether the State has made out her ease or not, or upon 'the question as to whether the defendant acted ifi self-defence or not, or it may be created by the evidence in relation to the character of the defendant, or remain after a due consideration of all the evidence in this cause.”
The fourteenth instruction was made to apply to certain
The appellant maintains that a proper construction of the instructions from No. 3 to No. 7, both inclusive, made all of those instructions applicable only to the misdemeanor charged in the indictment, thereby inevitably creating the impression on the minds of the jury, that the law of self-defence, as given by the court, could not be construed to support a plea of self-defence to the felonious intent alleged against him.
It is a well established rule of decision in this court, that an instruction will not be held erroneous because it may have failed to give the whole law governing the subject-matter to which it related, provided it states the law correctly so far as it assumed to give it, and no erroneous inference could reasonably be drawn from what was omitted by it. Besides, in a case like this, the defence is complete, when the defendant is shown to have been justified in making the assault with which he is charged.
The objection urged to instructions numbered 8 and 9 is the converse of that made to the five preceding instructions, that is, that those instructions related alone to the felony charged in the indictment. But what we have already said sufficiently qnswers that objection also.
No valid objection has been pointed out to the 13th instruction and none is apparent to us. There was certainly nothing in it injurious to the appellant.
It is objected to the 14th instruction, that the court failed to tell the jury that the character of the defendant for peace and quiet was presumed to be good until the contrary was shown.
In a criminal cause, the defendant’s character is not taken into consideration, unless the defendant first introduces evidence in support of it. In that event, the question of character has to be decided upon the evidence,
"We are unable to see that the appellant has any just reason to complain of any of the instructions given by the court. .
The appellant asked the court to give ten additional instructions, all of which were refused by the court, and he complains that some of those instructions were improperly refused. But all the material matters contained in those additional instructions were sufficiently commented upon, and covered by, the instructions given by the court, and for that reason, if for no other, there was no error in refusing to give any of such additional instructions.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.