50 Neb. 140 | Neb. | 1897
July 12, 1895, an information was filed in the district court and by the county attorney of Douglas county, in which the plaintiff in error was charged with the crime
One of the alleged errors assigned and urged in this court is that the trial court refused to give an instruction requested by plaintiff in error, in the following language: “You are instructed that you should take into consideration the delay of bringing prosecution, and the fact that, Emma Anderson did not make complaint herself, or cause it to be done.” The,argument here is directed to the proposition that it was error to refuse to inform the jury that the delay in instituting the prosecution was an act for their consideration. The information, as we have before stated, was filed July 12, 1895, and the crime was alleged to have been committed September 15, 1894. Whether this instruction, viewed generally, was one proper to be given in criminal actions of the nature of the one at bar, we need not now determine. There might have existed a condition of the facts, as disclosed by the evidence, as applicable to which its giving would not have been proper, but there is no bill of exceptions in the record, hence the evidence is not before us; and if the instruction might have been correct and applicable to some state of the facts, wé cannot say that there was not evidence which made the refusal to read it without error. If there was error in the denial of the request to give the instruction, it must affirmatively appear from the entire record. (Willis v. State, 27 Neb., 98; Oltmanns v. Findlay, 47 Neb., 289.)
Hon. W. F. Norris, judge of the eighth judicial district, presided at the trial of the case, acting for and as one of the judges of the fourth judicial district The verdict of the jury was adverse to the plaintiff in error and a motion on his part for a new trial was duly filed. When
There are no other alleged errors presented, and it follows from the conclusions announced that the judgment of the district court will be
Affirmed.