229 P. 939 | Ariz. | 1924
The appellant, with J.B. Evans and Lloyd Evans, was charged by information with the crime of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder.
The evidence shows that on the night of September 29, 1921, Sheriff Skaggs, of Graham county, and two deputies, Will Mangum and S.I. Allred, went to a place near Artesia, in said county, for the purpose of seizing an illicit still and arresting the persons operating the same. The officers were joined by one Sparks and proceeded up a wash to a point within a few yards of the still. The still was in operation and two men were standing *56 near it, one of whom, it is claimed, was the appellant. While the officers were watching the still, someone at or near it said: "Put out the fire; someone is coming up the wash." The fire was put out and the two men at the still started to run. The officers and Sparks attempted to follow the fleeing men, Allred and Mangum bearing to their right and Sheriff Skaggs and Sparks to the left. Allred was about twenty feet ahead of Mangum, and as he reached a point opposite a mesquite tree he heard a noise behind the tree and stopped and pulled his gun. Just as he did this he was shot in the left leg. After the shot was fired, a man ran from behind the mesquite tree going in a southerly direction. Shortly afterwards two more shots were fired through the brush. A few minutes after the shooting the dogs at Bunyan (E.L.) Evans' house began barking and continued to bark for a few minutes. Next morning the officers found tracks behind the tree from where Allred was shot, which tracks led from the tree towards Evans' house. A short distance from the tree the tracks of another man joined those coming from the tree. These tracks were later joined by the tracks of two more men, and were all traced directly to Evans' house. The morning after the shooting the officers arrested appellant, one Floyd Campbell, and the two Evanses, father and son, at or near the Evans house. Appellant's shoes were removed and fitted into the tracks by the mesquite tree and those leading from the mesquite tree to the Evans house. The shoes had holes in the soles and all of the tracks showed the impression of these holes.
It appears that the appellant and the other defendants had a preliminary trial October 3, 1921, and were bound over to the superior court. On that day an order of commitment for assault with intent to commit murder was duly entered in the docket of *57 the justice of the peace, but no certified copy thereof was transmitted, with the other papers, to the clerk of the superior court. On the same day the county attorney filed an information in the superior court charging the appellant and the two Evanses with an "assault upon the person of S.I. Allred, by shooting the said S.I. Allred, with the intent to kill and murder the said S.I. Allred." On October 4th defendants pleaded not guilty to this information and the case was set down for trial for October 21st, which order was later vacated and the case reset for October 25th. On October 21st another information was filed against defendants, charging them with an assault upon Allred "with a deadly weapon, to wit, a certain firearm loaded with powder and ball, with intent . . . to kill and murder the said S.I. Allred." On October 25th the defendants' motion to set aside the information of October 3d, on the ground that they had not been bound over, was granted. On the same day a like motion by defendants directed at the information filed October 21st was denied. Before the last motion was passed upon a copy of the order of commitment made by the justice of the peace on October 3d was ordered filed in the superior court. The demurrer of defendants that information did not state the public offense of assault with a deadly weapon was overruled. Appellant, on the trial, denied shooting Allred and contended that he was accidentally shot by Deputy Sheriff Mangum. He was convicted of an assault with a deadly weapon and sentenced to serve from two and one-half to five years in the state prison. He appeals from the order overruling his motion for a new trial and from the judgment of conviction.
The first, second and fourth assignments are in effect: (1) That the appellant had no preliminary *58 trial upon a charge for assault with a deadly weapon and was not bound over to answer any such charge; (2) that no commitment to answer the charge of assault with a deadly weapon, with intent to commit murder, had been filed in the superior court; and (3) that the information failed to state facts sufficient to constitute the public offense of assault with a deadly weapon. It is undisputed that appellant had a preliminary examination and that the committing magistrate entered an order holding appellant to the superior court to answer for the crime of an assault with an intent to commit murder, before the filing of either of the informations. The commitment holding appellant was not by name for the crime of an "assault with a deadly weapon," nor was it lodged with the clerk of the superior court at the time the county attorney filed the information of October 3d or the one of October 21st.
The Constitution, in section 30 of article 2, requires that a preliminary examination be given in all felony cases; and the statute, paragraphs 872-897, inclusive, of the Penal Code, provides what shall be done by the committing magistrate on a preliminary examination. Paragraph 885, Id., after prescribing the form of order the committing magistrate should make upon holding an accused, further provides that:
"When a defendant has been examined and committed as heretofore provided in this section, it shall be the duty of the county attorney, within thirty days thereafter, to file in the superior court of the county in which the offense is triable, an information charging the defendant with such offense."
We find nothing in the statutes that forbid the filing by the county attorney of information before a copy of the order of commitment has been filed *59 with the clerk, or requiring him to wait until such copy is filed.
In State v. Fertig,
While the appellant was not held to answer the charge of assault with a deadly weapon, he was held for the higher and more serious offense of an assault with intent to commit murder. These offenses are both against the person. They differ principally in that the element of the specific intent must concur with the act to constitute an assault with intent to commit murder. This offense may not always be committed with a deadly weapon, but that it is committed more often with such instrument than with any other means is well known. The two offenses are of the same general character or nature. Our statutes defining these offenses are taken from the California statutes. In People v. Pape,
"It is not contended by appellant but that the information sufficiently charges an assault with intent to murder. The jury found the defendant (appellant) guilty of an assault with a deadly weapon. The offense of which defendant was found guilty is included in that with which he was charged. People v.English,
There is nothing to appellant's contention that he was not bound over for the offense for which he was tried and convicted. And the fact that a copy of the commitment was not on file in the superior *60 court at the time the information was returned was at most a technical error or defect and could not have affected any substantial right of appellant, and therefore, is no ground for reversal. Paragraph 1170, Penal Code 1913. While the crime of an assault with a deadly weapon is not a degree of the offense of assault with intent to commit murder, a commitment for the latter offense sufficiently describes the former as that an information based thereon for assault with a deadly weapon could not possibly mislead or prejudice the rights of the accused.
The information alleges that the instrument used was a deadly weapon. This, under the decisions, is a sufficient allegation of the lethal character of the weapon. People v. Congleton,
Appellant complains of the court's rulings upon the admission of evidence:
(1) Witness Mangum, testifying in behalf of the prosecution, had told of Allred's being shot, of parties running away in the dark, and of hearing immediately thereafter "bullets striking through the trees — mesquites." He was then asked if he called anybody's attention to the shots, and, over objection, answered: "I made the remark to Mr. Allred that they were shooting back to scare us from following." Appellant moved that this answer be stricken as not a part of the res gestae and as a conclusion of the witness. The court's ruling is the basis of this assignment. However, it is not pressed very hard, the only comment of appellant's brief being: "Clearly such testimony was objectionable and if it had any effect on the case at all it would *61 tend to prejudice the jury against defendant." Three shots were fired by the parties running from the sheriff and his deputies, one taking effect on Allred. The other two did not take effect on anyone, but were a part of the same transaction and were doubtless fired for the same purpose as the first, to wit, to prevent apprehension. The language objected to was a most natural as well as spontaneous comment, and it appearing to have been used at the time of the shots or immediately thereafter, and at the scene of the trouble, was a part of the res gestae.
(2) It is said the appellant was compelled to give evidence against himself. The basis for this assertion is that the officers who arrested appellant removed his shoes and thereafter used them for the purposes of comparison with the tracks found leading from the scene of the shooting to the Evans place, where appellant was afterwards found and arrested. It is the contention that the officers in taking the shoes from appellant's feet violated not only the federal but the state Constitution which provide that no person shall be compelled to give evidence against himself. Article 2, § 10. So far as the record shows the appellant did not object to his shoes being taken or to their use in the manner suggested. It may be doubted if the constitutional privilege now invoked was ever intended to exempt an accused from an exposition of physical or natural marks or distinctions or characteristics, such as tracks, footprints, stains, and finger-prints. 4 Wigmore on Evidence, §
"The tendency of the more modern cases is to restrict the constitutional privilege against compulsory *62 self-crimination to confessions, and admissions proceeding from the accused, and to open the door to the reception of all kinds of `real evidence' or proof of physical facts, which speak for themselves."
We think the cases are practically in accord in holding that the accused's shoes may be taken from his feet and used to compare with tracks, and afterwards introduced in evidence, when they are removed without objection and in the absence of compulsion. And some of the courts go so far as to admit such evidence when the act of the defendant is entirely involuntary, as where he is compelled by the officers to put his foot in the track for the purposes of comparison. Lee v. State,
The witnesses were permitted to state, in effect, that they had compared the shoes of appellant with the tracks near the mesquite where Allred was shot and those leading to the Evans house, and that, in their opinion, the tracks were made by the owner of the shoes, and that there could be no doubt about it. One witness went so far as to say that it was not possible for the tracks to have been made by any other shoes. In this manner of stating the evidence we think the witnesses were permitted to go too far. The witnesses should have been permitted to state the facts observed by them, as, the size of the tracks as compared with the shoes, the peculiarities of the shoes indicated in the tracks, the measurements, etc., and left any deductions or conclusions to be drawn by the jury. This seems to be the rule observed by the courts in most of the *63
cases. Collins v. Commonwealth, 15 Ky. Law Rep. 691, 25 S.W. 743; Heidelbaugh v. State,
However, this evidence was all admitted without any objection, and, even though it should have been excluded, under the circumstances, we are not permitted to correct the error.
It is said:
"The court did not inform the jury in the instructions that the defendant's plea of not guilty presented the issues triable and tried; and therefore the court failed to submit to the jury all the controverted questions of fact for their decision."
It is probable the jury knew, after listening to the trial, as well as counsel and the court the issue for them to decide was whether appellant was guilty or not guilty. The whole effort on the part of the prosecution having been to establish the guilt, and the whole effort on the part of the appellant to prevent such a personal calamity, it would be ascribing to the jury very little intelligence to suggest that they did not know what they were there for.
The appellant complains because the court instructed the jury that the information contained the charge of an assault with a deadly weapon and that he might be found guilty thereof if the evidence warranted it. This presents the objection to the information raised by demurrer which we have held was properly overruled. It was not necessary to allege in the information the manner in which the deadly weapon was used, it being sufficient to set forth the fact that it was deadly. See People v.Congleton, People v. Villarino, People v. Pape, People *64
v. Savercool, and Territory v. West, supra. Where the weapon used is a firearm its deadly character will always depend upon the manner of its use. If it is actually fired at someone within shooting distance, or used as a bludgeon, its deadly character will be obvious, but if it is simply pointed at the victim in a threatening manner it may or may not be deadly, depending upon whether it was loaded, the burden being upon the accused, if he contend he committed no assault, to show the weapon at the time was unloaded. Gomez v. Territory,
Complaint is also made of the court's reading, as part of its instructions a portion of section 219 of the Penal Code, as follows:
"Every person who commits an assault upon the person of another with a deadly weapon or instrument, or by any means or force likely to produce great bodily injury," is guilty of the crime known as assault with a deadly weapon.
It is said the phrase "or by any means or force likely to produce great bodily injury" was calculated to mislead the jury and prejudice the defendant's rights. The information charged the instrument used by appellant to be a certain firearm loaded with powder and ball, and the instruction, to be technically correct, should have omitted all reference to any other means or force; but it would be far from the truth to assume the instruction as given prejudiced any right of appellant. The criticized language might better have been omitted for the sake of accuracy, but otherwise it was harmless.
The instruction as to what constitutes an assault with a deadly weapon, or one phase of it, is said to *65 be erroneous. The court properly defined an assault in the language of the statute. Section 207, Penal Code. He also gave a definition of an assault with intent to murder. He then said:
"Every person who commits an assault upon the person of another with a deadly weapon or instrument . . . is guilty of the crime known as assault with a deadly weapon."
In another part of the instructions the court, in differentiating the two offenses laid in the information, said that the crime of an assault with a deadly weapon "requires the intent and the ability to commit a great bodily injury with a deadly weapon upon the person." It is this last-quoted phrase of which complaint is made. It is said it omits to include as an element of the offense "a present ability to commit a violent injury, or great bodily injury, on the person of another with a deadly weapon." The instructions, of course, must be taken as a whole and not piecemeal, and when those given by the court are treated that way, it will be found that they fairly state the law.
Appellant singles out of the instructions of the court this language:
"You are instructed that in this case you must find from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant Edd Lee fired the gun that wounded Mr. Allred before you can convict,"
— and complains of it because, he says, it permits the jury to convict the defendant if they believe beyond a reasonable doubt Edd Lee fired the gun without any cause or design, the mere fact of his having fired the gun being sufficient to justify a conviction. In the statement of facts we said the appellant denied shooting Allred and claimed that Allred was wounded by an accidental shot discharged by Mangum. This instruction was given to meet *66 that contention. Other appropriate and correct instructions as to intent, design, or purpose were given by the court.
Complaint is also made of another instruction which told the jury, in effect, that if they had a reasonable doubt as to whether Edd Lee, or some other person, fired the gun that wounded Allred it would be their duty to return a verdict of not guilty. This instruction is surely as favorable to the appellant as he could ask under the facts and circumstances disclosed in this case. This was, in effect, a repetition of the previous instruction, and doubtless was given to accord with appellant's theory that it was not he, but Mangum, who shot Allred.
An examination of the instructions requested and given, however, shows that the last two instructions were requested by the appellant himself. Having himself secured their submission it is with poor grace that he asks this court to hold them bad law and set aside the verdict.
Finally, appellant objects to the proceedings had upon his arraignment for judgment. Paragraph 1123 of the Penal Code of 1913 makes it the duty of the court, or the clerk of the court, to inform a defendant when he appears for judgment of the nature of the indictment or information, his plea, and the verdict, and to ask him if he have any legal cause to show why judgment should not be pronounced against him. The minutes of the clerk of the court for December 17, 1921, the day appellant was sentenced, show that appellant, his attorney, and the county attorney, were present in court; that the court informed the appellant of the nature of the information filed against him, stating that it was for the crime of assault with intent to commit murder, committed on the twenty-ninth day of September, 1921; *67
of the appellant's arraignment and of his plea of not guilty as charged in the information of October 3, 1921; of his trial by a jury, and asked the appellant if he had any legal cause to show why judgment should not be pronounced against him, the appellant answering in the negative. The court's statement to the appellant was incorrect in that the trial was not had upon the information filed October 3, 1921, but upon the information filed October 21st. The court did, however, clearly state the nature of the charge in the information, and also all of the other facts required by the statute. We think the date of the filing of the information was not as material as that the defendant should know the nature of the charge in the information. The purpose of requiring the court to state to a defendant on his arraignment the things set forth in paragraph 1123 of the Penal Code is that he may show, if it be a fact, that he is then insane or that he has good cause to offer in arrest of judgment or for a new trial. Section 1124, Id. It is said by the California courts that this requirement of the statute is mandatory. People v. Walker,
We have carefully scrutinized all the assignments made by appellant and have also examined his authorities. Our conclusion is that appellant was given a fair trial in accordance with the law, and that the *68 judgment of the lower court should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
McALISTER, C.J., and LYMAN, J., concur.