153 N.E. 772 | Ind. | 1926
Appellant was charged by indictment with the offense of unlawfully and feloniously buying, concealing, and aiding in the concealment of certain diamonds which were alleged to have been feloniously stolen from the person of the owner by certain named robbers, and thereafter received and concealed by appellant, with full knowledge that the robbers had stolen them. He was found guilty, and was fined $100 and sentenced to imprisonment for not less than one nor more than fourteen years. Overruling his motion for a new trial is assigned as error, under which appellant complains because the trial court gave oral instructions to the jury of more than 1,500 words, taken down by the reporter in shorthand as constituting nine instructions, in the course of which he read to the jury the indictment, the several statutes which forbid receiving stolen goods and define the offenses of grand larceny and petit larceny, respectively, explained what were the elements of the offense charged, and gave a general statement of the law by which the jury was told it should be governed in deciding the case.
The record shows that at the conclusion of the evidence and before the argument had begun, appellant presented and tendered to the court sixteen instructions in writing, together 1, 2. with a written request signed by counsel for the defendant that the court should "instruct the jury in writing, and give to the jury the following instructions, and each of them," and that, of the instructions so requested, the court gave all but one, after which he gave further instructions orally, as was stated above. The statute provides that, after the evidence is completed and the arguments of counsel have been made, "the court must then charge the jury, which charge, upon the request of the prosecuting attorney, the defendant or his counsel, made at any time before the commencement of the *362
argument, shall be in writing." § 2301, cl. 5, Burns 1926, Acts 1909 p. 257. The record does not show that the request for written instructions was waived, either expressly or by any acts of the defendant or his counsel, and denying him the right to have the court's instructions reduced to writing and read to the jury, along with the instructions which he had requested, so that all might come to the jury with equal authority, was reversible error. Smurr v. State (1883),
The attorney-general suggests a doubt whether or not a proper exception was saved to the giving of oral instructions. The bill of exceptions, No. 1, recites that, at the conclusion of 3. the evidence and before the beginning of the arguments of counsel, the defendant presented his written request that the court should instruct the jury in writing, as well as that he should give certain instructions, that defendant excepted to its refusal to give the one refused, and "that thereupon the court gave to the jury of its own motion, orally, the following instructions, to wit:" (setting them out,) "to the giving of which said instructions, and to the giving of each of them, the defendant at the time separately and severally excepted." We think this sufficiently shows that the defendant objected *363 and excepted to the action of the court in giving the oral instructions.
The judgment of conviction rests almost entirely upon the testimony of a self-confessed robber, that the next day after he had stolen the diamonds from the owner, they were "turned 4. over" to appellant at a camp on the river, and "were taken away from there." The defendant testified in his own behalf, but while admitting that he had been convicted of offenses against the liquor law, and had pleaded guilty to a charge of adultery, he denied all knowledge of the diamonds and all connection with the robbers. The evidence of defendant's guilt is not so clear and conclusive that we can disregard the error intervening.
By an ancillary appeal, and an assignment of error challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the action of the trial court in amending the record nunc pro tunc,
5. appellant seeks to challenge an attempted amendment of the record in the trial court which he says was made without other evidence than an affidavit stating what the affiant said had occurred in the course of the trial. It is true that many authorities deny the power of the trial court to amend a bill of exceptions or entry in the order-book or other part of the record after the close of the term at which final judgment was rendered unless there is some minute, memorandum, memorial, or record in writing, antedating the rendition of judgment, by which to amend.Taylor v. State (1921),
For the error in giving oral instructions after a proper request has been made to instruct the jury in writing, the judgment is reversed. And the trial court is directed to sustain defendant's motion for a new trial and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.