174 Ind. 255 | Ind. | 1910
The State prosecuted appellant upon an indictment in three counts returned by the grand jury of Allen county, Indiana, wherein he was charged with the murder of Columbus Croy. The first count of the indictment charged that appellant, at said county, oil June 7, 1907, feloniously and with premeditated malice killed and murdered said Croy. The second and third counts charged that appellant purposely killed and murdered Croy, while he (appellant) was engaged in the perpetration of a burglary in said county and State on June 7, 1907. A motion to quash each count was overruled, and appellant entered a plea of not guilty. There was a trial by a jury and a verdict returned finding defendant guilty of murder in the first degree, and assessing his punishment at imprisonment in the state prison during life. Over his motion for a new trial, the court rendered judgment on the verdict.
The alleged errors assigned and discussed by appellant’s counsel in this appeal relate to the overruling of the original and the supplemental motions for a new trial. Numerous errors are assigned in the original motion, among which are those relating to the exclusion of evidence offered by appellant and the rulings of the court permitting the State to introduce certain evidence over appellant’s objection and denying his motions to strike out evidence, and in allowing the State to impeach certain of appellant’s witnesses upon immaterial and collateral matters. The insufficiency of the evidence is also assigned as a reason for a new trial.
It appears that Croy, at the time he was killed, was the marshal of the town of Woodburn, a small incorporated
Fred A. LaDuke, one of the parties charged with the murder of decedent, and who, from his own testimony, is shown to have been an accomplice of appellant, appears to have been the principal witness against appellant. This witness testified, among other things, that on the night of June 6, 1907, he, together with John Stout, John Baker and appellant herein, broke into a saloon conducted by Joe Faulkner in said town of Woodburn; that while standing on a street corner on the night in question John Baker said: “I am awful dry, let’s go and get something to drink.” Witness said: “Where?” Baker said: “Over to Joe’s”— meaning Joe Faulkner’s saloon. Baker said to appellant: “Come on Miller, let’s have a drink.” Stout said: “Yes, come on, we’re ready.” Baker went to the back door of the saloon and knocked, but there was no response. ITe then said: “Boys, we can’t get in there, let’s go around to the window.” All of the persons went in single file; Baker first, Stout next, then appellant, and the witness, La-Duke, last. Witness testified that Baker piled at the window with something which he had picked up, and finally broke the glass and pried up the sash; that after Baker had entered the saloon through the window, he told Stout to watch in front, and Miller to watch the back part; that all of the men went into the saloon, for the purpose of getting some whisky and cigars; that after they entered the saloon he heard a noise down the alley, around the printing office, and the next thing he heard was Stout, who said: “Stay back there,” and then Stout fired his pistol twice, but he did not know that any one was hit by the shots fired by Stout; that the men then left the saloon, and went to
Appellant’s counsel promptly moved to strike out this answer in respect to what the wife of appellant had told the witness, on the ground that it- was not responsive to the question. The court overruled this motion and permitted the evidence to remain and go to the jury. After this motion was overruled, in the course of the witness’s examination, he stated that he found the revolver in question ten years before the trial. This witness, during his examination, evinced a disposition to inject into the ease other impertinent evidence not responsive to the questions propounded.
So far as the decision in Reed v. State, supra, can be said to be out of line with the holding of this court in the cases of Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Case, supra, and Porter v. State, supra, upon the point in question, to that extent it must be deemed and held to be modified. Appellant’s motion to strike out the answer in controversy should have been sus
Clarence Omo, a witness for the State, testified at the trial that, about two weeks after the murder of Croy, he went to a certain saloon in Port Wayne to get some beer; that he saw two men in the closet of the saloon, and heard them talking; that by their voices he recognized them to be John Stout and appellant Herman Miller; that he heard Stout say to Miller: “Oh, forget it.” That Miller said in reply: “Well, we done it. They can’t get us. We’ve fixed him all right.” He further testified that the two men went out of the saloon behind him, and that he recognized them to be Miller and Stout. After the conviction of appellant, and after his original motion for a new trial had been denied, this witness appears voluntarily to have confessed that the evidence heretofore referred to, which he gave on the trial, was
The court permitted" appellant to file a supplemental motion for a new trial, supported by the affidavit of Omo. This latter motion set up as a ground for a new trial the confession of the witness Omo that he had wilfully perjured himself in giving the testimony in question. The motion was denied, and upon this ruling appellant predicates error. The court appears to have permitted the filing of the supplemental motion upon the authority of the case of Dennis v. State (1885), 103 Ind. 142. Under this latter decision appellant’s counsel argue that a new trial, as requested under the supplemental motion, should have been granted. In relation to the granting of a new trial, iu a case where a witness is properly shown to have wilfully testified falsely to some important fact or facts in the case, see 29 Cyc. 868, 869, and cases therein cited.
As the judgment below must be reversed on account of the errors herein referred to, it is not essential that we consider the question whether the court erred in overruling the supplemental motion for a new trial. Other alleged errors, some of which relate to the impeaching of other of appellant’s witnesses upon immaterial facts, are argued and
For the errors of the trial court, which we have herein pointed out, the judgment is reversed, with instructions to the lower court to grant appellant a new trial.