106 Tenn. 181 | Tenn. | 1900
This ife a conviction of an assault with intent to commit voluntary manslaughter, with punishment fixed at eleven months imprisonment in the county jail, and the payment of a fine of five hundred dollars.
It is assigned for error that the record fails to show a plea of not guilty. This is true; but it does show that the jury were sworn “to try the issues joined,” the necessary inference from which is that this plea was interposed.
In this respect the case differs from Lynch v. State, 99 Tenn., 124, which is relied on by plaintiff in error. There the entry on the minutes failed to show a plea or anything from which its existence could be implied. For this reason that case was reversed. Here, however, it being clearly igrplicable that such plea was filed, the statute forbids a reversal because the Clerk of the Court omitted to file or enter it of record. Code (Shannon), § 1217.
The assignment of error however, most earnestly pressed upon the Court, is, that the evidence does not warrant conviction. But in the condition of the record we cannot consider this assignment. The trial Judge, in overruling the motion for a new trial, allowed plaintiff in error thirty days within which to make and file his bill of exceptions. There is in the transcript a paper so entitled, but there is nothing to indicate that it was ever filed.
It is not improper to say that we have carefully examined the papers sent up as a bill of exceptions, and even if properly filed, would not be inclined to interfere with the judgment of the trial Court.
Affirmed.