106 P. 929 | Wyo. | 1910
The plaintiff in error, Nicholson, was tried in the District Court of Weston County upon an information charging him with murder in the first degree; was found guilty of manslaughter .and sentenced to a term, in the penitentiary. From that judgment he brings the case here on error.
It appears from the record that on September 5, 1908, the County Attorney of said county filed an information in said court charging the plaintiff in error (who will be hereinafter called defendant) with the crime of murder in the first degree by killing and murdering one Rudolph W. Fur-rer on the 26th day of February, 1908. On September 7, 1908, the same being the first day of the term, the defendant was arraigned on said information and filed a plea in abatement thereto on the ground that the offense therein charged is alleged to have been committed on February 26, 1908, and more than thirty days prior to the first day of the September, 1908, term of the court, and that he had not been given a preliminary examination on said charge and had not waived the same. On the same day the prosecutor filed a
At the close of the evidence for the state, the defendant requested the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant on the ground of insufficiency of evidence to convict. This the court refused to do. This assignment ■of error will be considered later in connection with the obj ection that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. ’ It is next urged that the court erred in instructing on the lower degrees of crime included in the information. But there was evidence from which the jury might reasonably conclude that the killing, if unlawful, was upon a sudden heat of passion rather than malicious or premeditated. On the evidence as it appears in the record it was not error to instruct on the lower degrees. The giving of certain instructions defining the different degrees of crime included in the information and explaining the distinction between those degrees is assigned as error, mainly on the ground that no instructions on the lower degrees were warranted by the evidence. The definitions given of the several degrees of crime included in the information are in the language of the statute; and the instructions explaining the distinctions between the several degrees correctly state the law, and are not seriously challenged on that ground.
The use of the words “story told” and “appears,” it is. argued, were misleading. But we think the jury could not have otherwise understood the words “story told,” as used in this instruction, than in the sense of the testimony given on the trial; and that the fairness or bias of a witness more often “appears” from his conduct on the stand and his. manner in testifying than from what he or other witnesses state in their testimony; and if either such fairness or bias of a witness “appears” to the jury, it is a circumstance to be considered in determining the weight to be given to. his testimony. The court instructed the jury “that with the punishment of this defendant in case of his conviction,, you have nothing whatever to do; so that in determining, the guilt or innocence of this defendant, you have no right to take into consideration what punishment he might or might not receive in the event of his conviction.” * * * We see no error in this instruction. The guilt or innocence of an accused does not depend upon the extent of the punishment fixed by the law; and the sole duty of the jury is to determine, from the evidence, the guilt or innocence of the defendant. Instruction No. 30, is objected to,, and is as follows: “It is the duty of each juryman, while the jury is deliberating upon their verdict, to give careful consideration to the views his fellow jurymen may have to present upon the testimony in the case. He should not
Objection is fcnade to the statement of counsel for the prosecution in stating the case to the jury and the evidence by which it expected to sustain it, to the effect that they would show by a doctor and others that one of the wounds ■of deceased could not have been made in the manner claimed by defendant. If that could be shown it was competent •and material; and if the prosecution failed to sustain the statement by evidence, it certainly did not prejudice the defendant.
Several rulings of the court as to the admissibility of evidence are assigned as error. We have examined the record in that respect and find nothing that appears to be preju^ dicial error. Most of the objections are to evidence tending to effect the credibility of witnesses, or only remotely bearing upon the issues; and even if some of- the rulings were erroneous as claimed, the evidence admitted or excluded
It is urged that a new trial should have been granted on the ground of surprise which ordinary prudence could not have guarded against. This surprise consists in .the failure of the state to produce at the trial a witness for whom a subpoena had been issued by the prosecution. It appears that the attorney for the defendant on August 22, 1908, inquired at the clerk’s office if a subpoena had been issued for one Schmidt and was informed that such subpoena had been issued and sent to the sheriff of Natrona County for service and that said sheriff had informed the clerk that he had located said witness and would serve the subpoena. If the defendant considered the testimony of this witness important in his defense he should have had him subpoenaed on his behalf and not have relied upon the subpoena issued on behalf of the state. In any event, no application for a continuance was made on account of his absence, and the objection came too late.
The motion for a new trial contains a charge of misconduct of the jury and the officer in charge of the same, which is supported by affidavits. Several affiants state in their affidavits that during the progress of the trial they saw one of the jurors separated from the balance of the jury and on the street unattended by an officer; and two affiants, state that at another time they saw another juror go, unattended, into a store and into a bank. One affiant states that the “jury were at different times during the progress of said trial permitted to separate and scatter around in and about said hotel at meal time, promiscuously, from the dining room, office, and in front of said hotel, where the prosecuting witness, and other witnesses for the state were stopping; and said jury were permitted to stop in the office of said hotel and to loiter about the same; and intermingle amongst the people and guests and witnesses for the state in said cause; affiant further says some of the witnesses for the state harbored a very bitter feeling against the defendant,
The statute provides “In the trial of capital cases the jury shall not be permitted to separate, after being sworn, until discharged by the court” (Sec. 5385, R. S. 1899), and by Sec. 3646, the officer having the jury in charge shall not suffer any communication to be made to them. In some states it is held that when a defendant shows a separation
The only other question requiring consideration is the sufficiency of the evidence. The defendant attempted to justify the homicide on the ground of self-defense, and, there being no witnesses to the homicide, the State relied upon circumstantial evidence to overcome the claim of the defendant. The evidence was sufficient to require the case to go to the jury, and the court did not err in refusing to direct a verdict of acquittal., The sufficiency of the evidence,' whatever it may be upon another trial, will be a matter to be determined at that time.
For the error in refusing to grant a new trial on the ground of misconduct of the jury the judgment of the District Court is reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.