57 Cal. 566 | Cal. | 1881
This case comes before us on the judgment roll alone, and the only grounds of alleged error are to the charge of the Court to the jury.
The prosecution was by information, and the charge was an assault with intent to kill and murder. The Court charged the jury that in order to find the defendant guilty, as charged in the information, they must find that if death had ensued from the wound inflicted the offense would have been murder in either the first or second degree. This was a correct statement of the law applicable to the case. The remainder of the charge, which, it is claimed, was erroneous, was the definition given by the learned judge of the term “reasonable doubt.” “Reasonable doubt,” said the Court, “does not mean a mere doubt: it means a doubt which is founded in reason, and which grows out of the reasoning of intelligent minds upon the doubt.” It is claimed that the definition is without meaning, and therefore the judgment should be reversed.
If we were to concede the correctness of the statement, that the definition has no meaning at all, and is wholly unintelligible, it would not follow, as a legal consequence, that the judgment should be reversed. If the jury did not understand the definition—if it conveyed to their minds no just and intelligible conception of what the law means by the term “ reasonable doubt”— it can hardly be concluded that the alleged absence of meaning in the instruction affected the defendant prejudicially in a substantial right, and that therefore the case calls for a reversal. Other parts of the charge were correct. The jury were told
We find no error in the charge which could have affected any substantial right of the defendant, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Myrick, J., Sharpstein, J., Ross, J., and McKinstry, J., concurred.