8 Utah 268 | Utah | 1892
•The defendant was indicted for robbery, alleged to have
But the record discloses that no judgment was rendered on the former conviction, and that a new trial was granted by the court on motion of the defendant, one of the grounds of which was that the jury had failed to find as to the question of a former acquittal. Where the record shows the defendant consented to the discharge of the- jury after a void or defective verdict, the defense, on a second trial, of once in jeopardy, is unavailing. People v. Curtis, 76 Cal. 57, 17 Pac. Rep. 941; 1 Bish. Crim. Law, § 998, and cases cited; U. S. v. Perez, 9 Wheat. 580; People v. Kinsey, 51 Cal. 278; People v. Holding, 59 Cal. 567. And the rule is the same where the record is silent as to the consent of the defendant. Error of the trial court must be made to appear, and, if the record is silent as to the consent of the defendant, his consent will be presumed. People v. Curtis, 76 Cal. 57, 17 Pac. Rep. 941.
By the indictment in the present case the defendant was accused of the crime of robbery. To the indictment he pleaded not guilty and a former acquittal. He was twice tried under the indictment and these- pleas for robbery, and was twice convicted. The court, jury, and counsel understood the indictment to charge the defendant with the crime of robbery. Counsel for the defendant asked the court to give certain instructions to the jury, based on the idea that the charge against the defendant was that of robbery, and the record shows throughout that the defendant was tried for robbery. The undisputed evidence, and which was admitted without objection, was that the prosecuting witness, 'Wood, went home from his place of business late at night, carrying a sack containing about 8170, which he placed on the table in the kitchen, and started to go into the dining-room, when a man wearing a mask, whom he identified as the defendant, entered the kitchen by the back door, and, telling Wood that he would kill him if he interfered, picked up the sack of money, and carried it away, and that Wood, through fear for his life, did not attempt to prevent the taking and carrying away of the money. This was a taking of the money from the possession of Wood, and constituted the crime of robbery. The indictment should have charged that the money was taken from the possession of Wood, for it is possible for it to have been in the possession of some one else, although in his immediate presence. But the facts were sufficient to “ enable the defendant to understand
Under the defendant’s plea of a former acquittal, the evidence introduced tended to show that the defendant had been indicted, tried, and acquitted of the crime of burglary, alleged to have been committed on the' same night of the robbery by entering the same dwelling house of the said Wood, with the intent to commit a larceny of the property of one Arthur Hodgert; that Hodgert occupied a room in Wood’s house, up stairs, and that it had been entered from the outside by passing over»the roof of a shed through a window into Hodgert’s room, and that the alleged burglary occurred but a few 'minutes, or a very short time, before the robbery. The court charged the jury that the entering of a room on the second floor forcibly through a window, with the intent to steal the property of Hodgert, would be a different transaction from entering from the outside into ' a room on the first floor later,
At the trial the court admitted evidence, against the objection of the defendant, that, when the defendant was arrested on the day following the robbery, a watch which belonged to Hodgert was found on his person, and which Hodgert, testified was taken from his room on the night of the robbery. The admission of this evidence is claimed as error. The record shows that this evidence was admitted, not'to establish the fact that the defendant was guilty of the burglary for which he had been acquitted, but as evidence tending to show that he was at the house of Wood on the night in question. He was not charged in the indictment for burglary with having stolen the property of Hodgert, but only with having broken and entered his room with the intent to commit larceny. For the purpose for which this evidence was admitted, we think no error was committed.
It is contended by counsel for the defendant that the court erred in its definition of what constitutes a “ reasonable doubt.'’" The charge of the court on this point was as follows: “The court further charges you that you cannot find the defendant guilty unless you believe, from all the evidence, that he is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, and that a mere preponderance of the evidence is not sufficient to authorize • a conviction. But the court further charges you that a mere possibility that the defendant is not guilty does not amount to a reasonable doubt. The