38 Cal. 141 | Cal. | 1869
The action of one of the jurors in calling the attention of the Court to the fact that the defendant was shaking his head at the witnesses, and asking if such conduct was proper and allowable; and also, the action of the Sheriff, in slipping blank forms of verdict under the door of the jury-room, while the jury was in consultation, are not presented in such a manner as to enable this Court to consider their legal effect upon the verdict. They are brought up here by a bill of exceptions—so called—which merely recites that the acts in question transpired, but does not show that any action by the Court was asked for, or denied, or that there was any action by the Court in relation thereto. There having been no action by the Court below, there is nothing for us to review. A bill of exceptions is defined in the four hundred and thirty-third section of the Criminal Practice Act. An exception is a formal protest against the ruling of the Court upon a question of law, and a bill of exceptions is a written statement, settled and signed by the Judge, of what the ruling was, the facts in view of which it was made, and the protest of counsel. The bill of exceptions—so called—in this case, contains no ruling of the Court, and no protest of counsel, but simply details certain acts which transpired at the trial, in respect to which no action whatever seems to have been taken. Exceptions do not lie to the acts or conduct of the officers of the Court, but of the Court itself.
If counsel conceived that their client was prejudiced in any way by the transactions in question, they ought to have called upon the Court for relief in some form. Had they done so, there doubtless would have been some response on the part of the Court, amounting to a ruling, which might have been made the subject-matter of a bill of exceptions.
The remaining points are aimed at the instructions, which have been brought up without any statement of the evidence in view of which they were allowed or denied by the Court. When such is the case, we do not disturb the verdict, unless the instructions would be erroneous under every conceivable state of facts. (People v. Levison, 16 Cal. 98; Peoples. King, 27 Id. 507.) As an abstract proposition, however, the fourth instruction is not erroneous. If A., intending to murder B., shoots C., supposing C. to be B., and wounds 0., he is guilty of an assault with intent to murder C. Notwithstanding A.’s mistake, C. is the person whom he assaulted, and whom he intended to kill. (Regina v. Smith, 33 Eng. L. and E. R. 567.) There are no other points which require special notice.
Judgment affirmed.