101 P. 847 | Wyo. | 1909
The plaintiff in error, Ella Smith, was charged by an information filed by the county and prosecuting attorney of Big Horn County in the district court of that county, with the crime of unlawfully and feloniously branding two
The horses that the prosecution claimed to have been so branded were two suckling colts, one a bay and the other a sorrel. The defendant testified in her own behalf and admitted that she branded the colts, but claimed that they were her property, or if they were not, that she branded them honestly believing them to be her property at the time. To prove the ownership of the colts, the prosecuting witness, Baldwin, testified that he was the owner of two mares, one a bay and the other a sorrel, each of which had a colt in the spring of 1907, each colt being of the same color as its mother; that the mares and colts were turned out on the range when the colts were one or two months old, the mares being branded with his brand, the colts being unbranded at that time; that he saw them together about October 9, of that year and that at that time the colts were still unbranded; that he next saw the mares about October 25, 1907, but the colts were not with them. He was then permitted by the court to testify, over the objection of the defendant, that at that time the brands on each of the mares had been changed and other brands placed upon them, which he described. Another witness for the state was likewise permitted to testify as to what brands he observed upon the mares about October 12, 1907, and as to the appearance of the brands. Counsel for plaintiff in error contend that it was error to admit this testimony and say in their brief “that evidence was permitted to go to the jury of another substantive and independent crime, other than the one defendant was charged with, and being prosecuted for the commission of. Such evidence did not even attempt to charge defendant with the commission of such extraneoris crime and in ho manner connected her with it. Nor did it in any sense tend to fasten such crime on her or connect it with the crime she was charged with. As to who com
The court gave the jury the following instruction to which the defendant objected and excepted and assigns the giving of the same as error, viz.: “You are instructed -that under the laws of this state any person who brands, or alters or defaces the brand of any horse, mule, sheep or neat cattle of value, the property of another, with the intent thereby to steal the same, is guilty of a felony.” The instruction is almost in the language of the statute defining the crime, which is “whoever brands, or alters or defaces the -brand of any horse, mule, sheep or neat cattle, of value, the property of another, with intent thereby to steal the same or to prevent the identification thereof, is guilty of a felony.” The contention of counsel is that the instruction was misleading as the court had admitted the evidence in reference to the altering of the brands on the mares with which the defendant was not charged. But we cannot conceive how the
In this connection it is assigned as error that there was misconduct on the part of the county attorney in referring in his argument to the jury to the two mares as having been branded with intent to prevent their identification. The language used by him does not appear in the record and it is not claimed that he made any statement, or claimed that the changing of the brands on the- mares was done by the defendant. Jurors must be regarded as men of ordinary intelligence and possessed of reasonable judgment; and we see no reason for believing that they were in any wise prejudiced against the defendant, or that the verdict would have been different, had no such reference been made by the county attorney.
The defendant requested the following instruction which the court refused to give, and that is assigned as error:
“The court instructs you that the meaning of reasonable doubt is, that it is such a doubt from all the evidence in the case, that remains unsatisfied and unconvinced after a full consideration of all the facts and circumstances of the case, and if you entertain a reasonable doubt upon any material element of the offense charged, or upon any material allegation in the information, then it is your duty to give the benefit of such doubt to the defendant and acquit her.”
There was no error in refusing to give this instruction, as
It is also contended that the court erred in failing' and refusing to give an instruction defining the meaning of a reasonable doubt, though requested to do so by the defendant. Our statute, Sec. 5371, R. S. 1899, provides, “When the evidence is concluded, either party may request instructions to the jury on points of law, which shall be given or refused by the court; which instructions shall be reduced in writing, if either party require it.” And it is further provided in the same section, “Before the argument of the case is begun, the court shall immediately, and before proceeding with other business, charge the jury, which charge shall be reduced to writing by the court, if either party request it, and such charge or charges, or any other charge or instruction provided for in this section, when so written or given, shall in no case be orally qualified,” etc. We are of the opinion that the meaning of these provisions is, that the party desiring an instruction on any point of law in the case, shall state to the court the proposition which he claims to be the law applicable to the point; and that the court shall then either give or refuse it. That it is not enough to merely state to the court that the party desires the court to instruct on a certain point; but he must present to the court what he claims to be the law. While it is not imperative that the'instruction requested be reduced to writing, unless the other party require it, yet that is the bettqr practice, and the uniform practice, we think, in this jurisdiction. In the case at bar the instruction above considered was the only one attempting to define a reasonable doubt, presented to the court; and in the absence of the presentation, either orally or in writing, of an instruction correctly defining the term, we think there was
The only remaining question in the case is the usual one that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. And as usual there is a substantial conflict in the evidence; but the jury under proper instructions has passed upon that question, the trial court held it sufficient, and there being-in our opinion sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in finding the defendant guilty, the verdict cannot be disturbed on that ground. We find no prejudicial error in the record, and the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed.