92 So. 45 | La. | 1922
Relators were tried and eonvict- ■ ed in the Twenty-Ninth judicial district court for carrying certain dangerous weapons, to wit, Colts’ revolvers, concealed on or about their persons. They were charged in separate informations, which were consolidated for trial, at the request of their counsel. Each of the accused was sentenced to pay a fine of $200, or to serve in the parish jail a term of three months.
We gather from the reasons assigned by the trial judge that the special charges were refused, as they were not applicable to the facts of the case.
The respondent judge in his answer to the rule herein issued states:
“That the prosecution established beyond a reasonable doubt in the mind of the trial-court, from the circumstances of the arrest, the finding of the concealed weapons belonging to the accused, etc., that they were guilty for the reasons assigned, which reasons are in writing and which are submitted for the attention of your honors herein as sufficient for the verdict of guilty and the judgment of the lower court.”
Relators do not question the jurisdiction of the trial court, nor the regularity of the proceedings in which they, were convicted and sentenced.
The entire testimony in the case was taken' on the trial and is found in the record before us. If this.testimony disclosed as the only fact in the case that the pistols which accused were charged with carrying concealed on their persons were found on the floor of the automobile in which they were arrested, relators would have presented a proper case for the review of the action of the judge a quo in refusing to be guided by the special instructions requested by them. However, we find from the testimony that the accused were arrested by a deputy sheriff and a justice of the peace at 1 o’clock at night in an automobile in which they were transporting a can of alcohol in a sack; that, when halted by the deputy sheriff, they kept going, and continued to go, after the deputy had jumped on the fender of the machine; that they ran into the car of the justice -of the peace ahead of them at a point in the road, which was blocked by this car and by a roller; that the justice of the peace halted them, when they struck the running board of his car, and fired his pistol into the air, and they then stopped.
Accused when arrested were taken out of their automobile, and carried into a store near by. While they were on the gallery of this store with the deputy sheriff, the justice of the peace searched their car, and found one pistol in front of the front seat on the floor, and the other on a can of alcohol in the back of the car. The accused Fernandez was driving the car, and the other
We have reviewed these facts for the sole purpose of showing that the requested special charges were not applicable to the facts of the case as a whole, as they left out of consideration the circumstances connected with and surrounding the finding of the pistols in the automobile, and it is upon these circumstances that the trial judge based th'e conviction of the accused.
It is therefore ordered that the prayer of relators be refused, and that said writs be denied at relators’ costs.