113 So. 546 | La. | 1927
On November 30, 1926, the district attorney of the Nineteenth Judicial district filed an information in the district court for the parish of East Baton Rouge, charging the defendant with having embezzled $214.25 from the Pollack Company, a private corporation, on June 23, 1924. The information also alleged that the accused "did immediately after the commission of said offense flee and abscond from justice and so remained until within one year of the filing of this bill of information," etc.
Upon the trial of the case, defendant filed a plea of prescription which was referred to the jury.
The trial resulted in a verdict of guilty as charged, with a recommendation for mercy, and defendant was sentenced to imprisonment for one year in the state penitentiary. He has appealed from the conviction and sentence, relying upon three bills of exception to obtain the annulment thereof.
Bill No. 1. Mr. R.J. Duhon, a deputy sheriff, called as a witness by the state, was asked by the district attorney: *1095
"Is it not a fact Lindsey was a fugitive from justice?"
Defendant objected to the question on the ground that the deputy, not being a lawyer, was incompetent to answer. The objection was overruled; the court holding that the witness was the best judge as to whether or not he could answer the question. The bill, however, fails to show how the question was answered, or that it was answered at all. It is therefore without merit. State v. Thompson,
Bill No. 2 was reserved to the alleged refusal of the trial judge to deliver a special charge set forth in the bill. The bill, however, was not signed by the judge, who in a statement per curiam shows that counsel for defendant did not object nor reserve any bill to any portion of his general charge, and that at the conclusion of his general charge, in reply to his question, counsel for defendant stated that he had no special charge to submit. The trial judge declares he never heard of nor saw the exception until the bill was filed in the record several days after the conclusion of the trial. There is no merit in the bill.
Bill No. 3 was taken to the overruling of a motion for a new trial. Defendant, in his motion, reiterated the errors complained of in the prior bills, and averred, further, that the jury erred in failing to sustain his plea of prescription. In his plea defendant avers that he was charged by affidavit before the city judge of the city of Baton Rouge on June 23, 1924, with having committed the crime of embezzlement on the same day, and that no further proceedings were had in the matter until November 30, 1926, when the present information was filed against him; that more than a year having elapsed from the date the alleged offense *1096
was made known to a public officer having power to direct a public prosecution and the date of the filing of the information, his prosecution therefor is barred by the statute of limitations; that the allegations of the information negativing prescription are contrary to the facts and documentary evidence as will be established on the hearing of the plea. Defendant relies on Rev. St. § 986, as amended by Act
The trial judge gives as his reasons for overruling the motion for a new trial on this point that, when the case was called for trial, defendant filed his plea of prescription in the form of a motion to quash, and waived his right to have the plea tried and disposed of by the court in limine, by requesting that it be referred to the jury and passed upon by them as a fact in the case. This was agreed to by the district attorney, and, after hearing testimony thereon, the jury refused to sustain the plea. He further states that he heard the evidence in question, and that he had no hesitancy in saying that there was no error committed by the jury in so doing.
The bill is untenable. Defendant could have required that his special plea be tried and decided in limine by the trial judge, and, if it had been overruled, he would not have been precluded thereby from relying on it as a defense under his plea of not guilty. However, he waived, as he had a right to do, the trial of the special plea in limine and permitted the question of prescription to be involved in the general issue of not guilty, to be decided by the jury. State v. Hayes,
For the reasons assigned, the verdict and sentence appealed from are affirmed. *1097