48 Iowa 448 | Iowa | 1878
The alleged murder was committed on the 17th day of January, 1877. The statute provides that the court, in the exercise of a sound discretion, must decide the matter of the petition, when fully advised, according to the very right of it. Code, § 4374. The statute vests in the court, not an absolute nor an arbitrary discretion, but a sound judicial discretion. If the discretion be improperly exercised, the action of the District Court may be reviewed and reversed. See State v. Nash & Redout, 7 Iowa, 347; State v. Mooney, 10 Iowa, 506; State v. Arnold, 12 Iowa, 479.
In the case of State v. Nash & Redout, supra, the following very appropriate language is employed: “It is important to maintain the usefulness of our judicial system, that no suspicion of influence from popular excitement in the administration of the law should be allowed to impair the public confidence in the fairness and impartiality of judicial proceedings. An excited state of public feeling and opinion is always the most unfavorable for the investigation of truth. Not only should the mind of the juror be wholly without bias and prejudice, it should not only be free from all undue feeling and excitement in itself, but it should be, as far as possible, removed from the influence of prejudice and feeling and
Reversed.