56 Kan. 84 | Kan. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
: I. The plea in abatement is urged on the authority of The State v. Gleason, 32 Kan. 245 ; but in that case the prosecution was commenced in the district court, and the information was verified by the county attorney only upon information and belief. Section 15 of the bill of rights provides that “no warrant shall issue but on probable cause supported by oath or affirmation,” and this court held that the verification of the information was neither an oath nor an affirmation ; and this position is supported by City of Atchison v. Bartholow, 4 Kan. 124, 139, 140 ; and Thompson v. Higginbotham, 18 id. 42, 44. In the Gleason case, therefore, no legal foundation had been-laid for issuing the warrant, and, its validity having been challenged at the first opportunity, this court held that the defendant ought to have been discharged until the information should be veri
II. It was the duty of the clerk of the court to make out a copy of the information, and cause the same to be delivered to the defendant, or his counsel, at least 48 hours before the arraignment.. (¶ 5223, Gen. Stat. 1889.) There is no specific requirement .of a-certificate by the clerk under the seal of the court to the correctness of the copy, although it is the better practice to attach such certificate and seal. The certificate of the clerk here was in good form, except that the seal was not affixed ; but we are required to give judgment without regard to technical errors or defects, or to exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties.' (¶ 5355, Gen. Stat. 1889 ; Laurent v. The State, 1 Kan. 313 ; Millar v. The State, 2 id. 175 ; The State v. Winner, 17 id. 298.) There is no claim that
III. James Clune was killed by the defendant on Tuesday, April 30. The defendant claims that the act was committed in self-defense. On the Sunday night next preceding, Clune, one O’Brien, the defendant, and perhaps some others, were engaged in an affray, and there was considerable evidence that on Sunday night, Monday and Tuesday Clune made threats that he would kill the defendant on sight, and some of these threats were communicated to the defendant. On Tuesday the defendant and one Buffing-ton were driving a team through an alley in Kansas City, Kanv when they saw Clune and OjBrien with some other persons in a barn abutting on the alley. The defendant offered to show by his own testimony and that of Buffington that he then expressed his fears to Buffington in words something like these : '‘ There are those fellows. They will get me.” But the evidence was excluded on the ground that it was a declaration of the defendant in his own interest. Counsel claimed that, as the homicide occurred only about three minutes afterward, and within 150 feet from the place where this expression' is alleged to have been used, it ought to have been admitted, if not as part of the res gestee, at least as showing the state of mind of the defendant very shortly before the fatal shot was fired, and which might'be presumed to continue until that event. Buffington was allowed to testify that at this time he told the defendant, in substance, to sit 'still, and they wouldn’t hurt him, which implies that the defendant had expressed or manifested some fear. The evidence for the prosecution tended to