76 Iowa 330 | Iowa | 1888
IY. Objections are made to several paragraphs of the charge to the jury. The law applicable to the crime charged, and the evidence necessary to convict, are quite plain, and we fail to find any ground for disturbing the judgment for errors in the charge to the jury. It is claimed that one of the instructions is founded upon a state of facts upon which there is no evidence ; that another is erroneous because it does not correctly state the law as to the corroborating evidence necessary to convict. We do not think these objections are well founded. Indeed, it appears to us that the charge is free from any valid objection.
Y. Certain objections are made to the rulings of the court on the admission and exclusion of evidence. We discover no error in them, and we think it is not necessary to consider them in detail. Taking the record throughout, it appears to us that all of the rulings of the court were fair, and that the cause was conducted throughout, and submitted to the jury, in such a manner
VI. It is insisted that the verdict is contrary to and not supported by the evidence. The prosecutrix was aged from thirteen- to fourteen years when the alleged crime was committed, and the defendant was between sixteen and seventeen years of age. If the testimony of the prosecutrix is true, the crime was a most atrocious one. The defendant is a mere boy, and we can appreciate the zeal of counsel in his behalf. But we cannot say that the verdict is not supported by the evidence.' The learned and experienced judge who tried the case appears to have been of opinion that the evidence was suffi cient. He saw and heard the witnesses and the parties, and was much better able to determine whether this mere boy should be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary than this court can be." Our conclusion is that the judgment of the district court must be
Affirmed.