154 Iowa 514 | Iowa | 1912
Appellant, without moving to strike, requests the court to disregard the state’s amendment to the abstract, and we shall comply with this request save as the abstract, which in many respects is misleading and untrue, is shown by the transcript to be correct. The amendment may be somewhat defective in .form, but, as counsel for appellant in the preparation of their argument have proceeded as though unaware of the existence of this court’s rules prescribing the method to be followed, it would seem that honors are about even, and that the appeal should be considered on the record as presented. Had the particular errors of which complaint is made and the precise points relied on for reversal been specifically stated, as directed in the rules, this court would not only have had the benefit of counsel’s analysis of the record and of argument concentrated on each of the alleged errors, but would have avoided the necessity of making a search to ascertain rulings of which appellant complains. The rules for the preparation of briefs were adopted after extensive inquiry concerning the practice of other courts of last resort and in the light of long experience, and have been found not only to promote their thorough preparation; but perspicuously to challenge attention to the very rulings to which exception is taken anld greatly to facilitate the labors of the court.
By way of defense, it was shown that defendant was traveling about the country purchasing cast-off jewelry, wthioh he either had made over, or, if gold, melted and then sold, and, at about 4 o’clock in the afternoon prior to his arrest had purchased two pearls of one Rubar at Cambridge, about four miles east of Huxley, and had paid $4 therefor. This he took from a chamois skin purse. In the course of their conversation, he emptied this purse in his hand in order to find old coins he was exhibiting to Rubar. According to the latter, this consisted simply of a “few dollars and quarters, and so on,” all of small denomination. He carried this chamois skin purse, which was about two-thirds full, mostly of small coin, next to his body fastened to his trousers by a safety pin. It also appeared that one Beebe in part payment for a horse had paid him at Des Moines $10 or $15 in dimes and small coins about the last of April. He had boarded with Mrs. Wagner in Des Moines, and she testified that she had made the purse for him, and that when he left her place about three days before his arreat he had this filled with some bills, silver, and $10 or $12 in nickels and dimes. This testimony is corroborated by that of her husband, but neither .seem to have been certain as to the amount in small change. Such is the evidence on which the jury
Complaint is made that appellant was not allowed to show for what purpose he carried the razors found on his person. Though the record discloses that counsel suggested to the court that it seemed to him fair that such