This сase is here on exceptions of the respondent following his trial by jury in the Windsor county court where he was convicted of murder in the first degree. The victim was Elizabeth Weatherup. A сompanion case, previously tried, is
State
v.
Blair,
118 Vt 81,
The respondent excepted to the exclusion by the trial court of a certified copy of the transcript of a proceeding which occurred while the case of State v. Donald Demag was being considered at the March 1948 term of the Chittenden county court. At that time the respondent had been indicted for the first degree murder of one Francis Racicot and, on arraignment, pleaded guilty to murder in the second degree. The matter being considered was whether the court should accept that рlea. Both the attorney general and counsel for the respondent reviewed the respondent’s history at considerable length and requested the court to acceрt the plea. At the trial of the case now being considered the respondent offered the entire transcript of this former proceeding and, when asked by the court the purpose of the offer, stated that the offer was made on the ground that the transcript was a judicial admission against the State and might constitute the basis of a verdict in the case thеn being tried. The offer was of the entire transcript and included statements of his own counsel in his behalf. Much of it was hearsay and self serving. The inclusion of this inadmissable matter rendered the еxclusion of the whole offer proper. Ravine House Co. v. Bradstreet, 102 Vt 370, 375, 148 A 481; Turgeon v. Baker, 105 Vt 61, 63, 163 A 588. The exception is of no avail.
At the close of the State’s case in chief the respondent moved for a directed verdict because the State had failеd to prove that the respondent had broken and entered the Weather-up home with the intent to commit felonious larceny. He waived his exception by proceeding with his case after the denial of his motion.
Croteau
v.
Allbee,
117 Vt 332, 334,
The trial court cannot be put in error on a point not made below.
Campbell
v.
Howard National
Bank, 118 Vt 182, 188,
Moreover, the claim has no merit even if the question had been properly saved below. It has long been settled law in this State that proof of a breaking and entering with intent to commit any larceny is sufficient to convict a respondent of burglary.
State
v.
Keyser,
56 Vt 622, 623-624,
State
v.
Hodgdon,
89 Vt 148, 151,
*276
The respondent excepted to the failure of the court to charge in accordance with the respondent’s request that “All persons charged with crime and brought to trial are presumed by law to be innocent until proved guilty, and the law presumes this respondent to be innocent until the contrary shall have been established.” The respondent does not dispute but agrees, in accordance with
Tyrrell
v.
Prudential Insurance Co.,
109 Vt 6, 192 A 184,
There is great conflict on this point in decisions of various courts both state and federal but it is unnecessary to go outside of the cases arising in Vermont. The respondent cites State v. McDonnell, 32 Vt 491, 538; State v. Patterson, 45 Vt 308, 314; State v. Costa, 78 Vt 198, 204, 62 A 38; and State v. Shaw, 89 Vt 121, 131, 94 A 434, LRA 1915F, 1087. These decisions were all рrevious to the Tyrrell case where our present rule was adopted that the presumption of innocence, of itself alone, contributes no evidence and has no рrobative value. In that case at 109 Vt 25 our court said, “Anything and everything in our cases to the contrary of the rule herein adopted as to presumptions is hereafter to be disregаrded.”
State
v.
Lizotte,
109 Vt 378, 387-388, 197 A 396 is squarely and exactly in point. There the court refused to instruct the jury, in accordance with requests almost identical with the request here. The decision repeats the rule аdopted in the Tyrrell case. The Lizotte case then holds that the function of a presumption is the same in a criminal as in a civil case and, since the presumption has no probative value, it is not for consideration by the jury and is not an appropriate subject upon which to charge the jury.
State
v.
Demars,
118 Vt 175, 177-178,
The respondent claims that the right to a charge on the presumption of innocence is protected from infringement by State action under the fourteenth amendment of the federal constitution. In
Howard
v.
North Carolina,
The respondent claims that the failure to charge the jury on the presumption of innocence was aggravated by other errors in the charge. Specifically the respondent says that it was error for the trial judge to charge: [a] “The law does not require that each particular inсriminating fact which may aid the jury in determining that the accused is guilty shall be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. The doubt which will justify an acquittal is not a doubt of any particular fact constituting the sum of the prisoner’s guilt, but a doubt, upon all the evidence, that he is guilty.” [b] that by twice using the word “the” when referring to burglary the trial judge assumed that a burglary had been committed.
The record doеs not show any exception to these alleged errors in the charge and the respondent claims none in his brief. It is the established rule of this Court that it will not, even in criminal cases, cоnsider questions not raised in the court below. State v. Monte, 90 Vt 566, 568, 99A 264; State v. Williams, 94 Vt 423, 443, 111 A 701; State v. Stacy, 104 Vt 379, 410, 160 A 257, 747.
The respondent excepted to the failure to charge that “If the evidence upon any essential point admits even a reasonable doubt, the respondent is entitled to it.” In support of this exception the respondent cites and quotes State v. Meyer, 58 Vt 457, 462, 3 A 195, 198. In that case the respondent excepted to the cоurt’s refusal to charge as requested that the respondent should be acquitted if the jury believed that the evidence, upon any essential point, admitted “of the slightest doubt consistent with reason.” The court modified the last phrase of the request and charged “of any reasonable doubt, a doubt consistent *278 with reason” and the decision holds that charge was all thе' respondent was entitled to.
Here the court carefully and correctly charged the jury regarding reasonable doubt. It charged that the jury must be satisfied that all the essential elеments of homicide were established beyond a reasonable doubt in order to convict. It then charged the essential elements of each degree of homicide. It also charged the essential elements which the State must prove in order to justify a verdict of guilty; also that the State must establish beyond a reasonable doubt either that the respondent did the killing or participated in the killing, of participated in a burglary resulting in the killing and that the respondent was legally sane at the time. The charge must not be construed piecemeal but as a whole.
State
v.
Orlandi,
106 Vt 165, 176, 170 A 908;
State
v.
Blair,
118 Vt 81, 97,
Judgment that there is no error and that the respondent takes nothing by his exceptions. Let sentence pass and execution be done.
