Eddie H. Edwards was charged under R.S. 14:285 with making a telephone call in which he used obscene, profane, vulgar, lewd, lascivious, and indecent language and made a suggestion and proposal of an obscene nature, with the intent to coerce, intimidate, and harass another person. He was convicted and sentenced to serve two years in the parish jail. On this appeal he relies upon six of the bills of exceptions reserved in the court below. *
Bill of Exceptions No. 1.
Under the heading “Argument on Bill of Exception # 1” the defendant’s brief contains only the statement: “Bill of Exception No. 1 is submitted without argument.” In State v. Mills,
We do not consider the merits of Bill of Exceptions No. 1.
Bills of Exceptions Nos. 2-5.
These bills were taken to the overruling of defendant’s objections to remarks *1020 of the assistant district attorney in closing argument. Bill No. 2 alleges that the prosecutor made reference to his personal beliefs, and that under the law he might not assert a personal belief in the guilt or innocence of the accused or upon any individual element of the crime. The remark objected to was: “Well, I don’t think you can doubt that this was a telephone conversation. There is certainly no other way of describing it I don’t think — •” The trial judge in per curiam says that he overruled the objection because the comment was not on the guilt of the defendant but rather on the fact that the defendant had made a telephone call, a matter brought out in evidence. The judge was correct in this ruling.
Bill No. 4 raises a similar objection to the expression: “The State has I believe covered all of the evidence — ” The trial judge states in per curiam that again the State was commenting on evidence which had been heard by the jury. Obviously there was no prejudice from this ruling.
Bill No. 3 is grounded upon the objection that the prosecutor talked of a situation about which there had been no evidence, and that this was highly prejudicial in effect. The prosecutor had said that if the deputy sheriff could have reached the telephone booth before the defendant hung up the ’phone, “it would have been an ideal situation”, but that since “it didn’t happen”, the. State had to rely on circumstantial evidence. We see no prejudice to the defendant in the judge’s ruling.
According to Bill of Exceptions No. S, the defense objected to the State’s use of the term “intercourse” in discussion of the case, contending that no testimony or language relating to “intercourse” had been given. The per curiam tells us that defense counsel in his closing argument had made the first reference to the word. Under these circumstances the State’s use of the term was legitimate, and defendant could not complain that he was thereby prejudiced. See State v. Taylor,
Bill of Exceptions No. 6.
This bill was reserved to the judge’s refusal to give several special charges requested by the defense, which were definitions of the words “obscene”, “indecent”, “profane”, “lewd”, and “lascivious”. The court explained to counsel that these charges were not proper instructions to a jury, the members of which were under a duty to determine for themselves the definitions of the terms used in the statute and the bill of information. We think the judge was correct in refusing to charge these definitions, taken by counsel from a law dictionary and Louisiana jurisprudence.
*1022
The bill of information tracks the statute in charging the crime. When the words “obscene, profane, vulgar, lewd, lascivious, and indecent” (all modifying the word “language”) are taken together in context, under the rule noscitur a sociis their meaning is clear and unmistakable, and the jury was capable of determining whether the language used in the telephone conversation was such as was described by these adjectives. In State v. Hertzog,
The conviction and sentence are affirmed.
Notes
After the hills of exceptions had been signed by the trial judge, the defense moved to correct a deficiency in the transcript upon which the appeal was to he heard. The motion requested that in order to comply with the ruling of this court in State v. Barnes,
