163 Iowa 297 | Iowa | 1913
The defendant is an Italian laborer. He has been in this country for seven or eight years. He was twenty-three years of age at the time of the commission of the alleged murder. On November 5, 3911, he shot one Nove Turso, a fel
I. Does the conviction of the defendant have sufficient support in the evidence? "We quote from the record the following testimony on behalf of the state:
Dante Romeo testified for the state:
Dominick Celivero testified:
I live at 611 Southwest Sixth street, Des Moines, Iowa. Have been in this country five years. I knew Nove Turso in the old country. He was a shovel hand at Valley Junction and came to this country last March, 1911. I know the defendant. I was at Raff ella Pelligrino’s home on November 5, 1911, at the christening. I saw Nove Turso there. He came about 10 o’clock in the morning. I saw the defendant there about 4 o’clock in the afternoon. The defendant came in and went upstairs and talked to some of his friends. When he came down he knocked over a. bucket of beer. I do not
The defendant was a witness in his own behalf. We quote from the record his following testimony as a witness:
I am the defendant in this case. I live at 1926 St. Joe avenue, in the north part of the city of Des Moines. I am married, live in Des Moines, and have a family of my own. Have lived in Des Moines since 1907. Before that I lived in New York and Pennsylvania. I was born in Italy and came, to America in 1905, landed at Brooklyn, N. Y., and afterwards went to Wilkesbarre, Pa. I am twenty-three years
The foregoing quotations are sufficient answer to appellant’s contention at this point. They leave no room for debate, and we will not discuss them.
The serious question in this record at this point is as to whether the trial court unduly limited the defendant in his showing as to the extent of injury inflicted upon him by the Morascos. The extent of actual injury inflicted by a previous assault may be an important consideration as bearing upon the ground of reasonable apprehension of danger on the part of the defendant in the final quarrel. The trial court drew a rather close line on the defendant at this point. We would have been better satisfied with the state of this record if the trial court had allowed a larger latitude to the defendant in his showing of the extent of the bodily injury previously
The jury by the verdict reduced the crime charged to its