The defendant, James W. Garrett, was convicted of murder in the first degree and his punishment was fixed at life-imprisonment in the penitentiary. He had duty appealed.
This is the second time that this case has been in this court.. The former appeal was from a like conviction and sentence. The opinion is reported in
The facts in the present record are essentially the same as on the former trial, and for that reason we adopt the lucid statement of facts prepared by White, C., and set forth in State v. Garrett, supra, as applicable here, with the exceptions hereinafter noted.
*284 There was evidence in behalf of the defendant upon the last trial that he frequently carried a large roll of money—amount not stated—and that he was seen with such a roll a short time before, as well as immediately after, Mrs. Campbell, the deceased, had been murdered. As upon the former hearing, so in the trial now in review, defendant did not testify in his own behalf, and, as before, certain relatives with whom defendant claimed he had been visiting at Moberly, Missouri, at such a time as made it impossible that he could have been at New Frankfort, the scene of the tragedy, when the murder was committed, also failed to testify. The defense was an alibi, and upon the last trial defendant produced one or two witnesses, in addition to the two who testified on the first trial, in support of that defense.
The court gave eight instructions in behalf of the State, and thirteen at the instance of the defendant, and refused two asked by the defendant.
Appellant is not represented by counsel in this court. We are therefore relegated to our own study of the record and to the motion for a new trial for information concerning any errors which may have occurred in the trial court.
We will, therefore, rule specifically upon such matters in this motion as, upon a careful reading of the record, approximating five hundred typewritten pages, may appear to us to be worthy of separate mention, and as to the remainder, content ourselves with the general statement that we find them devoid of merit.
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III. Error is also asserted in refusing to give instruction marked D-2 in behalf of appellant. This instruction reads as follows:
nifere™cete “You are instructed that the State has not shown that the deceased had in her possession any money at the time of her death, nor that any robbery was committed in connection with her death, nor is there any proof that the money found upon the person of the defendant at the time of his aiTest had ever belonged to the deceased or been in her possession during her lifetime.
*287 “You are therefore instructed and directed to disregard-all testimony offered by the State on the subject of the financial condition of the deceased and you are further instructed to disregard all testimony showing the' possession of any money by the defendant subsequent to the death of the deceased.”
This instruction was properly refused for the reason that it was directly contrary to the facts shown by the evidence, and to proper and legitimate inference to be drawn from the evidence. [State v. Donnelly,
We think that this assignment must also be overruled. The record does not show that the sheriff was directed to fill the panel from the town of Marshall, nor that he did so. It is nowhere alleged that appellant was not aware of the facts as to this matter at the time the jury was selected, yet the appellant made no objection on this ground upon the examination of the jurors upon the
voir dire
and saved no exception upon this ground. The objection appears for the first time in the motion for a new trial and it is for that reason not available for review here. [State v. Ivy,
Appellant also insists that certain jurors who were on the panel were incompetent from having formed and expressed an opinion as to his guilt or innocence. The record shows that certain members of the panel stated that they had an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of appellant, but it further discloses that this opinion was in each instance based upon rumor and newspaper reports, either at about the time the homicide was committed, or at the time of former trials.of this cause. Certain of these jurors had also heard some fragments of the testimony at former hearings of this case. Each of the jurors further stated, however, that he could give the appellant a fair and impartial trial.
Under the statute (Sec. 5220, R. S. 1909), as well as numerous decisions, such an opinion, formed from mere rumor and newspaper reports, is not sufficient to disqualify a juror when it further appears that he can afford the defendant a fair and impartial trial notwithstanding such an opinion. [State v. Vickers,
*289
The evidence tending to show that the deceased commonly kept, or was commonly believed to keep, money about the premises and that that rumor was knoAvn to appellant, was clearly competent upon the question of motive. [State v. Rasco,
Upon the admissibility of evidence bearing upon the financial condition of appellant, both before and after the homicide, Ave have found no direct, adjudication in this State, but, on principle, it seems clear that this eAn.dence is competent. If it could be shown that ten minutes before a robbery was committed the accused was penniless and that within ten minutes thereafter, In'. Avas in funds, particularly of the kind and character knoAAm to have been possessed by the deceased, that
*290
fact, coupled with evidence showing an opportunity on the part of the accused to comit the crime in question, and that the deceased was found to have had money before the crime and none thereafter, would certainly have weight in the mind of any reasonable man, absent a reasonable explanation, as tending to identify the accused as the author of the crime. The length of time intervening between the state of poverty and the state of wealth on the part of the accused, would be a circumstance going to the weight, but not to the competency of the evidence. It has been so held in other jurisdictions. [State v. Carrington, 11 S. D. 178, l. c. 186; Garza v. State,
On the whole we are convinced that the appellant was afforded a fair and impartial trial and that the evidence justified the verdict rendered against him. The judgment should be affirmed.
It is so ordered.
