By the Court,
The defendant was convicted in the District Court in and for Lincoln County of the crime of murder in the first degree, and subsequently judgment of death was by said court pronounced upon him. He appeals to this court from the said judgment.
There is no regular assignment of errors in the record filed here, but treating the two statements of errors claimed by defendant, as made in his bill of exceptions presented by him to the judge of the trial court for allowance and settlement, as performing the functions of an assignment of errors, two questions arise on the bill of exceptions as settled by said judge: First, did the trial court err in the admission of the testimony of the witness Mrs. Gross? and, second, did said court err in admitting the testimony of the witness Archie Gross?
The second question is entirely out of the case, as the defendant’s counsel admits, because no exception to said testimony was taken.
On the first question, the bill of exceptions settled and allowed by the said judge is as follows: "One Mrs. Kate W. Gross was, sworn as a witness on behalf of the prosecution, and testified, among other things, that she met the defendant, Hancock, in 1895, and went to live with him, and that she was then a married woman, having a husband named Keen
The defendant presented to the trial judge what he denominated " Statement to Act as Bill of Exceptions.” The trial judge refused to allow the statement as the bill of exceptions, giving his reasons therefor as follows: "Which so-called 'Statement to Act as Bill of Exceptions’ has been found by me to be incorrect in the following particulars: * * * In alleging that the witness Mrs. Gross testified that said witness was considered and accepted as appellant’s (defendant’s) wife by the community in which appellant (defendant) resided at various times and at the time charged in the indictment, when in fact said witness testified that there were several places in which she and the defendant resided where she was neither considered nor accepted as his wife. (3) In not stating sufficiently the evidence upon which the court ruled that the witness Mrs. Gross was not incompetent to testify, to which ruling the exception was taken.” The defendant claimed that the witness Mrs. Gross was his common-law wife, and that she should not have been allowed to testify against him without his consent. This is what he claims as reversible error.
The question whether or not she was his common-law wife was one for the trial court to determine, before admitting her as a witness against the defendant over the objection of defendant. It will be perceived from the bill of exceptions settled and allowed by the court on this point that the trial judge found as a fact that she was not the defendant’s common-law wife; and, as the record stands in this court, this fact, so found, would determine the case against the defendant. But inasmuch as the life of a human being is involved in the matter, we have read with care the whole proceedings at the trial, including the testimony of the witnesses, both that given touching the question of admissibility and that given after being ruled admissible, although these proceedings are filed here with no other authentication than the certificate of the shorthand reporter, who was sworn to take down and report the matter-, that they were taken and reported correctly.
There was no error in this ruling of the court. This appeal has no merit, and it would seem that the only object of it was for delay.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
