167 Iowa 334 | Iowa | 1914
No claim is made that the testimony does not support the verdict, and the only contentions relate to a ruling on testimony and to the correctness of certain instructions given by the trial court.
This is a correct exposition of the law, and the instruction complained of should be construed with reference thereto. So construed, there is no error.
V. An instruction given by the court with reference to defendant’s drunken condition at the time of the assault reads as follows:
The defendant asked the following with reference thereto:
You are instructed that you may take into consideration the fact, if you so find it to be a fact, that the defendant, at the time he made the assault, if you find he made one, was intoxicated, or had been drinking, so that he did not have possession of his full mental or physical faculties; such testi
This latter was refused, and it is now contended that the one given is erroneous: (1) In that “drunkenness” is not a defense, but inheres in the charge itself; (2) that it cast the burden on defendant of proving his intoxication; and (3) that it is erroneous in requiring the jury to find that by reason of intoxication defendant was unable to form an intent; whereas, the test, as appellant contends, is whether or not defendant was so far under the influence of liquor that he was incapable of distinguishing the right or wrong of what he did. That the last point made against the instruction is without merit is squarely held in State v. Donovan, 61 Iowa, 369. The instruction does not in terms refer to the burden of proof, but simply undertakes to explain what degree of intoxication would exculpate the defendant, and this degree was, as we have already said, correct. In other instructions the court placed the burden upon the state of proving defendant’s intent to commit the offense by the evidence beyond all reasonable doubt.
VI. The instruction as to reasonable doubt is challenged. It conforms to the rules announced in State v. Ostrander, 18 Iowa, 459, and State v. Phillips, 118 Iowa, 660, 675, and there was no error.
Finding no- error, the judgment must be, and it is- — • Affirmed.