13 S.D. 242 | S.D. | 1900
Defendant was convicted upon an information containing the following allegations: “That John Hellekson, late of said county, yeoman, on the 15bh day of February, 1898, at the county of Presho, then an unorganized county attached to Lyman county for judicial purposes, now a part of Lyman county, South Dakota, did then and there, willfully and feloniously, by fraud and stealth, and with intent to deprive the owner thereof, take, steal, and carry away certain personal
It appears of record that John G-. Bartine, Escp, who was appointed by the court to prosecute this action, was state’s attorney of Lyman county when the prosecution was begun; that I. N. Auld, Esq., the present state’s attorney of that county, represented defendant at the preliminary examination before the committing magistrate, which circumstances were explained by Mr. Auld in his argument to the jury on behalf of the defendant; ihat Mr. Bartine, in closing for the government, referred to the fact that the state’s attorney was representing the defendant; and that counsel for defendant, before the closing of Mr. Bartine’s argument, presented to the court the following written charge, which was neither given in terms
Was it reversible error to refuse to give the charge as requested? We think not. The record discloses that the attorney for the defendant opened the discussion relating to his official position, and explained his relations to the litigation, while the attorney for the state merely alluded to the fact that the state's attorney was acting for the defense — a fact well known to all the jurors. Any proper allusion to the subject by the court would have placed the defendant in a less favorable position than he was left by the argument of counsel and the existence of a necessarily well-known fact. Although the statute, so far as we are aware, does not in terms prohibit an attorney, who assumes the duties of state's attorney after having been retained to defend a person charged with crime, from continuing to act for the accused, it is our opinion that he ought not to do so under any circumstances: and, if his doing so operates to prejudice the jury against the accused, it is a situation which should be avoided by the accused, and not by the court by means of a charge which would tend to sanction or encourage state's attorneys in placing themselves in a position inconsistent with the proper discharge of their official duties. For another and conclusive reason, the failure to give this written charge was not reversible error. As presented,
We have carefully examined all the requests for instructions which were refused, and find that all of them that should have been given were covered by the very fair and comprehensive charge of the learned circuit court. There are no other assignments of error which merit discussion. We think there was sufficient evidence to warrant the conviction, and that the judgment of the lower court should be affirmed. It is so ordered.