77 N.J.L. 523 | N.J. | 1908
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff in error was convicted of murder in the first degree, and has elected to bring up the entire record under section 136 of the Criminal Procedure act. His counsel in the argument of the case urged a reversal upon the ground that the evidence must leave a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt in every considerate mind, and relied upon our opinion in Kohl v. State, 30 Vroom 445. That case, however, was decided under the act of 1894. Gen. Stat., p. 1154, pl. 170. Lmder that act the Appellate Court was required to order a new trial if it appears in the record that the plaintiff in error suffered manifest wrong or injury upon the evidence adduced upon the trial. This act now appears as section 136 of the revised Criminal Procedure act (Pamph. L. 1898, p. 916), but the revisers were careful to omit the provision for a new trial where the injury arose upon the evidence adduced upon the trial below, and we have decided in a case arising under the revised act that we are no longer required to review the whole evidence. State v. Jaggers, 42 Vroom 281. Our right to review such injuries arose wholly out of this statutory provision, and with its repeal we are no longer authorized to review for such a cause.
It was argued with apparent confidence that the court should have charged that if the evidence of the experts and all the witnesses created a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s sanity, then the jury must find the defendant not guilty on the ground of insanity. The law is settled to the contrary. Graves v. State, 16 Vroom 347; Winters v. State, 32 Id. 613.
The defendant at the trial, in order to prove his insanity, produced two medical witnesses, who testified that he was insane. This testimony was not met by medical testimony on the part of the state, and it is insisted that the court should have charged that their testimony stood uncontradicted, and that the state had a right to rebut it but failed so to do. The
The stress of the argument for the plaintiff in error was directed to the comments made by the trial judge upon the testimony, particularly the testimony of the medical experts as to the prisoner’s mental condition. It is enough to say that these comments were within the latitude allowed by our decisions. We think his comments were justified by what was said by Chief Justice Hornblower in State v. Spencer, 1 Zab. 196, 208, and by this court in Winters v. State, 32 Vroom 613, 617. The facts in issue as to the insanity of the prisoner and as to his guilt upon the evidence were fairly left to the jury. Where that is done it is the province of the trial judge to comment upon the evidence. Donnelly v. State, 2 Dutcher 463; Engel v. State, 21 Vroom 272; State v. Hummer, 44 Id. 714.
A careful examination of the whole record in the case fails to show that the plaintiff in error has suffered manifest wrong or injury in any of the respects which we are required to consider by the one hundred and thirty-sixth section of the Criminal Procedure act, and the judgment must be affirmed.
For reversal—None.