161 So. 182 | La. | 1935
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *144 The accused was indicted, arraigned, and tried for the crime of murder. The trial resulted in the jury returning a qualified verdict. A motion for a new trial was filed, heard, and overruled, and the accused was sentenced to serve a life term imprisonment in the Louisiana state penitentiary. From the verdict and sentence, he appealed.
There are ten bills of exception in the record.
In the case of State v. Bradford,
"From which it is clear that there is, during said ten months, no distinction between a regular term and a special term of the district courts; said courts are then either in session or not in session, `as the public business may require.' And the district judge is the sole judge of when `the public business' may require him to sit during said time. Defendant has therefore no cause for complaint if the district judge should be of opinion that the public business may require him to sit on any particular day, not a holiday, during said time. In State v. Shields, 33 La. Ann. 1410, this court said: `The law provides no delay for arraignment after indictment or information, and the defendant is required to plead when arraigned, which is his only time as of right. * * * Indulgence is often granted in the discretion and leniency of the court, but there is no law controlling such discretion.'"
In this case the defendant's counsel was present in court when his client was arraigned, and he made no objection to the arraignment, or to the entry of the defendant's plea, or to the assignment of the case for trial at a future date. It is only where the judge arbitrarily refuses to permit an accused to withdraw his plea, after it is entered in the minutes, that this court will interfere. Certain rules of court are attached to this bill. *146 These rules, if it be held that they have application in the three parishes of the district, as to which it is not necessary for us to express an opinion, do not, in any respect, affect the discretion of the judge to convene his court in special session, when the public business can, in his opinion, be best served thereby. The mere fact that court was convened in the two parishes on the same day could not affect any right of the defendant.
After the ruling, but before the witness answered the question, the district attorney changed it to read as follows: "Q. What was the nature of the wounds. Serious or not serious?"
There was no objection to this question, and, as the objectionable question was not answered, it is apparent that this bill is without merit.
"Q. What were the nature of the wounds you examined on Jeff Wright?"
This question, although the verbiage is somewhat different, calls for the same answer *148 as the question which was answered without objection, and which we have quoted in our consideration of bill No. 4.
For the reasons assigned, the verdict and sentence are affirmed.