219 P. 557 | Nev. | 1923
The defendant was convicted in the district court of the crime of first-degree murder, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial and the judgment he appealed. Preliminary to considering the merits of the case, we will dispose of the objection going to the jurisdiction of the court to try the case and render a judgment against the defendant.
After the death of the deceased a coroner’s jury was impaneled to inquire into the cause of her death. It returned the following verdict:
“The deceased was named Mrs. E. L. Holt; was a native of Pennsylvania, aged about 38 years; that she came to her death on the 2d day of December, 1921, in this county, by gunshot wounds inflicted by other than herself under circumstances not excusable or justifiable in law, and we believe such other person to have been E. L. Holt, and we recommend that he be held to answer the same.”
Upon the return of this verdict the coroner, pursuant to Rev. Laws, 7551, issued a warrant for the arrest of the defendant. The section just mentioned reads as follows:
“If the jury find that the person was killed by another under circumstances not excusable or justifiable in law, and the party committing the act be not in custody, the justice of the peace, acting as coroner, shall issue a warrant signed by him, with his name of office, for the arrest of the accused.”
The defendant was arrested upon the warrant mentioned and taken before the magistrate. Counsel appeared in behalf of the defendant, asked for time in the matter, and stipulated as to the date of holding the preliminary examination.
The preliminary examination was based upon the verdict of-the coroner’s jury.' When the defendant was brought before the magistrate for the preliminary hearing he was informed that the proceedings were based upon the verdict of the coroner’s jury, and that it was considered as a complaint. The magistrate commenced
On the part of the state it is contended that the verdict of the coroner’s jury constituted a complaint, and that our statutes Qontemplate the holding of a preliminary hearing based thereupon. To support this contention our attention is directed to certain sections of the statute and to the following authorities: In Re Sly, 9 Idaho, 779, 76 Pac. 766; State v. Tennison, 39 Kan. 726, 18 Pac. 948; Turner v. People, 33 Mich. 363. We do not deem it necessary to decide the foregoing contention, since, as further maintained by the state, the defendant waived the right to raise the point relied upon in the district court by his failure to urge it before the justice of the peace, and by expressly waiving the reading of the verdict of the coroner’s jury when informed that it was the complaint upon which the preliminary hearing was being held.
A preliminary hearing is not a trial. In the very nature of the situation it could not be. A justice of the peace has no jurisdiction to try one charged with a felony; he can only hold a preliminary hearing and determine if probable cause exists for holding defendant to answer. The holding of a preliminary hearing is a statutory proceeding, and it is a rule well recognized by the courts of the land that one charged with
It is the public policy incorporated into the written law of this state to ignore all irregularities and informalities in criminal procedure which result in no injury. Every consideration impels us to hold that the defendant waived the filing of a formal written complaint, even if one be required, as to which we express no opinion, though we are frank to say it is the safer practice to file one as the basis of every preliminary hearing, whether the result of a coroner’s inquest or not.
While the point is not made, and we do not undertake-to decide it, the query arises whether the defendant was not limited, in making a motion to set aside the information, to the grounds enumerated in section 7090 of the Revised Laws, as amended by section 30, c. 232, Stats. 1919. In this connection the case of State v. Bailey, 32 Kan. 83, 3 Pac. 769, is interesting. The proceedings in that case before the information was filed were identical with those in this case, except that the defendant did move the justice of the peace to quash the warrant and discharge him from custody. The-
“When the question is raised by a plea in abatement, as in the present case, we think the only questions presented for consideration are whether an attempt has been made to give the defendant a preliminary examination, and whether by such attempt reasonable notice has been given to him with regard to the nature and character of the offense charged against him. If no attempt has been made to give the defendant a preliminary examination, and if he has not waived the same, and was not at the time of the filing of the information a fugitive from justice, we think the plea in abatement should be sustained; and also where the preliminary examination has not been waived and the defendant has not been a fugitive from justice, and has not had, through the instrumentality of a preliminary examination, any reasonable notice of the nature and character of the offense charged against him, we think the plea in abatement should also be sustained. But it is not necessary that the papers and proceedings on a preliminary examination should be technically regular and exact, like the papers and proceedings on the final trial. It is not necessary that the papers and proceedings on a preliminary examination should set forth the offense in all its details and with perfect and exhaustive accuracy. For the purpose of authorizing a final trial, and of requiring that the defendant should plead to the merits of the action, all that is necessary is that the defendant should be given a fair opportunity to know, by a proffered preliminary examination, the general character and outlines of the offense charged against him; and it is not necessary that all the details and technical averments required in an information should be set forth in the papers used on the preliminary examination. And the defendant should take notice from the evidence introduced by the state on the preliminary examination, as well as from the papers in the case, of the nature and character of the offense charged*241 against him. In the present case the defendant had an opportunity to know, and did know, from the preliminary examination, all that was necessary for him to know.”
We come now to the assertion that .the court committed prejudicial error in admitting in evidence a photograph of the deceased in the position in which she was found shortly after the homicide. It is said that the only purpose which the introduction of this evidence could serve was to inflame the minds of the jury. If such were the fact, we freely admit that its admission in evidence was not only error but prejudicial. It is., the theory of the defense that the deceased shot herself. The photograph shows her lying on the floor close to the wall, with a door at her back, and the portion of her body above her waist to the right of the door, with her face turned from the wall and toward the middle of the room, the left forearm drawn up, and her right forearm over her forehead with the palm open, palm up, and the butt of an automatic pistol touching the fingers, the barrel pointing at an angle of about forty-five degrees from the body, the muzzle being close to the left hand. The ball or base of the thumb of. the right hand is bloody, and across it are corrugations comparing to those on the slide of the pistol. It is argued by the state, in view of the contention by the defendant that the deceased killed herself, that those facts are material, and that their portrayal by the photograph is proper.
This court, in State v. Roberts, 28 Nev. 350, 82 Pac. 100, wherein the contention here made was argued, said:
“We are cited to some extreme cases where photographs were rejected on the grounds that witnesses had described what they would show, or that they would inflame aild prejudice the jury — doctrines that we are not able to sanction, and which are not supported by the weight of authority. If juries cannot be intrusted with the pertinent facts for which litigants and offenders are responsible, however appalling they may be,*242 and with the most accurate, instructive, and convincing evidence of those facts, it is time to abolish the jury system. Photography, engraving, and the art of picture making are important factors in our civilization, and the courts in their search for truth should not be averse to accepting the benefits they bring. A glimpse at a photograph may give a more definite and correct idea of a building or of-a person’s features than the most minute and detailed testimony. A child may learn more regarding the appearance of an animal it never saw by the sight of its picture than by listening to a lecture or reading a volume of description. When photographs are shown to be' correct representations, and give a better and clearer understanding of relevant facts, it would seem on reason and principle that their use as evidence should be favored.”
In this age of general education, wherein people are trained to think, we believe there is little danger of the minds of a jury being influenced merely because a bloody garment, a photograph showing a bloody garment, or any other bloody object is introduced in evidence and exhibited to them. But, however this may be, if such evidence can serve to throw light upon the matter inquired into, or can present a situation for the enlightenment of the jury more clearly and satisfactorily than can be presented by oral testimony, we think it is no abuse of discretion for the court to permit its introduction. The state contends that the corrugations across the ball of the thumb are circumstances indicating that the pistol was placed in the hand after the blood had slightly dried. In the instant case the photograph shows every detail as to the position of the body with reference to the wall of the room, the door, the position of the hands, the corrugations, and the pistol much more clearly and satisfactorily than could have been explained by oral testimony. Furthermore, the bloody condition of the body was detailed to the jury prior to the introduction of the photograph. In the circumstances we think the court did not err.
But it is said that the body was moved by the opening of the door by Mrs. Downing, and hence the
It is insisted that the court erred in admitting in evidence the testimony of the witnesses Russell and Browning, in that their testimony is not properly in rebuttal, and should have been given in the main case, and, furthermore, that the incident testified to by the witness Russell is an incident too remote. The defendant testified in his own behalf, and among other things testified that he had never had serious difficulty with his wife, and had never struck her. Miss Russell testified that she was a sister of the deceased, and that, while she was visiting the defendant’s family about eight years prior thereto, she had seen defendant strike her. When the state was presenting its case in chief the theory of the defense had not been outlined, and it was impossible for the state to know what his defense would be. It did not develop until he went- upon the stand and gave his testimony, wherein he swore that the deceased and he had lived on amicable terms, and that he had never struck her, and that she shot herself. Under the circumstances, we are satisfied that the testimony was admissible. Though the incident testified to was somewhat remote, it did tend to rebut the testimony given by the defendant, and the jury had the right to consider it for what it was worth.
The testimony of the witness Browning flatly contradicted that of the defendant upon one point, and tends to contradict him upon another. The defendant testified that after the shooting he returned to the house, and that Browning followed him, and that he entered and left the door unlocked. Browning, in rebuttal, testified that he found the door locked, and that he
Finally, it is contended that the verdict is contrary to the evidence. It is said that the deceased at the time of the tragedy was momentarily insane, and that she shot the defendant and herself. It is clearly shown that the deceased was subject to fits of great despondency, and that shortly before the tragedy she said she was going to Lovelock and kill her husband, their boy, and herself. On the other hand, there is a letter in the record written by her to a friend in San Francisco the day before the homicide in which she said she would return to that city. This indicates that if she ever had such an intention she had abandoned it. The jury heard all the evidence, and, under instructions not complained of, returned a verdict of guilty. From the evidence, as interpreted by counsel for the appellant upon the oral argument, we do not see how the jury could have done differently. In presenting the theory of the defense he said the defendant got the gun about an hour or a little over from a friend; that he took it home in his overcoat pocket, and when he got there placed his overcoat upon the bed, and that his wife, while looking through his pockets for letters, found the
No prejudicial error appearing, there is no alternative but to affirm the judgment.
It is so ordered.