17 Mo. 544 | Mo. | 1853
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant was indicted for feloniously assaulting and shooting one Jonathan Millsaps, with intent to kill him. There were several counts in the indictment. The defendant appeared and plead not guilty. At the trial term, after the jury were sworn, the defendant moved the court to compel the counsel for the State to elect under which count of the indictment the prisoner should be tried. This motion the court overruled, and the defendant excepted. The State then introduced testimony to prove the offence, and the defendant offered evidence in mitigation. The jury convicted the defendant, and assessed his punishment at two years imprisonment in the state penitentiary. A motion was made for a new trial, which being overruled, the defendant excepted, and brings the case here by writ of error.
The defendant, by his counsel, offered to prove in mitigation, that defendant was informed on the evening of the' day before the shooting took place, that Millsaps had made an agreement .with defendant’s wife to get her a divorce and many her. This evidence was objected to by the State, and rejected by the court. The defendant then offered to prove that Millsaps had told a witness, that another person was more to blame for the shooting than the defendant was. This was objected to by the attorney for the State, and the objections were sustained by the court. The defendant then offered to prove the general character of Millsaps, as a desperado, and dangerous man, and likely to carry his threats into execution. This proof being objected to, was likewise excluded and rejected by the court. The case was submitted to the jury under instructions. Both parties asked the court to give-instructions, and all the instructions prayed for by each party, were given to the jury without any objection or exception. The only matters, then, for our consideration, are the rulings of the court below, in regard to the refusal to compel the circuit attorney to elect under which
The witness stated, that two or three weeks before Millsaps was shot, he heard Millsaps say “ that Alfred Jackson would not take care of his wife, nor let him do it; that he would help her to get a divorce from said Jackson that he frequently heard Millsaps say “that Alfred Jackson’s wife had no husband, and ought to have somebody to attend to her. On Sunday evening last, Alfred Jackson told me that he had shot Millsaps.” The witness said he had communicated to Alfred Jackson what he had heard Millsaps say. The words of the witness, which are quoted above, were excluded. It appears from the record, that Robert Jackson had died after the examination first had before the justice of the peace who committed the prisoner. On this examination, Robert Jackson had testified, and his testimony was reduced to writing; the above words were not permitted to be given in evidence when his written statement was offered. It does not appear from’ the evidence of Robert Jackson, taken before the justice who committed the prisoner, at what time he communicated these remarks of Millsaps about Jackson’s wife, to Jackson; there is nothing said about the time of his making these known to the prisoner, whether before or after he shot Millsaps. It was right, then, to exclude these words from the jury on this account, if no other. The court did permit the balance of the statement to be read without any objection ; and, therefore, no other error, than the exclusion of the above words, was complained of by the prisoner in regard to the testimony of Robert Jackson.
Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed,