94 A. 429 | R.I. | 1915
This is an indictment for an assault with intent to kill one Albert C. Hall on the 27th day of September, 1912. The case was tried in February, 1913, and the defendant was found guilty of an assault with a dangerous weapon. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial assigning as grounds therefor (1) "that he did not have a full, fair and impartial trial," (2 and 3) that the verdict was against the evidence and the weight thereof, and (4) newly discovered evidence. In support of the last ground nine affidavits were filed. The motion was denied and defendant excepted to the decision and the case was brought to this court on his bill of exceptions.
The bill contains five exceptions, the first four taken to the exclusion of offered testimony and the fifth to the denial of the motion for a new trial. Since the trial in the Superior Court and before the hearing here, the attorney who appeared for the defendant at the trial has died and the defendant has been represented here by counsel who did not in any way participate in the trial below.
In the hearing before this court not one of the exceptions included in the bill has been pressed. They may therefore properly be treated as waived. As, however, this is a criminal case of gravity we have examined the record and considered the exceptions.
The first four exceptions are we think without merit.
Referring to the fifth exception and as to the second and third grounds of the motion, we have read the transcript of the testimony with care. It is not disputed that the defendant shot at and hit Hall at close range, at least four times, *574 with a 32 caliber revolver. One bullet has been removed and two others have been located in Hall's body, but have not been removed. The defendant claims that the shooting was done in self-defence. From our examination of the transcript we are of the opinion that the jury could properly render the verdict they did.
As to the fourth ground of the motion, newly discovered evidence, an examination of the affidavits shows that some of this evidence is cumulative and not of a controlling character, that some of it merely tends to impeach the testimony of a witness and that some of it is apparently inadmissible as hearsay.
Two of the affiants were witnesses at the trial and two of the others are referred to in the record and there is no adequate explanation for their not being called as witnesses.
The affidavits furnish insufficient ground for granting the motion. See State v. O'Brien,
In State v. Papa,
The defendant really relies in his claim for a new trial upon two questions not raised by his bill of exceptions, but attempted to be raised here in the first instance, namely: (1) "Whether in criminal cases where the charge is shooting with intent to kill, the omission of the trial judge to charge the jury that defendant is presumed to be innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, to which omission defendant does not except, can be a ground for a new trial, the court having charged that the state must prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt?" (2) "Is the charge given to the *575 jury by the justice presiding at the trial in the Superior Court prejudicial to the defendant in matters other than the omission to charge the presumption of innocence?"
If these questions are properly raised, they are of interest and importance. The defendant cites cases in other jurisdictions, where, particularly in criminal cases involving capital punishment, and occasionally in other criminal cases of gravity, where the punishment may be severe, courts have reviewed improper or incomplete instructions prejudicial to an accused, although no exception had been taken. Most of the cases cited, however, were before the appellate court on writ of error or appeal, under which the questions were being considered in manner provided by law.
There are a few cases where apparently in the absence of prescribed statutory procedure an appellate court in the exercise of its "general superintending power and control over all inferior courts" when convinced "that a fair trial has not been had" and "that injustice has been done" has ordered a new trial. See People v. Murray,
We hold, therefore, that on the record presented we cannot consider the two questions referred to and stated above, because they are not properly before us.
Section 2 of Chapter 297 of the General Laws is designed to furnish a remedy for a person who has not had a full, fair and impartial trial by providing for a petition "within one year after verdict" to this court for a new trial, which it is empowered to grant with or without terms. In State v. Papa,supra, p. 457, it is held that this remedy in such a case is exclusive. But it is to be remembered that a petitioner for a new trial under said Section 2, on the ground that the former *576
trial was not full, fair and impartial, in order to make a case, must show something more than mere error on the part of the court, which would form the subject of an exception. Unless there be something more than that, to grant a new trial under the provisions of Section 2 would practically do away with the procedure provided by Chapter 298 of the General Laws for bringing cases here on bills of exception. Bristow v.Nichols,
All of the defendant's exceptions are overruled and the case is remitted to the Superior Court for sentence.