11 Nev. 314 | Nev. | 1876
By the Court,
The defendant, Peter Larkin, was convicted of murder in the first degree.' He appeals from the judgment and from the order of the court overruling his motion for a new trial; also from the order of the court overruling his motion in arrest of judgment. Upon the day set for hearing the argu
Section 450 of tbe criminal practice act provides that tbe record of tbe action shall consist, among other things, of * ‘ A copy of the minutes of the trial.” (1 Comp. Laws, 2075.)
It is claimed that the minutes kept by tho reporter are tbe only minutes of the trial, and that in pursuance of the above section it was the duty of the clerk to include tlio same in “ the record of the action.”
The application for mandamns was denied, for tbe reason that in our judgment tbe legislature, in using tbe words “ minutes of the trial,” meant only the minutes as kept by the clerk, and recorded in tho minute book containing tbe proceedings of trial that are daily read by the clerk and approved by the court. As to the correctness of tbis rilling there ought not to be any doubt or controversy, and if it was not for,the fact that in Gregory v. Frothingham (1 Nev. 260), this question is referred to, in a dictum of the court, as being one upon which tbe court was divided in opinion, we should not be disposed to discuss it.
If, by tbe mere act of appointing a reporter to report tbe proceedings, the court adopts tbe notes kept by him as’ the minutes of the trial, as was argued by counsel, then we would have a record without any verification, save, perhaps, tbe certificate of tbe reporter. , Tbe court would have no power, after tbe notes were completed and filed, to correct pr in any manner change tbe same. It would be the duty of tbe clerk to copy them in making up tbe record of the action after conviction, and without further verification they would be included in the transcript on appeal.
If tbe reporter kept notes of all tbe points raised by counsel and tbe rulings of tbe court thereon, as well as tbe testimony of the witnesses, as appears to have been done in
Such a practice would not only jeopardize the rights of every defendant in a criminal case, but it would lead to endless confusion and distrust, and would entirely destroy the certainty of legal records and defeat the very object for which they are made and kept.
If the statute warranted such a proceeding, it would be our duty to follow it; but it is evident that when the various sections of the criminal practice act are examined, it ivas the intention of the legislature to avoid, instead of to encourage or countenance such a loose, unsatisfactory and dangerous practice.
In The State v. Huff, ante, it is clearly intimated that the correct practice, if counsel desire to have the reporter’s notes included in the record on appeal, is to insert them in the bill of exceptions, so that they can be identified and authenticated as the statute provides.
There is no provision-of the statute «that will authorize this court to review or examine the testimony, in a criminal case, unless it is embodied in a bill of exceptions. It is simply absurd to contend that the legislature meant to include the reporter’s notes of the testimony as the “minutes of the trial.”
Section 423 provides that: ‘ ‘A bill containing the exceptions must be settled and signed by the judge.” (1 Comp. L., 2048.)
Section 424 provides that:- “The bill of exceptions shall contain so much of the evidence only as is necessary, to present the question of law upon which the exceptions were taken, and the judge shall, upon the settlement of the bill, whether agreed to by the parties or not, strike out evidence and other matters not material to the questions to be raised. ” (1 Comp. L., 2049.)
It is the duty of the district judge to examine the evidence in the bill of exceptions and to certify to its correct
In California there is a law authorizing the appointment of official reporters, and it provides that his notes “shall always be taken as prima facie evidence of the testimony given upon any trial where such notes are taken,” and the supreme court, in the People v. Woods, refused to consider the reporter’s notes because they were not properly authenticated. Wallace, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “In the record before us no statement of the evidence is contained in an authentic form. It is true, that the notes of evidence taken by the phonographic reporter are embodied in the transcript, and the certificate of the reporter is appended to the effect that they constitute a correct statement of the evidence, to the best of his knowledge and belief. But the act of 1867-8, 425, provides that the reporter’s notes shall be taken as prima- facie evidence only; that is, of course, that wherever presented they are open to question, and, possible, correction. This provision evidently refers to the proceedings to be had in the court below upon settlement of statements, allowance of bills of exceptions, etc. The record filed in this court, and upon which we proceed here, however, are not merely prima facie, but are conclusive in their character, and we have no means of correcting the notes of the reporter of the court below, or of entertaining an inquiry into their conformity with the facts actually occurring in that court. It results that the reporter’s notes cannot be considered in this court.” (43 Cal. 177.)
We shall now proceed to consider the various objections that were taken in the court below, and properly included in the. record on appeal.
2. The defendant moved the court to set aside the indictment on the ground that he was in custody of the sheriff, and confined in the county jail “under and by virtue of an order of the court to answer the charge of murder,” and that he was not allowed the privilege of challenging the panel, or individual members of the grand jury. The facts as set forth in the bill of exceptions are as follows:
“ The grand jury for the January tei-rn, 1876, of said court, was impaneled by the said court on the second day of February, a.d. 1876; that at the time of the impanelment of the said grand jury, the said defendant was not held to answer before the said grand jury for any offense whatever, but that in truth and in fact, an indictment had prior to the impanelment of said grand jury been found against said defendant for murder, by the grand jury of the October term, 1875, of said court, which said indictment was still pending against said defendant at the time of the impanelment of the said grand jury impaneled by the said court for the said January term, 1876, of the court; which said indictment was afterwards, to -wit, on the twenty-first day of February, 1876, dismissed upon proper proof of the destruction thereof by fire. * * * That neither the said defendant, nor his counsel, nor any person in his behalf, has ever at any time asked, or demanded of this court the privilege of appearing before the said grand jury so impaneled as aforesaid, nor for an opportunity to challenge the panel or any individual member of the said grand jury; * * or * ever at any time heretofore made any showing that the said defendant had in fact any ground of challenge to the panel of said grand jury, or to any individual member thereof; that at no time has this court ever refused such right, or privilege, to the said defendant, or any per&on in his behalf. The court, after duly considering the said motion, the facts and the premises, stated to the defendant and his counsel, that'they could move to set aside the said indictment by taking any objection thereto that might have*325 been taken advantage of to the said grand jury or any member thereof, had the defendant appeared before said grand’ jury. No desire being so expressed either by said defendant, or his counsel, the court overruled said motion, and required the said defendant to plead to said indictment.”
From these facts it appears that at the time the grand jury was impaneled defendant was not held to answer before it for any offense. He however had the privilege, under the ruling of the court, as well as by virtue of the provisions of section 276 of the criminal practice act, to move to set aside the indictment “on any ground which would have been good ground of challenge either to the panel or any individual grand juror.” (1 Comp. L. 1900.) Having refused to exercise this privilege he is not in a position to complain of the ruling of the court. (People v. Romero, 18 Cal. 93.)
3. It is claimed that the court erred in allowing the challenge of the prosecution to the jurors, Klein, Taylor and Kandolph, for implied bias in entertaining such conscientious opinions as would preclude their finding defendant guilty of murder in the first degree. Whether the answers given by these jurors were of such a nature as to actually disqualify them from serving as jurors, is a question that is not, under the provisions of our statute, subject to review. Section 421 of the criminal practice act provides that “exceptions may be taken by the defendant to a decision of the court upon a matter of law, * ' * * in disallowing a challenge to the panel of the jury, or to an individual juror, for implied bias.” (1 Comp. L. 2046.) The action of the court in allomng challenges for implied-bias is not made th'e subject of an exception, and the reason why it was omitted as one of the grounds of an exception is correctly stated by the supreme court of California in The People v. Murphy, as follows: “The reason, and it is a sensible one, upon which the statute proceeds, is that when a competent jury, composed of the requisite number of persons, has been impaneled and sworn in the case, the purpose of the law in that respect has been accomplished, that, though in the impaneling of the jury one competent person be rejected,
4. The defendant interposed an objection to the ruling of the court in excusing the juror Wilson upon the ground that neither party challenged him. The record shows that this juror upon his voire dire testified that he was not a citizen of the United States. It is claimed by appellant’s counsel that the court acted without there being one single fact before it to determine Avhether this testimony was true. The sworn statement of the juror was certainly prima facie sufficient to authorize the court to act. If the defendant entertained the belief that the juror was a citizen, the proper course for him to have pursued, would have been to propound such questions, or at least to have asked permission to do so, as would have presented the facts of the case to the court. The objection as made is wholly untenable. In the State v. Kelly, it was decided that, in cases of this kind, the court in the exercise of its sound discretion has the right of its own motion to discharge a juror at any time before he is sworn. (1 Nev. 227, and authorities there cited.) If there is an abuse of this discretion it might perhaps be subject to review, although there are but'few cases reported where the judgment of the court has ever been disturbed upon this ground. The authorities all agree that for any good cause shown the court may, without challenge from either party, excuse a juror before he is sworn. (People v. Arceo, 32 Cal. 44; Lewis v. State, 9 S. &. M. 118; McGuire v. State, 37 Miss. 376; State v. Marshall, 8 Ala. 304; Jesse v. State, 20 Geo. 164; Pierce v. State, 13 N. H. 554; Montague v. Commonwealth, 10 Grat. 767; Commonwealth v. Hayden, 4
In Commonwealth v. Hayden, before the jury were impaneled, one of the jurors requested to be excused, because he lived in the same town with the defendant. The judge asked the juror whether he had formed or expressed any opinion in regard to the case, or had any interest or bias in relation thereto, and the juror answered he had not. The judge said that the reason assigned by the juror was not of itself a sufficient excuse, but, in the exercise of his discretion, directed the juror to leave the panel, and a supernumerary to take his place, and the supreme court held “that it was within the authority of the court, in its discretion, to excuse the juror for the reason assigned, although he was not legally incompetent to sit in the trial.”
In Stout v. Hyatt, the court say: “It is not a substantial error for the district court to discharge a juror during the time the jury are being impaneled, although the juror may be dischargee! for an insufficient reason, where an unexceptionable jury is afterward obtained, and where the party complaining has not exhausted his peremptory challenges.” If this right exists where the juror is free from all statutory disqualifications a fortiori, there cannot be any question as to the right of the court to act, in a case like the present, where the statute declares that the juror is disqualified. In such a case it is the duty of the district court to excuse the juror. There is no doubt but what a qualified juror may be rejected by the court, and still an impartial jury be obtained. Before the defendant can ask for a reversal upon this ground, he must show, as in other cases, that he has, in some manner, been prejudiced by the action of the court. (State v. Raymond, ante.) The true rule applicable to criminal as well as civil cases, is, in our judgment, clearly and correctly stated in the case of The Atlas Mining Company v. Johnston, as follows: “And though it would be ground of error for the court to admit a juror who is challenged, and ought to have been rejected, it is no ground of error for the court to be more cautious and strict in securing an impartial jury than the law actually required; and that for this
5. It is claimed that the court erred in allowing testimony as to the intimate and illicit relations existing between the witness Nellie Sayers and the deceased; also, as to the same relations between this witness and the defendant. “An evil motive,” says Mr. Wills in his work on Circumstantial Evidence, “constitutes in law as in morals, the essence of guilt; and the existence of an inducing motive for the voluntary acts of a rational agent is assumed as naturally as secondary causes are concluded to exist for material phenomena. The predominant desires of the mind are invariably followed by corresponding volitions and actions. It is therefore indispensable, in the investigation of moral actions, to look at all the surrounding circumstances which connect the supposed actor with other persons and things, and may have influenced his motives.” (38.) The prosecution had the right to offer any evidence which tended to prove a motive in defendant for the commission of the crime, and this testimony was clearly admissible for that purpose. (State v. Watkins, 9 Conn. 52; State v. Green, 35 Conn. 203; Johnson v. State, 17 Ala. 625-6; State v. Rash, 34 N. C. 382.)
6. The court did not err in refusing to strike out the evidence of the witness Nellie Sayers. It is true, as was argued by counsel for appellant, that the full, free, and complete cross-examination of a witness is one of the unquestionable rights that every defendant and every litigant is entitled to. A thorough cross-examination is perhaps the most efficacious test which the wisdom of the law' has ever devised in order to discover the truth. It is not contended, however, that this right w'as in any manner
7. It is contended that the court erred in refusing to give this instruction: “The jury can draw no inference of guilt from the fact that the pistol in question was and is the property of the prisoner, if other persons had access to and might have had the possession of, or used the said pistol; nor from the fact that the pistol was found in the prisoner’s bedroom, if other persons had access to, or might have had access to, the bedroom after the shooting was done.” Waiving, for the nonce, the question of the absence from the record of all testimony tending to show the applicability of this instruction, and assuming that there was testimony offered at the trial which would have warranted an instruction upon this point, it is evident that the court did not err in refusing this instruction. The fact that the pistol belonged to defendant and that it was found in defendant’s bedroom shortly after the homicide, tended to establish one link in the chain of circumstantial evidence, and the court was not authorized to withdraw its consideration from the jury. The fact that other parties had access to defendant’s bedroom might have a tendency to weaken the force of this link in the chain of evidence, but it would not, of itself, destroy it.
8. It is next claimed that the court erred in refusing to give the following instruction, asked by defendant’s counsel: “The jury may, and it is their duty to, take into consideration, the chastity, or want of chastity of any witness for the state, in determining the credibility due such witness.” This instruction is not confined to any particular witness. It was, as we think, intended to mislead the jury, and was properly refused. It tells the jury, in effect, that want of chastity is sufficient to destroy the credibility of a witness. As a general proposition, to be applied indiscriminately to all cases, this is not true. A witness may be unchaste and yet be truthful. A witness may be chaste and yet bo untruthful. The law affords ample remedies for testing the credibility of witnesses, without introducing testimony of specific acts of immorality, and in particular instances allows greater latitude than in others, owing to the special
We decided in the State v. Huff, ante, that “no legitimate influence of the untruthfulness of a witness can be drawn from the fact that he has been convicted of frequent assaults and batteries. It could be inferred, that he Avas a A'iolent-tempered, and, perhaps, a dangerous man, but not that he Avas a liar.” The same general principle applies to all cases. A man may be so incontinent as to destroy his reputation for chastity, and yet retain a scrupulous regard for truth. Want of chastity, in many instances, might include a Avant of veracity; but, it must be admitted, that this is not always so. It is only with the witness’s character for truth and veracity with Avliich the jury have to deal. A witness, although unchaste, is entitled to credit if the jury are convinced that his, or her testimony is true. A witness, although chaste, is not entitled to credit if the jury are convinced that his, or her, testimony is false. ‘ ‘ The only object in inquiring into the character of a witness,” as Avas said in Rudsill v. Slingerland, “ is to ascertain whether his statements, in themselves, are entitled to credit; if he is a truthfnl person, they are; otherwise they are not. A Avitness, therefore, in coming into court, Avould, perhaps, properly be considered as asserting his character for truthfulness to be good, and be charged with notice to defend it; but Ave are unable to see Avhy a witness should be held responsible to ansAver for, ór be required to meet an attach upon his
9. The last objection is presented by the affidavits made by the defendant and by his counsel. It is alleged in the affidavit made by defendant’s counsel that during the closing argument of the district attorney, “the court-room Avas crowded to its fullest capacity Avith spectators, both seated