16 Minn. 75 | Minn. | 1870
By the Court,
This case is brongnt into this court by a writ of error to the court below. The statute provides, that the clerk, upon a writ of error being filed with him, shall transmit to this court a copy of the judgment roll and of the bill of exceptions, if any. Gen. St at., ch. 117, see. 5.
The return in the cause under consideration contains no “case ” or “ bill of exceptions”; the record, therefore, does not show any of the evidence, nor any exceptions taken by the defendant upon the trial, nor does the return show the grounds or proceedings upon which the motion for a new trial was based; therefore, the objections urged by the defendants counsel in this court, to the rulings of the court below upon the trial, that the evidence was incompetent to establish the death of the party killed, because it was wholly circumstantial, and that there was misconduct on the part of the jury, cannot be sustained.
The defendant’s counsel also urged upon the argument as ground of error, that the record shows that the defendant was sworn as a witness in the case upon the trial, but does not show-that it was at his own request.
By our statute, the minutes of the trial constitute a part of the judgment roll, [Geni. Stat., ch. 118, see. 1. subd. 4); and if error appears therein, the defendant is perhaps entitled to the benefit of it. But the record here shows no error.
The copy of the minutes of the trial, among other things, after showing the meeting of the court, states as follows:
The next question for our consideration is whether the verdict is supported by the indictment. The indictment is substantially in the form prescribed by the statute, and is sufficient to embrace the crime of murder in the first degree. State vs. Dumphey, 4 Minn. 443.
The statutes of this state provide that “upon an indictment for an offence consisting of different degrees, the jury may find the defendant not guilty of the degree charged in the indictment, and guilty of any degree inferior thereto. Upon an indictment for any offence, the jury may find the defendant not guilty of the commission thereof, and guilty of an attempt to commit the same. Upon an indictment for
Offences within the two degrees of murder above soecified were murder at common law.
The statute has created no new offence, but merely divided the common law offence into different degrees, based upon circumstances mitigating the crime, and has reduced the penalty to be inflicted on the criminal when convicted of such offence as so modified. The crime, whatever its degree, remains the same in its nature and name; the pleadings are not thereby changed, nor is it necessary that the indictment should show what degree of the crime is charged. Commonwealth vs. Flanagan, 7 W. & S. 418.
If the indictment charges the crime in terms which embrace the highest degree, a conviction may be had under our statute for that or any lesser degree of the same offence. State vs. Dumphey, 4 Minn. 443. The rule has been well laid down by the court of appeals of New York in determ
There can be no doubt that the killing charged in the indictment in this case may have been perpetrated by an act and under circumstances which would constitute murder in the second degree, and as the peculiar characteristics of murder in the second degree need not be stated when the indictment, as in this case, charges the crime of murder in the first degree, the proofs necessary to sustain a conviction for murder in the second degree would be admissible under the indictment. We must presume, then, id the absence of anything in the record to the contrary, that the verdict was supported by the evidence, and that the act for which the defendant is convicted is the same act charged in the indictment.
The only remaining objection is that the jury has not negatived the higher offence of murder in the first degree as charged in the indictment, but have convicted the defendant
Judgment affirmed