194 A. 387 | N.J. | 1937
The two defendants were jointly indicted for robbery (a payroll "hold-up") at the April term, 1935.
Defendant Locke was promptly apprehended, was arraigned, pleaded not guilty, and was released on bail. Rupprecht remained at large until December, 1936, when he also pleaded not guilty. Both defendants were placed on trial March 1st, 1937, when Rupprecht changed his plea to guilty and was remanded for sentence. The trial proceeded as to Locke, who was found guilty by the jury, and later sentenced. About two weeks after sentence his counsel asked for a new trial, which was denied. The case does not show the grounds of the application, nor has counsel seen fit to state them. The reason for alluding to this detail will appear presently. *31
There is no certificate of the entire trial record, and consequently the case is here on strict writ of error. There are only four assignments of error. The first is that the grand jury that found the indictment was illegally selected. This was not argued here, nor raised below, and there is not a scintilla of proof to support it. The same may be said of the second, that the general panel of petty jurors was illegal. The fourth, taken up out of numerical order, is that the verdict was against the weight of evidence. This, of course, is unavailable on strict writ of error. State v. Clark,
We confess to some surprise at the prosecution of this writ, in a case utterly devoid of technical or substantial merit. The judgment is affirmed. *33