108 So. 410 | La. | 1926
The accused were charged with murder. They were tried and convicted of manslaughter. From the verdict and sentence *189 they appealed. There are five bills of exception in the record.
"They shall have criminal jurisdiction, as committing magistrates only, and shall have power to bail or discharge, in cases not capital or necessarily punishable at hard labor, and may require bonds to keep the peace."
The Constitutions of 1898 and 1913, in addition to the foregoing powers and jurisdiction, authorized the General Assembly, by general or special laws, to invest justices of the peace with criminal jurisdiction over misdemeanors, to be tried by a jury of not more than five nor less than three persons, as might be provided by law. The Constitution of 1921 simply abrogates the power of the Legislature to invest justices of the peace with jurisdiction to try misdemeanors, but in all other respects the existing and two last preceding Constitutions are identical in so far as the criminal jurisdiction of justices of the peace is concerned. Since 1855 justices of the peace in country parishes have been empowered to perform the duties of the coroner in case there is no coroner or in the event of his absence or inability to act. In Plaquemines parish a coroner was regularly elected and qualified, but he thereafter resigned and refused to perform the duties of coroner. This was the situation when the homicide charged in this case was committed, and the justice of the peace in the ward where the homicide occurred properly held the inquest. The ruling was therefore correct. R.S. § 2056. *190
The cause of death may be established, as any other fact, by oral proof.
"I ask you, Mr. Savastano, when you were crossing the river with Felix Monroe, on your way to arrest Joe Monroe, Sr. and Jr., what Felix Monroe said to you about Clement Mackles' shotgun, and who had Clement Mackles' shotgun."
This question was objected to as irrelevant, leading, and hearsay. From the record we gather that the homicide was committed with Clement Mackles' shotgun, and, as the witness Felix Monroe had denied knowledge of the gun, it was proper for the state to impeach the testimony of the witness. The deputy sheriff answered the question as follows:
"He told me that his father, Joe Monroe, Sr., had borrowed Clement Mackles' shotgun and still had it."
The trial judge correctly overruled the objection to this testimony. State v. Hogan, *192
42 So. 352,
We find no prejudicial error in the record, and the verdict and sentence are therefore affirmed.
O'NIELL, C.J., dissents from the ruling on Bills 3, 4, and 5.