21 N.M. 110 | N.M. | 1915
OPINION OP THE COURT.
The appellant was convicted in the district court of Guadalupe county of assault with a deadly weapon. On December 10, 1914, J. W. Mayes was engaged in erecting a wire fence on land south of the residence of appellant and Smith McDonald, his father, near Alamo, Guadalupe county, N. M. Mayes had stretched wires along the line of the proposed fence, preparatory to fastening them to the fence posts. In returning to his home with a load of brush, Smith McDonald removed some of the wires on the ground so that his team and wagon could reach the east and west road. ' He then drove along this road until he reached a point opposite Mayes, when he (Smith McDonald) threw a part of the wires with which Mayes was working to one side. Mayes informed him that he should not disturb the wires, which led to a heated conversation between the two, which finally resulted in Smith McDonald beginning an assault upón.'; Mayes. '' During this assault Martin McDonald came to. the assistance of-hi's fathér and engaged, in the assault jointly with his father; After the father and Martin McDonald had succeeded in successfully assaulting Mayes with their fists, the father demanded that his son get a small target .rifle which the son had left on. the ground a short distance from where the parties were fighting. All three of them started for the gun; Martin McDonald first reaching it. He raised it as if to strike Mayes, and the parties again engaged in assaulting1 each other; Mayes being on .the defensive. This assault resulted in Mayes receiving at the hands of -the appellant sehious head wounds, inflicted with the ■ -target ’ rifle, which rendered Mayes unconscious.
“And it is not error for the prosecuting attorney in his. opening address to state facts as he expects to prove them, although not followed by proof because the facts themselves are irrelevant, or because he fails to introduce any evidence. * * * to support them.” 12 Cyc. 570.
In People v. Gleason, 127 Cal. 323, 59 Pac. 592, one of the cases illustrating the point, the court said:
“It would be going a great distance to hold that every time a district attorney happens to state in his opening more than he is able to prove the judgment should be reversed for misconduct; and there is nothing in the present case to show such an extreme disregard for the truth, and such a clear intent to influence the jury by false statements, as would warrant a reversal of the case upon that ground. Usually such an overstatement is prejudicial to the party making it.”
The judgment of the trail court is therefore, affirmed; and it is so ordered.