65 Iowa 60 | Iowa | 1884
V. In our opinion the instructions given by the court to the jury fully and fairly cover every proper question in the case. They call attention to the contradictory statements of the prosecutrix in her testimony upon the two trials, and state that if she intentionally testified falsely she might be discredited altogether, and direct the jury that they “are to j udge of her testimony, and determine how far, if at all, she is corroborated or contradicted by herself or others, and give it such credit as it may be entitled to, or none, as you may fairly judge to be right.” Counsel for the defendant claims that the instructions are erroneous in that they confine the jury to a consideration of such facts, if any, as to which the witness intentionally testified falsely; and it is further objected that the part of the instructions above quoted authorized the jury to find corroborative facts in the testimony of the prosecutrix. We do not think the instructions are vulnerable to the objections claimed, especially in view of the very full and fair directions elsewhere contained in the" charge upon the question of corroboration.
VI. The motion for a- new trial was supported by an affidavit of defendant’s counsel, in .which the district attorney was charged with misconduct in his closing argument to the jury. The district attorney filed a counter-affidavit, in which he claimed that his conduct and argument were highly proper, in view of the fact that it was but a reply to the argument of defendant’s counsel. It is unnecessary to set out these affidavits in this opinion. It is enough to say that we do not
We have examined the whole record in the case, and given, as we think, proper consideration to the very able and exhaustive argument of counsel for the defendant, and are united in the conclusion that the judgment of the district court must be ■
Affirmed.