No. 9563 | La. | Jan 15, 1886

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Eennee, J.

The errors assigned are presented upon a hill of exceptions and a motion in arrest of judgment.

I.

The indictment is for entering a store with inteut to steal and for petty larceny.

Tiie bill of exceptions recites, in its body, tliat the prosecuting witness stated, among other tilings, that he had occasion to step into the rear place portion of his store “to get a drink of water and while so occupied a child, whom he said he left minding the place, called out to him “you are robbed!” whereupon the counsel for accused moved that the statement, with regard to the exclamation of the child, should be stricken out as hearsay, which objection was overruled by the court and to which ruling the exception is taken. The judge, before signing the bill, made his own statement in the following words: “ The witness stated that he stepped into a room adjoining his store to get a glass of water and as he did so, his little girl cried out you are being robbed; that he rushed in the store as accused was in the act of railing out.”

Counsel for accused vehemently denies the correctness of the judge’s statement and even asks our attention to certain original documents, not part of the transcript and filed here without any authority. Of course we cannot look at these, being completely dehors the record.

It is equally clear that wo must accept and act upon the statement of the judge. It is his signature alone which imparts force to the bill; and the bill, in fact, is merely his statement of what occurred. He cannot be compelled to make a statement which he does not consider correct; and while his duty to make a correct statement is clear, the breach of that duty cannot be remedied in the mode here pioposed. Defendant must either stand upon the hill as signed by the judge, or he has no hill at all.

With due respect to the philosophical discussion of the subject o¡. res gestee by defendant’s counsel, we must say that, under the state-*68merit as made by the judge, tho exclamation of the child was too' clearly a part of the ros gesteo to admit of question. The x>articipantsin the events which the witness was relating, were the child who made-the exclamation, the witness who heard it and in consequence rushed-into the store, and the defendant who ran out of the store; and the-three acts are insejiarably connected with, and explanatory of, each other and together constitute the transaction. The exclamation falls clearly within the rule laid down by Mr. Wharton and never disputed by any authority, viz: “What is said and done by participants,, under the immediate spur of the transaction, becomes thus part, of the transaction, because it is the transaction which then speaks. * * * The question is, is the evidence offered that of the. event speaking-through participants, or that of observers speaking about the events V In the first case what was said can be introduced without calling those-who said it; in tho second case, they must be called.” Whar. Cr. Ev., §§ 262, 263; Roseoe’s Cr. Ev., 22; 1 Greenleaf on Ev. §§ 99, 100.

The only question raised by tlie bill is as to the admissibility of tile-exclamation. There is none on tlie subject of its evidentiary value.

II.

The motion in arrest is based on two grounds, viz:

1st. That there is no such offense known to the laws of Louisiana as that set forth in the first count. The defect suggested is that the-word used in the indictment is “ store,” while that used in the statute-is “ shop.” This point was long since disposed of as without force. State vs. Smith, 5 Ann. 340.

2d. That, if the first count be a nullity, the second count for petit larceny, is insufficient in its averments.

As this ground is conditioned upon our finding the first count to be a nullity, our ruling sustaining its sufficiency, destroys the objection which, however, otherwise, has no foundation under §§ L062, and 1063,. Revised Statutes.

Judgment affirmed.

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