65 Iowa 85 | Iowa | 1884
Another position urged by counsel is that, as the charge in the indictment is that defendant permitted the drunkenness, etc., to be carried on at his place, the state should have been required to prove the offense as thus charged, and that defendant ought not to be convicted on proof of a different state of facts. This position, stated in another form, is that the indictment charges that defendant permitted drunkenness, etc., to occur at his place on more than one occasion, whereas, under the instructions, he may be convicted on proof that he
Counsel excepts to that portion of the instruction which is in italics, particularly to the latter clause. If the clause objected to could be considered as entirely distinct from the balance of the instruction, we might not be disposed to approve it. Rut the instruction should be considered as a whole. It is not fair or just to select a single sentence or phrase from an instruction, and say that the sentence or phrase thus selected is incorrect. We should look rather at the whole of the instruction, and consider whether it, as a whole, enunciates a correct rule, and, looking at the instruction in question as a whole, we think it is not objectionable. The jury are told, in effect, that they are not to convict the defendant unless they are satisfied by the evidence to a moral certainty that he is guilty. What we have said as to the objection to this instruction applies with equal force to the objections urged by counsel to other instructions. They are mere criticisms of single sentences or phrases used in the instructions, and do not deal with the instruction as a whole. We have examined the charge of the court with care, and we think it fully and fairly presents the law of the case. We have also examined the whole record, and we do not find that it contains any error prejudicial to the rights of the defendant. The judgment of the district court is, therefore,
Affirmed.