58 Mo. 556 | Mo. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the cour
The defendant was indicted in the Hickory Circuit Court. The indictment contained three counts which were based, respectively, on the 29th, 32nd and 33rd sections of "Wagn. Stat., eh. 42, pp. 449, 450. On his application, the venue was changed to Polk County, where, upon a trial had, he was duly convicted, and his punishment assessed at two years in the penitentiary. Eor a'reversal' of the judgment, there have been assigned various errors which will be briefly noticed. The record’ in this case sufficiently discloses, that
Although the opening order of the Hickory Circuit Court does not show that the Hon. B. H. Emerson was judge of the court, yet it shows his presence together with that of the other officers of the court, and a subsequent entry, made prior to the removal of the cause, shows with distinctness that he was judge of that court. The record shows also, that the defendant was duly arraigned, and pleaded not guilty in the Polk Circuit Court, prior to tlie impaneling of the j ury. This is shown by the judgment of conviction, so that the objection, on the score of there being no arraignment of the accused, is not true in point of fact.
The defendant had no “ right secured to him by the law ” to compel the State to elect, upon which count of the indictment, she would proceed at the trial. (State vs. Porter, 26 Mo., 201.)
There was no error'in overruling the motion of defendant to have the jury impaneled from the regular panel of jurors, which had been summoned for the term under the provisions of the act concerning jurors. (Sess. Acts, 1873, p. 46.) A portion of the regular panel were then sitting as a jury in the trial of another cause, and it was perfectly competent after exhausting the remainder of the regular panel, for the court to order the jury to be completed from the by-standers, under the terms of section six of the act referred to. And it was a matter of no moment, that the regular panel for the term was not selected by the County Court at least thirty days prior to the commencement of the term at which the prisoner was tried, in accordance with the above mentioned act. .That
The evidence in the case, which fully sustains the verdict ■ of the jury, shows an aggravated assault with a pistol; and the court very properly refused the admission of evidence to show that the defendant “apologized the next morning.” Offenses against the law cannot be wiped out, or atoned for, by apologies.
The instructions, given in behalf of both the State and the defendant, presented the law applicable to the facts proven with the most unexceptionable fairness. The first instruction asked by defendant was correctly refused, because it in effect asserted the principle, that, although defendant had made a felonious assault, yet, unless he thereby endangered the life of his uncle, he ought to be acquitted.
The question in such cases is not as to the effect of the act done, but as to the animus which prompted its commission. Drunkenness is no excuse for crime, so that even if there had been any evidence on which to base the fifth instruction asked by defendant, it was properly refused, as it enunciated a doctrine always repudiated by the courts.
Rut one point remains to be considered; and that is as to whether a general finding of guilty, where an indictment contains three counts, will support a judgment. In reference to this, it may be observed, that where, as in the case at bar, the several counts relate to the same transaction, and are framed on different sections of the statute to meet the exigencies'oecurring at the trial, that then a general finding, which does not exceed, in the punishment which it assesses, the maximum of that specified in any section on which auy count is based, will be permissible, and afford no grouud for arrest
In conclusion, the trial court ruled correctly on every point presented by the record, and its judgment is accordingly affirmed;