State v. PRLJA

189 P. 64 | Mont. | 1920

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant was convicted in the district court of Silver Bow county of the crime of assault in the second degree, committed upon the person of one Mike Burzan. The trouble out of which the charge arose occurred at the Northern Pacific depot in Butte ■during the farewell demonstration for departing Servian volunteers. It appears from the evidence that there was considerable shooting done, one witness comparing the disturbance to an old-*464time Fourth of July celebration, though there seems to have been no effort to stop it or to arrest those doing the shooting. While Burzan had a gun in his pocket, he took no part in the shooting and his gun remained in his pocket until removed by Prlja at the emergency hospital, later.

Appellant was at the time, and for years prior thereto had been, a police officer, though he was not in uniform at the time of the trouble. Burzan testified that Prlja accosted him with a demand to know why he looked at appellant in the manner he did, and when he answered Prlja struck him over the head with a revolver, then told him he was under arrest, and thereupon took him to the street and called the patrol wagon; that while waiting and while he (Burzan) remained passive, appellant again struck him over the head and shot him twice through the thigh.

Prlja’s version of the affair is that he attempted to arrest Burzan for carrying concealed weapons, and so notified him; that he resisted, and it was then that the blow was struck; and that at the time of the shooting Burzan attacked him and bit him on the cheek, and that Burzan’s friends were attempting to interfere. Burzan and other witnesses for the state denied that Prlja gave any reason for making an arrest, or that Burzan resisted or bit the officer.

Two separate appeals were taken, the one from the judgment and the other from the order denying appellant’s motion for a new trial. But three assignments of error are made, aside from that predicated on the court’s denial of the motion for a new trial.

Assignments numbered 1 and 2 urge that the court erred in [1, 2] sustaining the state’s objections to the following questions propounded to the witness Burzan on cross-examination:

(1) “Now, you didn’t have a permit to carry that gun, did you?”

(2) “You know it is against the law to carry a gun, don’t you?”

*465Counsel for the defense had been permitted to go fully into the question of the witness having a gun on his person at the time, although nothing had been said regarding a gun in the witness’ testimony on direct examination, and the fact that Burzan at the timé was carrying a concealed weapon was a part of the defendant’s case. No objection was interposed to the line of examination until counsel asked the first question set out above.

In order to make out the defense it was not necessary to negative the exception contained in the concealed weapon statute (Laws 1903, Chap. 35) any more than it would have been necessary to charge the same in an information for carrying concealed weapons. (State v. Tully, 31 Mont. 365, 3 Ann. Cas. 824, 78 Pac. 760; Territory v. Burns, 6 Mont. 72, 9 Pac. 432.) And the knowledge of the witness as to whether or not he knew that the carrying of a concealed weapon was against the law would not affect the officer’s right to make an arrest, if he was in fact violating the law. No attempt was later made to show that the witness had a permit to carry a weapon, and the exclusion of his answers to the questions propounded did not affect the substantial rights of the defendant in the case, whether such exclusion was proper or erroneous. An answer to the first question in the negative would not have aided, while in the affirmative it would have injured, appellant’s defense.

While, in making a lawful arrest, if the person to be arrested [3] either flees or forcibly resists, the officer may use all necessary means to effect the arrest (Rev. Codes, sec. 9064), if he unnecessarily assaults such person, he is liable for such an assault (State v. Pugh, 101 N. C. 737, 9 Am. St. Rep. 44, 7 S. E. 757; 2 R. C. L. 471.)

The question here is, Was the assault made by appellant such as would excuse him? And this question was decided by the jury adversely to appellant’s contention. No question is raised as to the sufficiency of the evidence, and we cannot disturb the verdict of the jury.

*466Specification No. 3 is that the court erred in not ruling upon [4] and sustaining appellant’s personal objection to the question of the county attorney, on cross-examination: “Q. Do you feel that it is necessary for you to have a gun on your person in this courtroom?” The defendant did not answer the.question, but stated: “Object to the question; it is prejudicial to me.” "Thereupon the county attorney asked that Prlja be ordered to put his gun away, and the court directed him to turn it over to his counsel. There was no ruling on the question objected to, and consequently no exception taken. It is urged that the interrogation by the county attorney leading up to the question objected to and what transpired immediately thereafter was for the purpose of creating a prejudice against the defendant, and an antagonism toward him, of such a nature as to prevent him from having a fair and impartial trial. If such was the case, appellant brought the condition upon himself by going armed into the courtroom; a man with such experience as an officer as is shown by the record Prlja had should have realized the propriety of laying aside his weapon on entering the courtroom, if, indeed, he had any excuse for bringing it with him to the courthouse where he was to be tried for an assault with a deadly weapon. On discovering that the witness was armed, the county attorney was justified in calling the matter to the attention of the court, and if thereby appellant was prejudiced, he is in no position to complain.

The question to which the objection was directed was not [5] answered, and appellant stands in the same position as though his sole objection had been sustained.

.2. The three specifications of error were also urged as ground [6, 7] for a new trial, in connection with certain affidavits filed in support of the motion. These affidavits are made on behalf of appellant by five persons who claim to have been present •during some part of the trouble, and tend to either contradict witnesses for the state or to corroborate the appellant’s version. In addition to the affidavits of proposing witnesses, there was filed the affidavit of Joseph H. Griffin, as follows:

*467“State of Montana,
"“‘County of Silver Bow — ss:
“Joseph H. Griffin, being first duly sworn upon oath, deposes and says: That he is now, and during the trial of the action wherein the state of Montana was plaintiff and Philip Prlja was defendant was, one of the attorneys for said defendant, Philip Prlja; that prior to the trial of said action and during the trial of said action affiant did not know of the existence of the evidence set forth in the affidavits of S. N. Price, G. E. Miller, Tom Vucinieh, Mrs. D. Aclinovich, and John Boscovieh, and affiant could not with reasonable diligence have discovered said affidavits and presented same upon the trial of said action; that the said evidence set forth in said affidavits came to the attention of affiant about one month after the hearing of the above-entitled action.
“John (Joseph) H. Griffin.
“Subscribed and sworn to. * # * ”

The showing made falls far short of the requisites of such an application, laid down by this and other courts, to entitle a defendant to a new trial. No affidavit is made by the moving party himself; the record discloses that he was represented by two attorneys besides Griffin, and Griffin’s affidavit shows that he was but one of the attorneys for Prlja; yet the application contains the affidavit of neither of these attorneys.

A new trial ean be granted on the ground of newly discovered evidence only when it appears that the defendant could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and produced it at the trial. (Sec. 9350, Rev. Codes.) Yet the only reference to diligence contained in the entire application is the bald conclusion in the Griffin affidavit that he, as one of the attorneys for defendant, “could not with reasonable diligence have discovered said affidavits and presented same upon the trial, ’ ’ etc. It will be noted that the wording of the statute is that “the defendant could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and produced at the trial,” and this court has held that “It is fundamental that the moving party must show by his own affi*468davit that the new evidence was not known to him at the time of the trial. Upon that question the affidavits of other persons, are not, as a general rule, sufficient.” (Smith v. Shook, 30 Mont. 30, 77 Pac. 513; citing 1 Spelling on New Trial & Appeal, par. 207, and cases cited; Hayne on New Trial & Appeal, par. 92; Arnold v. Skaggs, 35 Cal. 684; Nicholson v. Metcalf, 31 Mont. 276, 78 Pac. 483.)

Even when a showing of diligence is made, and made by the moving party himself, the court has scrutinized the affidavit closely; thus, in In re Colbert’s Estate, 31 Mont. 461, 107 Am. St. Rep. 439, 3 Ann. Cas. 952, 78 Pac. 971, 80 Pac. 248, Mr. Commissioner Clayberg reviewed an extensive showing and stated: “It is well settled that a statement in an affidavit that the party has made inquiry of every person he thought might know anything about the case is insufficient” — citing a number of authorities.

In the case of State v. Matkins, 45 Mont. 58, 121 Pac. 881, this court said: “Applications for new trials on the ground of newly discovered evidence are not favored by the courts. The reason is that the moving party has already had a hearing after ample opportunity to prepare his case, and that, while smarting under defeat and disappointment, he is under strong-temptation to manufacture a plausible showing in support of his motion. lie may be entirely willing to take the chances of a new trial, but unwilling or afraid to swear to a statement necessary to procure it. It is often the case that the sense of loss arouses him to the diligent activity which he should have-put forth before the trial.”

Whether in this case the defendant was “unwilling or afraid to swear to a statement necessary to procure” a. new trial, the fact remains that he did not do so and that a showing of reasonable diligence is entirely lacking, and, in these respects at least, the showing is fatally defective.

In the case of State v. Brooks, 23 Mont. 146, 57 Pac. 1038, the court said: “As has been repeatedly held by this court, a motion for a new trial is addressed to the sound legal discretion of the trial court; and the action of the latter will not be *469disturbed, except in an instance manifesting a clear and unmistakable abuse of such discretion. This rule is peculiarly applicable to an. application based upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, which not only involves an enlarged discretion in the trial court, but has never been looked upon with favor, but rather with distrust.”

There was no abuse of discretion in the action of the trial ■court in denying the motion for a new trial, and we find no substantial error in the record.

The judgment and order are affirmed.

'Affirmed.

Mr. Chief Justice Brantly and Associate Justices Holloway, Hurly and Cooper concur.
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