53 Kan. 767 | Kan. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Isaac G. Reed was charged, in an information filed in the district court of Sumner county, with shooting and killing Isaac Hopperj in Sumner county, in such a manner and with such an intent as to constitute murder in the first degree. The information was filed on August 31, 1892, and on October 10, 1892, upon application of the defendant, a change of venue was granted, and the cause transferred to the district court of Cowley county for trial. The trial was begun in the latter court on January 10, 1893, and after the impaneling of the jury, the production of the evidence for the state and for the defendant, the charging of the jury, after the opening argument in behalf of the state and the argument in favor of the defendant, and before the closing argument for the state had been completed, on January 20, one of the jurors became sick, and was unable to attend at the trial. The cause was continued from time to time for five days, and on January 26, after an examination, and without the consent of the defendant, the court determined that it was impossible for that jury to conclude the trial, and thereupon it discharged the jury. At the next term of the court, the plea of former jeopardy was interposed, and attached to it was the evidence taken by the court when the first jury was discharged; but the court sustained a demurrer, and ruled that the discharge of the jury, having been made necessary by the sickness of a juror, did not operate as a bar to a further trial. The trial then proceeded, and the defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree, from which conviction he appeals to this court, alleging numerous grounds of error. We will only notice those which seem to be material, or require attention at this time.
“The jury may be discharged by the court on account of the sickness of a juror, or other accident or calamity requiring their discharge, or by consent of both parties, or after they have been kept together until it satisfactorily appears that there is no probability of their agreeing.” (Civil Code, §281; see, also, Crim. Code, § 208.)
There may be some cause for complaint at the very extended inquiry that was made as to the relations between the defendant and Mrs. Hopper. A detailed inquiry was made, and a large volume of testimony was taken. It may be said, however, that this was due, to a large extent, to the fact that an undue intimacy between these parties was denied by the defendant. The testimony of the illicit relation, however, if it existed, was receivable in evidence as tending to show the motive of the defendant in killing the deceased. (Johnson v. The State, 4 S. Rep. 535; Pierson v. The People, 79 N. Y. 424;
There is a further complaint that the court failed to submit' an instruction upon manslaughter in the second degree. As the instruction complained of related to a degree of crime inferior to that of which the defendant is convicted, this objection becomes immaterial. (The State v. Dickson, 6 Kas. 209; The State v. Potter, 15 id. 302; The State v. Rhea, 25 id. 576; The State v. Yarborough, 39 id. 588.) Further than that, however, we think the testimony was not such as to justify the court in submitting an instruction as to that grade of offense.
Other criticisms are made upon the charge of the court, but in them we find no error, nor anything which requires further comment. For the errors referred to, the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial.