The manifest purpose of the requirement that courts shall be held at the place provided by law is to give due stability and dignity to the administration of justice, and to protect the interests of litigants. In Hobart v. Hobart, 45 Iowa, 501, it was said that, to give existence to a court, its officers and the time and place of holding it must be such as are prescribed by law. This rule was recognize,d in Casey v. Stewart, Adm'r, 60 Iowa, 160; Moore v. C. & St. P. & K. Ry. Co., 93 Iowa, 484, and again in Funk v. Carroll County, 96 Iowa, 158. In the Funic Case the issue was tried to the court, and the testimony of a witness was taken at his residence, away from the courthouse, and we held that the court had no authority to adjourn to a private house for the purpose of a trial. There is a well-defined distinction, however, between the cases cited and the one at bar. Here the court was formally and regularly convened at the courthouse, in its own room, and the adjourriment was to a room in the same building. It may readily be conceded that the word “ place ” may sometimes mean a particular room or a particular spot in a room, but we are cited to no judicial construction so limiting it in a case of this kind. If the court be held in the building provided by law, though not in the room set apart for that purpose, we think the requirement
There was no error in admitting the ice pick, revolver, and billy in evidence. They were sufficiently identified, and were admissible as a part of the history of'the case. Stale v. Gray, 116 Iowa, 234; State v. Tyler, 122 Iowa, 125.
The eighth instruction is complained of. Therein was defined an accessory before the fact, and the court stated that, if certain facts were found proven, the jury should find the defendant guilty. The facts referred to were supported by evidence, and tended to show the defendant’s participation in the crime, and, if true, there could be no doubt that he aided and abetted its commission. The instruction was therefore correct.
The instruction on the question of the defendant’s previous good character need not be set out here. It has been given by trial courts times without number, and has been again, and yet again, approved by this court, and is the
We have given this case the consideration which its importance to the defendant and to the public demands, and find no error for which there should be a reversal. The judgment .is therefore affirmed.— Affirmed.