50 Iowa 43 | Iowa | 1878
“J. A. Cunningham,
“Clerk of the District Court of Washington county, Iowa.”
The defendants moved to set aside the indictment on the ground that it appeared upon its face that it had not been presented to the district court of Washington county, but had been presented to the district court of Jefferson county. The court overruled the motion, and the appellant assigns the same as error.
Section 4294 of the Code provides that an indictment, when found, must be presented by the foreman, in the presence of the grand jury, to the court, and marked “filed” by the clerk of the court. This means, of course, that it must be presented to the district court of the county in which the indictment is found, and marked “filed” by the clerk of such court. The indictment in question appears to have been filed by the clerk of the proper court, and it is not anywhere shown to us, nor claimed, indeed, that it was not presented to that court.
If it was so presented it is sufficient; and as the court must have known whether it was so presented or not we must-assume that the court, in overruling the motion, acted upon its own knowledge that it was so presented.
The Attorney General suggests that probably a printed form of an indictment prepared for Jefferson county was used, and
If the defendants had been charged with two crimes committed in Washington county the whole indictment would have been bad for duplicity. But the charge of a crime committed in Jefferson county was mere surplusage.
III. In the fourth instruction the jury was told that all who aid and abet in the commission of a public offense are equally guilty, whether present and doing the acts constituting the crime or not, and that if they should find that the defendants were jointly engaged in business and kept liquors as charged, to sell in violation of law, and one of the parties made the sales, if any there were made, then all would be equally guilty. The giving of this instruction is assigned as error. The appellant contends that there was no evidence that his co-defendants were engaged in the business, and that the instruction should not have been given for this reason. Whether this he so or not, we see no reason why the appellant-should complain.
IV. The fifth instruction assumes that there was evidence' from which the jury might find that liquors were kept for sale
Y. The defendants David Smouse, Sr., and David Smouse, Jr., moved the court to tax two-thirds of the costs to the county. The court overruled the motion, and the appellant assigns the same as error. David Smouse, Sr., and David Smouse, Jr., were acquitted, and no costs taxed to them. There is no reason why they should have made such motion, nor can the apjiellant complain that their motion was overruled. We .see no error, and the case must be
Affirmed.