59 Iowa 471 | Iowa | 1882
At the March term, 1881, of said court, the defendant was again put upon trial upon the indictment. He filed a written plea setting out the facts, and alleging that legal jeopardy had attached and that he could not again be put upon trial upon the indictment. The cause was submitted to a jury
It is provided by the constitution of this State that “no person shall, after acquittal, be tried for the same offense.” It is urged that the facts above cited amounted in law to an acquittal, or, what is the same thing, being once in jeopardy. “A person is in legal jeopardy when he is put upon trial, before a court of competent jurisdiction, upon an indictment or information which is sufficient in form and substance to sustain a conviction, and a jury has been charged with his deliverance. And a jury is said to he thus charged when they have been impaneled and sworn.” Cooley’s Const. Lim., 325.
While this is the general rule, there are many exceptions to it in the common law. If, by any overruling necessity, the jury are discharged without a verdict, as from the sickness or death of the judge holding the court, or of a juror, or the inability of the jury to agree on a verdict, or if the term of the court as fixed by law comes to an end before the trial is finished, or if the jury are discharged with the consent of the defendant, or a new trial be granted, the defendant may again be put upon trial upon the same indictment. Most of these exceptions are provided for by statute in this State. Code, § § 4443-4; 4455-6-7-9. And in State v. Redman, 17 Iowa, 329, it was held that when a verdict is insufficient and defective in not responding to the indictment, the court may set it aside and try the prisoner again on the same indictment. In the State v. Calendine, 8 Iowa, 288, when the name of a material witness upon the part of the State was not indorsed on the indictment, he not having been before the grand jury, and objection being made .to his testimony, the court dismissed the indictment, and ordered the prisoner to be held to bail, and another indictment was found, it was held that the defendant could not again be put upon trial. In that case it is said that “it is not at all times within the discretion of the court to stop the prosecution, and still hold the accused to answer to the same offense on a future charge. It may discharge the jury under peculiar circumstances, in
The question as to the emergency upon which the court was adjourned in this case was tried in the court below, and it was found that the court was justified in making the adjournment. Of course, it must not be understood that the rule requires that an actual necessity should exist for the discharge of the jury. If that were to be the test, then, in case of the sickness of the judge or a juror, the defendant might object that the sickness was so slight as not to absolutely require that the trial be stopped. Something must be left to the discretion of the court. If the discretion be not abused, the defendant has no cause of complaint.
We think that in the case at bar the discretion of the judge in determining there was sufficient cause to adjourn the term was wisely exercised. To hold otherwise would be to establish a rule that a defendant in a criminal case has the right to require that a judge shall proceed with the trial while his wife is dying at his home. The law makes no such inhuman requirements. A judge under such circumstances would be as unfit to proceed with the trial of a case as he would be if laboring under a severe fit of sickness. If, under these circumstances, we were to order the absolute discharge of the defendant, it would justly strike the profession as an act not required by, but subversive of, the ends of public justice.
It is contended that because of this conduct of the district attorney the judgment should be reversed. Section 3636 of Miller’s Code provides that defendants in criminal proceedings shall be competent witnesses in their own behalf, but, if a defendant should elect not to become a witness, that fact shall not have any weight against him on the trial, and shall not be referred to by counsel for the State, and if counsel should do so, defendant shall be entitled to a new trial.
It is conceded that it was the right of the district attorney to comment on such testimony as the defendant gave, but it is urged that he had no right to comment upon the defendant’s failure to testify as to matters regarding which he preferred to keep his mouth closed.
The exemption from unfavorable comment extends only to such defendants as choose not to avail themselves of the privilege of testifying in their own behalf. Here the defendant put himself upon the stand as a witness, and we can see no reason why the counsel for the State should not comment on his testimony as fully as on that of any other witness. By putting himself upon the stand and testifying to material facts in his defense, the defendant waived the protection which the statute accords to him. See Cooley’s Const. Lim., 317 and note.
Affirmed.