133 So. 349 | La. | 1931
The accused was indicted and tried for murder. The jury found him guilty of manslaughter, and, from that verdict and the court's sentence to imprisonment in the Louisiana State Penitentiary for not less than one nor more than three years, he appealed.
There are nine bills of exception in the transcript.
Bill No. 1 was reserved to the overruling of a motion to quash the indictment and bill No. 1 1/2 was reserved to the overruling of an objection, by the defendant, to the assistant district attorney participating in the prosecution of the case. Both of these bills are based upon a collateral attack upon the assistant district attorney's title to the office, and they may therefore be considered together.
It has been so often held that title to public office cannot be collaterally attacked that it seems superfluous to cite the authorities. A long list, however, may be found under paragraph 41, p. 694, vol. V, Louisiana Digest. The rule extends to all officers alike, whether executive or judicial. They can only be required to show that they are acting under color of title to the office. The rule that the acts of a de facto officer may only be called in question in proceedings to which he is a party is sanctioned by the great weight of authority in England and the United States. The trial Judge ruled accordingly and the rulings are correct. *23
"Except in extreme cases, the presumption is that the prejudicial effect on the jury of improper remarks made by counsel for the state was removed by the instructions of the court to the jury to disregard the same." State v. Easley,
To the same effect is State v. Johnson, 48 La. Ann. 87, 19 So. 213; State v. Spurling,
"Evidence of conviction of crime, but not of arrest, indictment or prosecution, is admissible for the purpose of impeaching the credibility of the witness. But before evidence of such former conviction can be adduced from any other source than the witness whose credibility is to be impeached, he must have been questioned on cross-examination as to such conviction, and have failed distinctly to admit the same; provided, always, that a witness, whether he be the defendant or not, may be compelled to answer on cross-examination whether or not he has ever been indicted or arrested and how many times."
The court's per curiam to this bill is an accurate, concise statement of the law, and the jury was properly instructed with reference to the testimony. The per curiam is as follows:
"The defendant having taken the witness stand in his own behalf, submitted himself to the rule that applies to any witness in a criminal case, and, for the purpose of testing his credibility, the state had a right to make him admit that he had been convicted of another crime in this Parish. This evidence *25 was restricted to the credibility of the witness, and the jurors were instructed to consider it only in that respect."
In a recent case, State v. Sanderson,
"However, the question propounded would have been admissible under the jurisprudence as it stood prior to the adoption of the Code of Criminal Procedure. It was relevant as seeking to elicit evidence touching the credibility of the witness, and was therefore connected with, or was incidental to, the examination in chief, for the evidence sought to be elicited might affect everything the witness testified to in chief. State v. Foster,
It appears from the court's per curiams to bills Nos. 5 and 6 that the rulings excepted to are correct. There is a difference between the recitals of these bills and the court's *27 statement of the facts. No testimony is attached to either bill, or found in the record, and there is no minute entry at variance with the judge's statement of the facts. The statement of the judge must therefore be accepted as correctly reflecting the facts.
Bill No. 7 is merely pro forma. It presents nothing for review.
Finding that, under the circumstances shown, the exclusion of proof, by the accused, of the granting to him of a pardon for the crime of larceny was prejudicial error, the verdict and sentence appealed from are set aside, and the case is remanded for trial according to law and the views herein expressed.