74 Iowa 545 | Iowa | 1888
This case was submitted on a voluminous transcript of the record, without an abstract, without any assignment of errors or argument of counsel, and with the citation of but a single authority. In this condition of the case, we have examined the record with care, for the p urpose of ascertaining what errors, if any, had been committed in the district court, and the grounds upon which defendant relies for a reversal of the 'judgment.
I. The defendant asked the court to give the jury the following instruction :
The court refused this instruction, but charged the jury as follows:
“ When the state shows beyond reasonable doubt, in the first instance, that the defendant is guilty, then defendant comes to his plea of insanity; and, when he comes to rely upon such plea, then, under the law, he is required, in order to excuse his act on account of the alleged insanity, to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, — that is, by the greater weight of credible evidence in the case, — that he was insane.”
Other portions of the charge, which we need not set out, further explained the paragraph quoted. The charge given was as favorable to defendant as was the instruction he asked. In legal effect, if a claim is made probable by the evidence, it is for the reason that the
We discover no error in the record, and the judgment of the district court is therefore
Aeeibmed.