238 P. 312 | Idaho | 1925
The appellant was convicted of the crime of assault with intent to commit robbery. This appeal is from the judgment of conviction, and from an order denying motion for a new trial. The appellant urges a number of assignments of error, but the court does not feel the necessity of discussing all of them.
It is urged that the identification of the appellant by the complaining witness, as the party who committed the alleged assault, was wholly insufficient to warrant a conviction. The appellant, in his brief, apparently labors under the impression that the only identification by the complaining witness of the appellant as being the party who assaulted him, was by the appellant's voice alone. The complaining witness testified that he not only recognized the appellant by his voice, but further recognized his face, in part as follows:
"Q. How do you know it was Theron Wheeler?
"A. I bear him; his voice, of course, and after I see his face."
The record further discloses that the complaining witness and the appellant had met on divers occasions, and had, previous to the alleged assault, had some tentative business dealings, so that the complaining witness and the appellant were known to each other. The verdict rendered was, upon that point, supported by substantial and sufficient evidence.
The appellant further insists that the trial court erred in an instruction to the jury upon the question of alibi, in which the court used, in part, the following language:
"But it is your duty to examine such evidence carefully to determine its truth or falsity."
The objection is raised only to the phrase above mentioned. In brief, the theory of the appellant is that the trial court, by the use of the language quoted, induced or tended to induce the jury to believe that the court looked upon such defense with suspicion. This form of instruction, in more *215
exacting language, has been approved by appellate courts in numerous cases. (People v. Passafiume,
Another error is assigned in the admission of the evidence of the witnesses Simmons and Ezell, in response to questions as to the general demeanor or conduct of appellant when arrested. The demeanor or conduct of one accused of crime may be testified to in a criminal prosecution. (State v. Byrd,
Another assignment of error goes to the permitting of the witness Hector Dayley to testify, over objection, that some time in February, 1922, the appellant proposed to him that he and Dayley go to a party named Starkweather and get a case of whiskey. It is noted that the witness Dayley further testified that the appellant stated that he would get this whiskey with the use of a gun, or at least his answer implied that interpretation. The alleged assault was committed on or about April 6, 1922, so it will be observed that *216
this conversation must have, occurred approximately two months before the time of the alleged commission of the crime with which appellant is charged. The incident was too remote and too unrelated to the crime charged in the information to have been admissible under any possible theory of the state's case. There was no connection at all between the conversation testified to by the witness Dayley and the commission of the alleged crime. It was not a case where the prosecution was entitled to aid its proof of the offense charged by proof of other crimes or attempted crimes. (State v. Buster,
It is ordered that the judgment of conviction be reversed and a new trial granted.
Wm. E. Lee, Budge, Givens and Taylor, JJ., concur.