Territory v. Abeita

1 N.M. 545 | N.M. | 1873

By Court,

Bristol, ¡T.:

Placide Abeita, the defendant herein, at the May term of the district court for the second judicial district, in and for the county of Bernalillo, in the year 1872, was tried and found guilty upon an indictment charging him with having committed the crime of robbery from the person of one Jose Duran. The cause has been removed to this court for review on bill of exceptions and appeal. After verdict a motion was made on behalf of the defendant for a new trial, on the ground of irregularities in the selection and summoning of the petit jurors serving at the term aforesaid, and from whom the jury impaneled to try the cause was taken; that one of such jurors had been summoned from an adjoining county, and was a non-resident of said county of Bernalillo, and that the court below erred in refusing to instruct the jury as requested on behalf of the defendant.

The respective points of error relied on by counsel for the defendant, we will take up and dispose of in the order presented. The first point of error assigned by counsel for the defendant is that the petit jury was not selected by the sheriff of Bernalillo county, but by the United States marshal, and that one of the jurors was a resident of Valencia county. There is nothing before the court from the proceedings in the court below showing how the jurors in attendance had been selected. The only statement appearing on the record in any manner relating to the jury is an-admission at some stage of the proceedings that the summons for the petit jury was issued to the United States marshal, and served by him, and that Gregorio A. Otero, one of the jury that tried the cause, was not a resident of Bernalillo county, but a resident of Valencia county. The record does not show that the defendant interposed any objection to the jury until after verdict. Neither does it appear that the grounds of objection then interposed were not known to the defendant at the time the jury was impaneled. Without stopping to inquire whether there were or were not irregularities either in the selection or summoning of the jury, it is evident that none existed which the defendant could not and did not waive bj omitting to interpose bis objections at tbe time of impaneling tbe jury. Tbe defendant was at liberty to submit bis case to an incompetent jury if be saw fit. If be did so, be was bound by it. It was too late at any subsequent stage of tbe proceedings, and especially after verdict, for bim to interpose bis objections unless it appeared that tbe grounds of objections were previously unknown to bim: 1 Bish. Crim. Proc., secs. 783, 793, 807; 6 Cal. 405; 16 Ill. 364; 6 N. H. 352; 5 Mass. 435; 6 Miss. 426; 5 Wis. 324; 1 Pick. 38.

Tbe second ground of error assigned on bebalf of tbe defendant is that the court below erred in refusing to give tbe jury tbe first instruction asked for by tbe defendant. Tbe instruction asked for was as follows: “If tbe jury believe from tbe evidence in tbe case that tbe defendant did not with force and violence take tbe property in tbe indictment, then tbe jury should find tbe defendant not guilty.”

Tbe indictment herein was found under section 30, chapter 51, page 326, of tbe Compiled Laws of New Mexico. Tbe indictment does not contain tbe allegation that tbe robbery was committed by force and violence, but with “force and arms,” and “by assault and putting in fear.” This instruction therefore, under tbe statute, if given, would have been a positive misdirection to tbe jury, as tbe force may not have been applied in a manner to convince tbe jury beyond a reasonable doubt of “ violence,” while they might have been satisfied beyond any doubt that there was an “ assault and putting in fear,” which in addition to tbe other essential ingredients of tbe offense was all that was requisite for a conviction.

Tbe third and last ground of error assigned on bebalf of tbe defendant is that tbe court below erred in refusing to give the jury tbe fourth instruction asked for by tbe defendant, which was as folloivs: “If tbe jury are satisfied that Jose Duran is fully contradicted by other good men as witnesses, and that be was drunk, and admitted it before the justice and denies it here, and in other respects is contradicted by tbe witnesses, tbe jury should give no weight to bis evidence unless corroborated by other evidence in tbe case.” The evidence disclosesabuudantmaterial outof which proper instructions to the jury upon the testimony tending to discredit that given by the witness, Jose Duran, might have been drafted and presented to the court with the request that they be given to the jury. But the instructions asked for in that connection were too broad in their terms, and too much incumbered with irrelevant and improper matters, to render them a suitable charge to the jury. In the shape presented, they would have tended rather to mislead than to aid the jury in applying the law to the evidence.

There was no error in the rulings of the court below that will justify this court in disturbing the judgment.

Judgment of the court below affirmed.

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