8 Utah 428 | Utah | 1893
The defendant was accused of tbe crime of adultery, and a jury found him guilty. He appealed from tbe order of the court overruling bis motion for a new trial, and from tbe judgment on the verdict.
Tbe court gave an oral charge to the jury which was not taken down by a reporter, and this defendant assigns as error. The last clause of § 5033, Comp. Laws Utah, 1888, is as follows: “If the charge be not given in writing, it must be taken down by the phonographic reporter.” It appears from the record that the defendant and his counsel were present when the charge was given, and it does not appear that the attention of the court was called to the omission now complained of, or that any objection was made or exception taken. It does appear that counsel for the defendant first called the attention of the court to the fact that its charge had not been taken down two or three days after the trial, upon his motion for a new trial. If objection had been made to the oversight when it occurred the court would have reduced the charge .to writing, or would have ordered it taken down by the stenographic reporter. In the case of Gibson v. State, (Fla.) 7 South. Rep. 376, the court said: “In regard to the alleged error of the court in delivering .a portion of the charge to the jury orally it does not appear from the record that any exception was taken to this at the time. Under the practice of this court in construing the statutes in relation to oral and written charges, such error, being as to a merely formal requirement, is considered waived if not excepted to before retirement of the jury. Even if - alleged as error on a motion for a new trial, it comes too late. The statute which authorizes a party to embody, in a motion for a new trial, mistakes of the court not