8 Blackf. 101 | Ind. | 1846
Indictment for murder. The defendant was convicted of manslaughter, and his punishment fixed at ten years’ confinement in the state prison. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled, and the judgment and sentence of the Court passed upon the verdict of the jury; to reverse which, this writ of error is prosecuted.
The counsel for the defendant contends, 1. That there is a fatal defect in the indictment upon which the conviction was had. That indictment charges, among other things, “ that the said Walter P. Ward, with a certain gun which he the said Walter P. Ward in both hands then and there had and held,” &c., feloniously did shoot, &c. It is insisted that the omission of the word his before the word “hands” in this allegation is a substantial defect in the indictment, for which the judgment of the Court should have been arrested. The omission or insertion of that pronoun would go merely to the certainty of the allegation, and not to accuracy in the description of any of the acts constituting the crime, and we think the allegation sufficiently certain in its absence.
After the prosecuting attorney had closed the evidence on the part of the state, the defendant’s counsel moved the Court to instruct said attorney to call as witnesses two other persons then in the court-house, who were present at the affray in which the alleged murder was committed, in order that the defendant might have the advantage of their cross-examination, but the Court refused so to instruct the prosecutor. This constitutes the second ground of error assumed on be
3. It is insisted there vyas error in the Court below refusing to set aside the verdict on the affidavit of a juror. It is admitted the law seems now to be settled that jurors will not be heard in impeachment of their verdict; but it is claimed the present case does not come within that rule. The affidavit is here offered, not to impeach the verdict, says the counsel, but to show the grounds upon which the juror making the affidavit assented to it; and those grounds being, in the opinion of the counsel, erroneous, he claims the verdict shall be set aside. The juror making the affidavit expresses therein no dissatisfaction with the verdict as found, but states that, under a particular view of the testimony which he thinks the correct one, he signed the verdict objected to. It is not pretended that the juror was misled by the instructions of the Court, or misunderstood any statement in the testimony. To entertain the affidavit in question under such circumstances, it seems to us, would be more objectionable than to receive those disclosing misconduct on the part of the jury. If the Court can hear the affidavits of jurors touching the construction they put upon, or the weight they attach to, the testimony of any witness in the cause, or the grounds upon which they place their verdict, and, differing with them, can set it aside, then is a jury trial but a vexatious ceremony. The principle of the authorities, also, is against the reception. Graham on N. T., 121. — 4 Mass. 399; — 1 Murp. 942.-2 Stark. R. 111.
4. It is urged that the verdict is against the weight of evidence. The testimony is spread upon the record; and after bestowing upon it a careful examination, we have concluded it will not justify us in disturbing the finding of the juiy-
5. It is also insisted that the Circuit Court erred in permitting the substance, instead of the exact words, of the dying declarations of the deceased, Stansbury, for the taking of whose life the defendant was tried, to be given in evidence to the jury. No authority is produced to sustain this posi
The judgment is affirmed with costs.