188 Ind. 228 | Ind. | 1919
— Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree, and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Appellant’s brief is in such condition that we cannot tell that any error was committed. It presents numerous motions at numerous times with reference to the jury, and indicates that evidence was heard on these
From what we are able to gather from the oral argument and the brief of the state, we are inclined to think that all of the errors of the court lean towards virtue’s side. That is to say, that because appellant was a person of African descent, the court permitted his lawyers greater latitude in motions and objections, and contentions about different things, in the introduction of evidence thereon, than the law required him to give them. It appears that the trial court was more than fair to appellant.
The brief being in such condition that even the counsel who argued the case orally cannot understand it himself, we are at a loss to know why we should be called upon to search the record to find some error. Subdivision 5, Rule 22, is too plain to require construction.
Judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 122 N. E. Y69.