Cluck v. State

40 Ind. 263
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 40 Ind. 263 (Cluck v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cluck v. State, 40 Ind. 263 (Ind. 1872).

Opinion

Buskirk, J.

The appellant was indicted, tried, and convicted in the court below of murder in the first degree, and was sentenced to be hanged'. He moved the court for a new trial, but the motion was overruled, and he excepted. The court thereupon rendered judgment that the death penalty should be inflicted upon him on the 20th day of December, 1872.

From such judgment he has appealed to this court, and [265]*265asks a reversal thereof, on the ground that the court erred in overruling his motion for a new trial.

Before proceeding to consider the errors assigned and discussed by counsel for the appellant, we are required to dispose of some motions which have been made on behalf of the State.

An application has been made in this court, supported by-affidavits, to have the bill of exceptions embodying the evidence amended, by inserting therein the testimony of several witnesses on behalf of the State, which it is alleged has been entirely omitted. It has been very fully and satisfactorily shown by the affidavits filed in support of such motion that the witnesses named testified to matters material to the case, and of the utmost importance to the prosecution, and that the testimony of such witnesses has been entirely omitted in the bill of exceptions. By the testimony of one of these witnesses, it was plainly and expressly proved that the crime was committed in the county of Marion, and State of Indiana. We have felt constrained to overrule the motion. This is an appellate court for the correction of errors committed by the inferior courts of the State. This court possesses no original jurisdiction. This court acts alone upon the record as made in the inferior court, and as certified to us, in the manner prescribed by law.

It is provided by sec. 585 of the code, that “any appellate court shall have full power to compel any inferior court, board, or officer exercising judicial functions, or other person, to certify to such court a full and complete transcript of the records and proceedings of any such tribunal, board, officer or person, and the production of any paper, whenever it shall be necessary for the proper determination of any cause or proceeding pending before the appellate court. The breach of any order may be punished as a contempt.” 2 G. & H. 279.

By the above section of the code, we have full power to compel any inferior court, board, or officer exercising judicial functions, or other person to certify to this court a full [266]*266and complete transcript of the records and proceedings of any such tribunal, board, officer, or person, and compel the production of any paper, whenever it shall be necessary for the proper determination of any cause or proceeding pending in this court, but it confers on us no power to alter or change the record of the court below. The power conferred is to compel the inferior tribunals and ministerial officers to certify to us full and complete transcripts of the records and proceedings as they exist in the court below, but they must exist there. If there is an omission or defect in the records and proceedings in the court below, .application must be made in such court to correct and amend such records and proceedings, and when so corrected we can, by certiorari, compel such court or officer to certify the record and proceedings as amended. Let us illustrate our meaning. A bill of exceptions is a record of high authority and great sanctity, and is not to be lightly interfered with. If the omitted testimony had been embodied in the bill of exceptions, and had thus become a part of the record, and the clerk, in making out the transcript, had failed to insert it therein, we have full power to compel him to certify to us such omitted testimony. But if the testimony was offered on the trial, but was not put in the bill of exceptions, then application would have to be made to the court below to arpend the bill of exceptions by inserting the omitted testimony, and when so amended we could, by certiorari, compel the clerk to certify to us the amended bill of exceptions.

Upon the point involved in the motion under consideration, we refer to the following authorities: Songer v. Walker, 1 Blackf. 251; Doe v. Owen, 2 Blackf. 452; Jones v. Van Patten, 3 Ind. 107; Colerick v. Hooper, 3 Ind. 316.

There has also been a motion made on behalf of the State, to reject and strike from .the record the bill of exceptions, upon the ground that the bill, as it appears in the record, is different from what it was when it was signed by the judge. The motion was supported by affidavit. We awarded a certiorari, and in obedience thereto the clerk has certified to [267]*267us the bill of exceptions as it was when signed'by the judge below, and which is as follows:

The State of Indiana v. William Cluck. State of Indiana, Marion county, ss.: in the criminal circuit court.

“And now, be it remembered that on the 21st day of October term of the Marion County Criminal Circuit Court the above-entitled cause came on for tidal before the Hon. Byron K. Elliott, the judge of the said court; and in the proceedings of said cause, the honorable court refused,

“ First. To allow a challenge for cause to a juror, who had, at or about the time of the murder alleged, formed an opinion of the guilt or innocence of the defendant, from the reading of the newspapers, and upon no other ground, but who had afterward forgotten the circumstances of the cas'e; and who had at the time of the trial no opinion, and who stated that his opinion would readily yield to the evidence and the law.

“ Second. To permit the defendant’s attorney to state to the jury, upon the argument, defendant’s general character, no evidence having been adduced by either defence or prosecution upon the subject of character, to which ruling the defendant at the time excepted, and the verdict guilty having been pronounced by the jury.

“ Third. To grant the defendant’s motion for a new trial, the said motion being based, first; upon affidavits showing that during the course of the trial one of the jurors, with pencil and paper, took written notes of the evidence as it was produced by witnesses, and in support of and in opposition to said motion, the following affidavits were filed (here insert); second, upon the admission of evidence as to threats.

“To which defendant excepted, and because of which he now prays the honorable court that this bill of exceptions may be signed by and sealed with the seal of the said court, and made a part of the record of the above-entitled cause; that the following was the evidence, and all the evidence, given upon the trial of said cause:

(Insert reporter’s notes).

[268]*268“Signed and sealed within the time allotted.
“ Byron K. Elliott.
“ It is agreed that the evidence, before this bill shall be of any effect, shall be revised and corrected by the attorney for the prosecution. B. K. Elliott, Judge.”

Two objections are urged to the validity of the bill of exceptions; first, that the court possessed no power to sign the bill of exceptions purporting to contain the evidence, until the evidence had been written out in full in such bill, and until he was satisfied that it contained the truth.

In the case of Stewart

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ind. 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cluck-v-state-ind-1872.