Parker v. State

161 P. 552, 24 Wyo. 491, 1916 Wyo. LEXIS 44
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1916
DocketNo. 877
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 161 P. 552 (Parker v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. State, 161 P. 552, 24 Wyo. 491, 1916 Wyo. LEXIS 44 (Wyo. 1916).

Opinion

Beard, Justice.

The plaintiff in error, Daniel Parker, was convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree, in the district court of Lincoln county, and sentenced to suffer death. From that judgment he brings the case to this court, assigning numerous errors and irregularities occurring on the trial, which his counsel contends were prejudicial and deprived the defendant of a fair and impartial trial.

An information charging the defendant with murder in the first degree was filed in the district court May 3, 1915. May 4, 1915, he was arraigned, and being without counsel and it appearing that he was without means to employ counsel, the court appointed R. R. Rose, Esq., an attorney at law, to defend him. The trial was commenced May 10, and a verdict of murder in the first degree was rendered by the jury May 15. A motion for a new trial was filed May 26, was denied the same day, and judgment pronounced May 27.

The Attorney General insists that a number of alleged errors discussed by counsel for plaintiff in error are not properly before the court for consideration because not sufficiently specified in the motion for a new trial. In answer to that contention counsel for plaintiff in error seeks to excuse the imperfections in the motion on the ground that he was denied sufficient time by the court within which to prepare the motion. It appears that on May 24 and within the ten days allowed by statute for filing such motion an application for ten days extension of time within which to do so was made, supported by the affidavit of counsel, in which affidavit he states that the verdict was returned on Saturday afternoon, May 15, and that at 10 o’clock on the following Monday (May 17) by appointment of the court as attorney to defend another person (one Cirej) also charged with murder in the first degree, he was required to enter upon the trial of said case, which trial was not concluded until Saturday afternoon, May 22. That during said time the official court reporter who reported this case was constantly engaged in court and could not furnish counsel with the evidence or remarks of the court, and that for those [499]*499reasons he was unable to prepare a more complete and specific motion. The application was heard on May 26, at which time the court extended the time for filing the motion until 2 o’clock p. m. the following day. Those facts are not disputed and so far as’ they appear by the journal entries are fully sustained. The statute (Sec. 6287, Comp. Stat. 1910) provides that the motion, except for newly discovered evidence, shall be filed at the term and within ten days after the verdict was rendered, unless additional time be granted by the court upon good cause shown. We think in the circumstances in this case the court in the exercise of its discretion and in justice to defendant should have allowed more time than was granted within which to file the motion; and for that reason the rule requiring the grounds for a new trial to be specifically stated should be enforced with less strictness than where such conditions do not exist. The rule (Rule 13, S. C. Rules) “Nothing which could have been properly assigned as a ground for a new trial in the court below will be considered in this court, unless it shall appear that the same was properly presented to the court below by a motion for a new trial,” etc., is a statutory one and has been and should be enforced by this court, especially in civil and in criminal cases of less magnitude than the one before us; but where a defendant is put upon trial for his life, convicted, and the extreme penalty imposed, if it appears to this court from an examination of the entire record that such fundamental errors have been committed upon the trial as to amount to a denial of justice and that the defendant has been deprived of his right to a fair and impartial trial, it will not insist upon a rigid enforcement of the rule. The Attorney General also invokes the application of the statute defining exceptions and the time and manner in which they are to be taken; and calls attention to the fact that a number of matters assigned as error were not excepted to at the time, and therefore cannot be considered. He has cited in his brief quite a number of cases decided by this court in which the rule was sustained and applied. Many of them are civil cases, and of the [500]*500criminal cases cited but one of them (Cook v. Territory, 3 Wyo. 110, 4 Pac. 887) was a capital case;, and it does not appear that the instructions given by the court on its own motion in that case and to which no exceptions were taken were claimed to be fundamentally erroneous. The taking of the life of a human being as a punishment for crime has not in later years met with general approval; and appellate courts have inclined to the view that in capital cases it is not only their right but their duty to examine the record for the purpose of ascertaining’ whether or not the defendant has been deprived of his constitutional right to a fair and impartial 'trial. But it is only in those cases where it clearly appears that such fundamental errors have been committed on the trial as to deprive the defendant of his substantial rights, or that the ruling, decision, or other matters ■ complained of clearly appear to have been prejudicial to the defendant that the judgment should be reversed; and especially so where exceptions have not been timely taken, or the errors have not been fully stated in a motion for a new trial. (Seng v. State, 20 Wyo. 222, 122 Pac. 631.) However, if it clearly appears from the record that such fundamental and prejudicial error has been committed as to amount to a denial of substantial justice, or to deprive the defendant of a fair trial, the court should not hesitate to reverse the judgment and grant a new trial, although proper exceptions were not taken at the time. (14 R. C. L. 808; Thornley v. State, 36 Tex. Crim. Rep. 118, 34 S. W. 264, 35 S. W. 981, 61 Am. St. 836; Patten v. United States, 42 App. Cases, D. C., 239; Hopt v. Utah, 110 U. S. 574, 4 Sup. Ct. 202, 28 L. Ed. 262; Wiborg v. United States, 136 U. S. 632, 16 Sup. Ct. 1127, 1197, 41 L. Ed. 289; Anderson v. State, 8 Okla. Crim. 90, 126 Pac. 840, Ann. Cases 1914C. 314; Vickers v. United States, 1 Okla. Crim. 452, 98 Pac. 467; People v. Burk, 159 Cal. 783, 115 Pac. 1101.)

The defense in this case was self-defense; and other than the deceased and defendant there were no witnesses to the affray, if any there was, until after the first of the four shots which were fired by defendant, one of which caused [501]*501the death of deceased. Defendant testified that deceased assaulted and knocked him down before he fired the shots and that he shot in self-defense.

The record discloses that at the time the instructions of the court were given to the jury, the defendant’s counsel objected and excepted to “instructions numbered eight, nine, ten, eleven, thirteen, fifteen, eighteen, nineteen, twenty-one and thirty-two,” and the giving of those instructions were in like manner assigned as error in the motion for a new trial. The Attorney General, in his brief, insists that those instructions cannot be here reviewed for the reason “that the objection is to these instructions as a whole, and not individually, and that if any instruction in the group is correct, the other instructions will not be considered.” He cites Dickerson v. State, 18 Wyo. 440, 110 Pac. 857, 116 Pac. 448, in support of the contention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 P. 552, 24 Wyo. 491, 1916 Wyo. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-state-wyo-1916.