State v. Haneey

235 N.W. 516, 58 S.D. 191
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1931
DocketFile No. 6755
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 235 N.W. 516 (State v. Haneey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Haneey, 235 N.W. 516, 58 S.D. 191 (S.D. 1931).

Opinion

MISER, C.

Appellants were convicted of a robbery of a bank at Huron. This appeal is from the judgment and the order denying new trial. The errors assigned are: (1) The disallowance of the challenge to the panel; (2) twenty-six instances of alleged misconduct by the state’s attorney; (3) the refusal to give appellants’ version of an instruction on the maxim, falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus.

[192]*192The disallowance of the challenge to the panel was not reversible error. In State v. Morse, 35 S. D. 18, 150 N. W. 293, Ann. Cas. 1918C, 570, this court construed what is now section 4936, R. C. 1919, to require defendant to show prejudice resulting from disallowance of a challenge to the panel of petit jurors. But appellants contend that, under the decisions in State v. Fellows, 49 S. D. 481, 207 N. W. 477, and State v. Johnson, 50 S. D. 388, 210 N. W. 350, they are entitled to a reversal. In State v. Smith, 232 N. W. 26, this court recently pointed out the distinctions between the Morse Case and the cases relied upon by appellant, and followed the Morse Case. No prejudice to appellants has been shown through the irregularities of which they complain. Therefore no reversible error resulted therefrom.

As to the assignments relating to misconduct of the state’s attorney, a large number of the instances assigned as error consist of across-the-table questions, suggestions, and argument. Instead of exercising the inherent power to compel counsel to refrain from such improper conduct, the trial judg'e used only mild reproof in which, too often, Objector and offender shared almost equally in the censure. In no small number of these across-the-table encounters appellants’ counsel freely participated. The result of all this is a record which can be no source of pride either to counsel or to the trial judge. Respondent has deemed it necessary to supplement appellants’ 69-page abstract with 120' pages of additional statement. A careful reading of both the abstract and the settled record, thereby made necessary, leaves one in grave doubt as to whether the result was at all different than it would have been had the case been tried without any misconduct whatever. State v. Townley, 149 Minn. 5, 182 N. W. 773, 780, 17 A. L. R. 253. Furthermore, when distributed through a six-day hard-fought trial, the instances of misconduct were less harmful than they appear when brought togethed in the assignments; and those assigned are materially reduced in number when those to which objections were sustained and those to which no objections were made are stricken out. The guilt of appellants was amply proven. A motion for a new trial was made, on the ground, among others, of the misconduct of counsel. In considering that motion for a new trial, the facts of misconduct, the provocation thereto, the effect thereof, the objections and rulings thereon, and actual atmosphere of the [193]*193trial, were within the knowledge of the trial judge. That he denied the motion does not indicate complete satisfaction with the conduct of the trial, but only that, in his opinion, the effect was not prejudicial to appellants. The granting or refusing of a new trial "for misconduct of counsel rests largely in the discretion of the trial court. As was said in Lindsay v. Pettigrew, 3 S. D. 199, 52 N. W. 873, 875: “This court will not reverse the decision of the court below on a motion for a new trial, where * * * the facts are fully within the knowledge of the court except in a case where this discretion is plainly misused.” In that case this court did reverse the decision of the court below. In the case at bar, while, as before stated, the record is not such as to be any source of pride either to counsel or to the trial court, after a painstaking examination of it, this court is not “clearly of the opinion that the facts as presented require us to reverse the judgment of the court below, and grant a new trial.” On the contrary, after considering not only the misconduct and other errors properly assigned, but the entire record, we are of the opinion that the learned trial judge neither misused nor abused his discretion in deciding that the misconduct did not require a new trial to be granted. State v. Albers, 52 S. D. 582, 219 N. W. 263.

Among the errors so assigned were some relating to the instruction of the jury. Appellant requested the court to instruct as follows: “In passing upon the credibility of the various witnesses in this case, the court instructs that if you should find that any witness has wilfully testified falsely as to any material fact in the case, then it is your privilege, and you may, if you so desire, disregard his entire testimony except in so far as it may be corroborated by the testimony of other credible witnesses.”

Instead of instructing as above requested, the court instructed as follows: “You are further instructed that if you believe that any witness has wilfully testified falsely to any material matter in this case, then you are at liberty to disregard the testimony of such witness in so far as you believe it to be false.”

Despite the fact that in Citizens’ State Bank v. Bailey, 46 S. D. 547, 195 N. W. 37, 38, this court said that an instruction such as the one given above “would have been accurate,” it is not a proper statement of the law under the maxim, falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus, nor is the instruction requested in good form. Both [194]*194the instruction requested and the instruction given are wrong. Each is made to express the rule by striking off the concluding clause. The forms of instruction approved in State v. Sexton, 10 S. D. 127, 72 N. W. 84, Hurlbut v. Leper, 12 S. D. 321, 81 N. W. 631, State v. Raice, 24 S. D. 111, 123 N. W. 708, and State v. Wilcox, 48 S. D. 289, 204 N. W. 369, all of which omit the final qualifying clause, are for that reason, better instructions under that maxim. Brickwood’s Sackett Instr. to Juries, § 344, footnote 9; Blashfield’s Instr. (2d Ed.) § 381, p. 835.

But the exception as taken to the refusal to give the requested instruction was as follows: “That it is a correct statement of the law and the instruction proposed by the court only permits the jury to disregard such evidence as they believe to be false. Whereas, the correct rule is that they may disregard all the testimony if they so desire, regardless of whether they may believe it to be true or false, it being the privilege of the juror to disregard such testimony even though he believes it to be true.” There was no exception taken to the instruction given except as contained in the foregoing exception to the instruction requested and refused.

Appellants were entitled to have the jury correctly instructed under the maxim, falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus. The trial court was willing to instruct under the maxim. In an attempt to do so, it used language which this court in Citizens’ State Bank v. Bailey, supra, had said was “accurate.” In taking their exceptions, appellants stated that the instruction given was wrong because it is the privilege of a juror to disregard testimony which he believes to be true when given by a witness who has willfully testified falsely to some other material matter in the case. The instruction given was incorrect, and the reason stated in appellants’ exception thereto was also incorrect.

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Bluebook (online)
235 N.W. 516, 58 S.D. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haneey-sd-1931.