State v. Hawthorn

64 So. 873, 134 La. 979, 1914 La. LEXIS 1693
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1914
DocketNo. 20,387
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 64 So. 873 (State v. Hawthorn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hawthorn, 64 So. 873, 134 La. 979, 1914 La. LEXIS 1693 (La. 1914).

Opinion

LAND, J.

Defendant was indicted for stealing a bull of the cow kind in violation of Act 64 of 1910. He was tried, convicted, and sentenced to five years at hard labor in the state penitentiary. He has appealed, and relies for reversal on 18 bills of exception as shown by the record.

In a bill of particulars filed by the district attorney the animal alleged to have been stolen is described as—

“a bull of the cow kind, about 3% years old, dark red in color, muley, about 850 pounds in weight.”

On the trial the prosecution adduced evidence tending to prove that the animal so [981]*981described, belonged to W. T. Smith of Concordia parish, and was sold by defendant to one Borsey Stewart. The defense was twofold: First, that the bull so sold was not the Smith bull; and, second, that the animal was purchased by defendant from T. S. Stiles in the state of Mississippi, and brought by him to his home in Concordia parish several months before the disappearance of the Smith bull.

Defendant was indicted on November 4, 1913, was arraigned the next day, and, over his objection, the case was set for trial on the 10th of the same month.

Defendant filed a motion for a continuance on the ground of the absence of material witnesses in his behalf, among them the said Stiles, to whom he had written, but had received no answer to his letters; but defendant believed that with further time and opportunity he could locate the said Stiles and have him present" at the next term of the court. The motion further set forth that the defendant expected to prove by W. R. Holford that he purchased a red bull from said Stiles in the state of Mississippi in the month of September, 1912, and brought said animal, with 24 other head of cattle, into Concordia parish, and that said bull is not the bull of W. T. Smith. The motion further set forth that said Holford visited in said parish as late as August, 1913, and that the defendant, for lack of time, had not been ..able to locate the said Holford, but could readily locate him and have him present at the next term of the court. The motion for a continuance was overruled, the trial proceeded, and the defendant was found guilty by the jury by a vote of nine to three.

Defendant then filed a motion for a new trial, to which, among others, was attached the affidavit of W. R. Holford, which reads .in part as follows:

“I am well and personally acquainted with Y. B. Hawthorn, the defendant in this case. I first met the said Hawthorn the latter part of September, 1912, near Hoxie, Miss. He was riding a horse. On the next day or the day after I again saw the said Hawthorn. He was coming towards Natchez with some ox teams and log wagons. He had a negro with him. I think he had three four-yoke teams. On this day Hawthorn bought a young red bull from a man named T. S. Stiles. This was a young bull about 2Yz or 3 years old, and about 400 or 500 pounds in weight. The bull had two short or nub horns. The bull'was branded T S on the right hip, and was marked in his ears. The bull was tied with a rope around his neck, and at the request of Hawthorn I took the rope off. and put a halter on the bull. I saw Hawthorn pay Stiles some money. They said the price of the bull was $10.”
“I went to-day to the farm of a man whose name I was told was Borsey Stewart. I identified the bull in -question before any one had pointed him out to me. Mr. Borsey Stewart was present at the time. I am informed that this is the same bull which Hawthorn is accused of stealing from W. T. Smith in Concordia parish in the year 1913. I know it is the same bull which Hawthorn bought from T. S. Stiles in Mississippi in September, 1912.”

The affiant further deposed that on the morning of that day he had heard for the first time that the defendant had been looking for him as a witness and wanted him to come over immediately to Vidalia and give his evidence on a motion for a new trial, which he did; that affiant had just got back from Amite county, Miss., where he went about the last of August, 1913; that affiant was not related by blood or marriage to the defendant, and had no interest in the ease except to see justice done.

Other affidavits were annexed to the motion, but these were by witnesses whose attendance could have been procured.

[4] It has been held that when the absent witnesses are nonresidents, not within the jurisdiction of the court, and could not be forced to appear by any process of the court, the granting or withholding of a continuance is within the discretion of the trial judge. State v. Nash, 45 La. Ann. 1139, 13 South. 732, 734; State v. Nicholson, 14 La. Ann. 785. The granting vel non of a new trial on the affidavit of a nonresident witness, who may [983]*983or may not appear at the next term of the court, seems to fall under the same rule. The judge held that the defendant had not used proper efforts to secure the presence at the trial of the witnesses who resided out of the state.

[3] Another application for a continuance was made on the ground of the absence of defendant’s alleged leading counsel, while in attendance on the Constitutional Convention of 1913. It appears that the defendant had employed two able members of the bar to conduct his case, one of whom had acted as counsel from the beginning, and the other had appeared during the trial. The judge ruled that the former was leading counsel. The judge below was in a better position than we are to decide this delicate question of precedence. But we know of no statute that makes attendance on a constitutional convention a ground for continuing a case. Existing statutes apply only to members of the Legislature. Revised Statutes, § 126; Act No. 198 of 1912. An objection to the judge’s testifying on the same matter, at the instance of the district attorney, is without merit.

The bill of particulars describes the animal as a “muley.” Defendant objected to the prosecuting witness Smith testifying that the bull had a small “nub” on one side of his head, on the ground that the bill of particulars had described the animal as a natural “muley.” What is a “muley” was a question of fact for the jury.

It appears from another bill of exception that, after speaking to the district attorney, the judge made the following statement:

“The court called counsel for the prosecution, as the prosecuting witness was leaving the stand, and asked him whether or not he had proved the value, by the witness, of the bull charged to have been stolen. He then informed counsel for defendant, in the presence of the jury and everybody else in the court, what he had whispered to the counsel for the prosecution.”

In his per curiam the judge says in explanation that he made the statement because he wanted counsel for defendant to know that he was not trying to speak to or advise the district attorney privately in regard to the matter, and that he had instructed the jury to pay no attention whatever to anything he had said in this connection, but to be governed solely by the evidence.

The value of the animal had nothing to do-with the penalty, and was irrelevant to the issue.

In making the statement the judge seems-to have been actuated by conscientious motives. The statement, with the explanation, was not in its nature prejudicial to the defendant.

[2]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 So. 873, 134 La. 979, 1914 La. LEXIS 1693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hawthorn-la-1914.