State v. Huff

11 Nev. 17
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1876
DocketNo. 743
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 11 Nev. 17 (State v. Huff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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. Huff, 11 Nev. 17 (Neb. 1876).

Opinions

By the Court,

Beatty, J.:

The defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree, upon an indictment which (omitting the formal beginning and ending) reads as follows: “Charles Huff, the above-named defendant, is accused by the grand jury of the county of Storey, by this indictment, of the crime of murder, committed as follows: That Charles Huff, the defendant above named, in the county of Storey, state of Nevada, on or about the thirtieth day of June, and prior to the finding of this indictment, without authority of law, unlawfully and with malice aforethought, stabbed with a knife in the hands of him, said defendant, and killed one William Patrick O’Reilley.

[20]*20No objection was taken to the sufficiency of this indictment in the court below, and the defendant, on his appeal to this court, for the first time makes the point that it is fatally defective on its face because, first, it does not show in what year tho offense was committed; and second, it does not show that death ensued Avitliin a year and a day after the Avound was inflicted.

If the second of these propositions is untenable the first clearly is; for the indictment does show that the offense charged was committed before the finding of the indictment; and as the particular year in which it Avas committed does not affect the question of jurisdiction, and is not one of the facts necessary to constitute the offense, the objection to the defect Avas Avaived by the failure of the defendant to demur. (Compiled Luavs, secs. 1910, 1918.)

Section 1803 of the compiled laws shows that the allegation as to the precise time when an offense was committed, is treated as a merely formal allegation except when time is a material ingredient of the offense. This is conceded by counsel, but it is argued that time is a material ingredient of murder, and the language of section 2329 of the compiled laAvs is relied upon in support of the proposition. “In order to make the killing either murder or manslaughter, it is requisito that the party die within a year and a day after the stroke received or the cause of death administered,” etc. The literal import of this language does lend some countenance to. the notion that the law is guilty of. the absurdity of saying that a malicious killing shall be deemed a harmless or a guilty act according to the length of time the victim survives after receiving the fatal wound. But knowing what tho rule of law which the statute recognizes and affirms has always been, we are able to acquit it of such absurdity. It is a rule of evidence merely. KnoAving that tho real cause of death must be more or less doubtful in all cases Avhcre a Avound has not proved speedily fatal, the law has Avisely set a limit to that inquiry, and has determined that Avhen a wounded party has survived the wound a year and a day, there shall be a conclusive presumption that he died from some other cause. It does not say: “Notwith[21]*21^standing you killed bim with malice aforethought you are deemed innocent because he lived a year- and a day after you stabbed him;” but what it does say is: “He lived so long after you stabbed him, I therefore conclude you did not kill him;” or rather, “It is so doubtful in such cases what was the cause of death, that' upon grounds of public policy I have determined never to permit the attempt to show that the wound was the cause.”

This is the true meaning of the statute, although its more obvious meaning' is something different. But taking this construction, it may still be urged that the time elapsing between the injury inflicted and the death is an ingredient of the crime of murder; for if the ingredients of murder are the killing and the malice prepense, and the -time is an ingredient of the killing, it must be an ingredient of the murder. This is true in a certain sense, but our statutes permit the allegation of the killing to be made in one word: the defendant killed; and the allegation of the killing is an allegation of every necessary ingredient of killing. It implies everything that was expressly alleged in the old formal indictments in regard to the infliction of the wound and the resulting death. It is no longer a question in this state, or at least in this court, that the legislature has the power to dispense with those formalities of allegation. As to the meaning of the year and a day rule, see 3 Greenl. Ev., sec. 120 and note; 1 Devereux (N. C.) 139, 141; 3 Coke Inst. 53; 39 Cal. 55; 4 Nev. 274; and see People v. Cronin, 34 Cal. 191.

It may be asked, what is the meaning of time being an ingredient of an offense? It means that there are acts which are criminal if done at one time and innocent if done at another. All purely statutory offenses are instances of this, and it is necessary for the indictment to show that they were committed after tlie'passage of the law defining and punishing them.

Finally, it may be said- with respect to this particular case, and it would be a sufficient answer to appellant’s objection if there was no .other, that the indictment does show by-fair and reasonable intendment that O’Beilley was stabbed [22]*22and died on the same day. It says that defendant stabbed him on that day and killed him on that day, therefore he must have died on that day. The evidence, we believe, shows that he did not die until the next day; but this was an unimportant variance; and the question is as to the sufficiency of the allegation, not as to the conformity of the proof.

The next error relied on by appellant is, that the court permitted improper questions to be asked him on cross-examination when he offei’ed himself as a Avitness, and compelled him to ansAver them to his prejudice.

It has been a matter of serious doubt with the court •whether this point is presented by the record. The judge of the district court has signed a bill of exceptions, which, by reference merely, makes the reporter’s notes of the evidence and the rulings of the court during the trial a part of itself, and the clerk has copied into the transcript Avhat purports to be the reporter’s notes; but they are not identified or authenticated in any manner, and there is nothing to shoAv that they are the notes referred to by the bill of exceptions. They do not appear even to have been filed in the clerk’s office, and for all Ave knoAV, may have been concocted after the bill of exceptions Avas signed. Upon consideration, hoAvever, Ave have concluded, as the state has made no objection to the evidence being treated as part of the bill of exceptions, and as it has come to our knoAvledge that the original record has been destroyed by fire, not to raise this objection ourselves, and we mention the condition of this record merely to direct attention to Avhat Ave consider a bad practice, if it is a practice, of making other loose documents and papers part of a bill of exceptions by reference. A bill of exceptions is a record, and a very important record. The only mode by which it can be authenticated is the signature of the judge; and AAdien so authenticated, it receives a Aery high degree of credit. It ought not therefore to be composed of loose and scattered papers, but should be complete in itself, with a formal beginning and ending, so that it may be knoAvn Avhere it begins and Avherc it ends when it is copied into a transcript on appeal. Above all, it should [23]*23not be left in a condition that puts in tbe power of other parties than the judge to alter it completely by the substitution of one loose unauthenticated paper for another.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Nev. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-huff-nev-1876.