State v. Johnson

75 So. 678, 141 La. 775, 1917 La. LEXIS 1563
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 16, 1917
DocketNo. 22383
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 75 So. 678 (State v. Johnson) 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. Johnson, 75 So. 678, 141 La. 775, 1917 La. LEXIS 1563 (La. 1917).

Opinions

MONROE, C. J.

[1] Four persons having been prosecuted for murder, two of them, Ben and Hyman Johnson, were convicted of manslaughter, and bring up this appeal.

Their first bill of exception was reserved to the overruling of a motion for continuance which was based upon the ground that no “legally certified” copies of the indictment and “list of venire” had been served on them. It is not asserted that no such lists were served, or that the lists, as served, were incorrect; the complaint being that they did not bear the seal of the court. The law (R. S. § 992) does not require the seal of the court, or even the certificate of the clerk, and, whilst'we are of opinion that, for various reasons, the copies and lists should be certified in that way, the fact that defend ants complain of no prejudice by reason of alleged incorrectness in those served upon them renders the omission of that formality [779]*779unimportant. Luster v. State, 63 Tex. Cr. R. 541, 141 S. W. 209, Ann. Cas. 1913D, 1089.

[2] 2. A female witness called by the state, having testified that she had recently married her then husband, and had previously been married to another man, was asked on cross-examination whether she had had sexual intercourse with other men than her husband, which question was objected to and ruled out on the ground that the witness was under the protection of the court and should be respected. The bill discloses no reason for asking such a question, but, assuming that the purpose was to impeach the character of the witness for veracity, we are of opinion that it was properly excluded. State v. Hobgood, 46 La. Ann. 855, 15 South. 406; State v. Baudoin, 115 La. 837, 40 South. 239; State v. Romero, 117 La. 1003, 42 South. 482.

[3] 3. Defendants placed a witness on the stand who testified that he remembered the night the dance was held at Adolph Johnson’s house, when Sam Russell was alleged to have been killed, and that he remembered seeing some one pass his house on the road leading to Johnson’s “whooping and yelling.” He was then asked, “What were they doing?” to which the district attorney objected, and the objection was sustained, on the ground, as stated by the judge, that “this testimony was entirely foreign to the issue of the case; no relevancy whatever was shown.”

The witness had already testified that he had seen some one pass his house “whooping and yelling,” and it appears to us that the question, “What were they doing?” could but have elicited the information that they were whooping and yelling. We are therefore of opinion that the ruling complained of discloses no prejudice to the defendants.

[4] 4. Another witness was asked whether he had heard any whooping along the public road leading to Johnson’s on the night that Sam Russell was alleged to have been killed, which question was objected to as irrelevant, and, the objection having been sustained, a bill was reserved. There is however nothing in the bill to indicate that the statement of the judge that “the testimony was irrelevant to the issues of this case” was not well founded.

[5] 5. Mrs. Russell, mother of the decedent, having been called as a witness for the state, was asked on cross-examination the following question:

“Mrs. Russell, you and your husband are very anxious to see the defendants convicted, and have gone so far as to employ two attorneys to assist the district attorney?”

Whereupon L. Austin Fontenot, of counsel to assist the district attorney, arose and said:

“I will tell why Mr. Russell employed me. He told me that he employed me because of the brags you (addressing defendant’s counsel, who is a nephew of the district attorney) were making that you would acquit those defendants, because of your relationship to the district attorney.”

To which remarks counsel for defendants objected, and the court instructed the jury to pay no attention to them. A bill was reserved, however, and contains the recital by defendant’s counsel:

“That, although said remark was an unqualified falsehood, if made by the said J. W. Russell, it was made in the presence of the jury, and, though the court instructed the jury not to pay any attention to the tilts of counsel, it was intended and probably did have the effect of prejudicing the jury, or some of them, against the defendants.”

The bill contains the further recital that “it was read and signed in the presence of the district attorney and in open court before sentence,” from which we infer that it was read in the presence and hearing of the jury.

The remark complained of was based upon information that appears to us to have been so entirely incredible that it is surprising that it should have been made. The counsel concerning whom it was made and his uncle, the district attorney, have, however, lived [781]*781all their lives among the people from whom the jury was selected, and we should be slow to believe that any jurors thus selected would be at all influenced by a remark of that kind, unless, perhaps, to resent it. At all events there is no complaint of the action of the judge in the premises, there was no request that the jury be discharged, and we are unable to say that the matter, as presented by the bill, discloses a sufficient reason for setting aside the verdict which was rendered by them. The cases of State v. Marceaux, 50 La. Ann. 1137, 24 South. 611, State v. Bessa, 115 La. 259, 38 South. 985, State v. Accardo, 129 La. 666, 56 South. 631, State v. Washington, 136 La. 855, 67 South. 930, State v. Bacon, 138 La. 654, 70 South. 572, and others to which we are referred by defendant’s counsel, involved different conditions the mere statement of which would differentiate them from the case here presented.

[6] 6. The state called a witness in rebuttal and asked him the question:

“On the night that Sam Russell was killed, did he borrow your knife and fix his harness and return it to you before he left for the dance?”

To which defendants’ counsel objected—

“for the reason that all of the state witnesses had testified that Sam Russell had no knife on the night in question, on their examination in chief, and that this was not therefore rebuttal evidence, but merely cumulative evidence, to show that the deceased had no knife on that occasion.”

The statement per curiam is:

“It was in rebuttal of the testimony of these defendants and their witnesses, who swore that the deceased had a knife at the time he was fighting with them.”

[11] The fact that testimony proper in rebuttal is also cumulative to that offered by the state in the opening of a criminal case is not of itself a sufficient reason for its exclusion; a necessity for strengthening the testimony in chief may arise from that offered by defendant.

[7] 7.

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Bluebook (online)
75 So. 678, 141 La. 775, 1917 La. LEXIS 1563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-johnson-la-1917.