State v. Mullenix

237 N.W. 483, 212 Iowa 1043
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 20, 1931
DocketNo. 40524.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 237 N.W. 483 (State v. Mullenix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mullenix, 237 N.W. 483, 212 Iowa 1043 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Evans, J.

At 10:45 A. M. on December 6, 1929, two men entered'the Dean Savings Bank in the County of Appanoose, and by force and arms perpetrated a robbery therein. Some time later one Ed. Caster was apprehended as one of the perpetrators. He pleaded guilty and was committed to the penitentiary. Later the defendant herein was apprehended as:the other perpetrator and was prosecuted therefor in this proceeding. Caster was used as a witness for the State in the identification of this defendant and in connecting him as one of the perpetrators.. Caster’s evidence was corroborated by at least three other persons, who saw both of the perpetrators on the day of the robbery. So .far as the merits of the prosecution are concerned, as distinguished from specific errors committed on the trial, thére can be no reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt. We shall therefore confine our discussion to the specific errors' assigned.

I. Two jurors were challenged as to their competency, by the defendant. These were Jones and Hence. In each case *1045 the challenge was predicated upon certain answers given by the jurors, which answers were qualified by later interrogation conducted in part by the court. Accepting the answers of the jurors to the later interrogation, the question in each case was clearly brought within the discretion of the court. Such has been our consistent holding. State v. Twine, 211 Iowa 450. When jurors are interrogated as to what they would do under stated circumstances, and so interrogated before they have been informed of what their duties as jurors are, and will be, they are not to be held inflexibly to answers given by them under a possibly mistaken conception of the scope of their duties. There was no error at this point.

II. The defendant objected to the testimony of two proffered witnesses because the name of neither was endorsed upon the information. One of these was Caster. It is contended that his true name is Edison Caster. His name purported to be endorsed On the information as Ed. Caster, by which name he was generally known. Such endorsement of Caster’s name was sufficient. State v. Leitzke, 206 Iowa 365; State v. Altomari, 199 Iowa 43; State v. Leeper, 198 Iowa 83.

The name of the other witness objected to was Ben Cassady. Four days’ notice of his proposed testimony was properly given and a purported return of the service was made and filed. The return of service however was defective. Proof of the service was sufficiently made otherwise. That the service was in fact made, is not disputed. Under such circumstances the regularity of the proof of service was not material. State v. Pugsley, 75 Iowa 742; State v. Ostrander, 18 Iowa 435.

III. Objection was made to the introduction of the testimony of several witnesses, who had participated in the pursuit of the robbers on the date of the robbery, and who detailed some of the events that occurred immediately after the robbery. The objection to each was that it was immaterial. Sufficient to say that such testimony was likewise wholly non-prejudicial .and needs no further consideration at our hands.

IV. Objection is urged to certain evidence given by the witness, Caster, in that it contained reference to other crimes committed by the defendant. Caster testified as follows:

‘ ‘ I had a talk with Mullenix about going up to Dean about *1046 two weeks before. On Thursday night we robbed the filling station at Cincinnati; and the-next night we robbed a store at Sidney, Missouri. ’ ’

This evidence was given without any objection thereto at the. time it went into the record. Moreover the commission of the crime herein referred to, as well as that of many'others, was incorporated as a proven fact in the hypothetical question formulated by defendant’s counsel and propounded to his expert witness, Bamford, as a basis of expert opinion as to mental condition. The defendant is.in no position to complain of it now.

V. It is next urged that the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict should have been sustained on the ground that the corroboration of the witness Caster was inadequate as a compliance with the statute. In our judgment such corroboration was not only adequate, but was virtually conclusive and undisputed.

VI. Complaint is made of certain interrogation of the witness Flossie Mullenix, the mother of the defendant. It is claimed that the cross examination amounted to misconduct of counsel. In our judgment some of the rulings were close. In any event the trial court sustained defendant’s objections to each question. There was nothing extraordinary in the method of the examination, and we discover therein no basis to charge willful misconduct on the part of counsel.

VII. Complaint is directed to a statement contained in Instruction #12, as follows:

‘ ‘ It will readily occur to you that this kind of evidence may be found quite reliable and satisfactory, or the reverse, and entitled to little, if any, consideration. ’ ’

The complaint is that by the foregoing the court minimized-the weight of the defendant’s expert testimony. On the contrary the court seems not to have done so. We see nothing prejudicial in the quoted portion. Were the fact otherwise, we should be disposed to sustain it on the ground that the expert evidence appearing in this record wa's of a low order. To say the least, it is exceedingly doubtful whether it was entitled to consideration as expert evidence at all.

VIII.. The more important error complained of in the *1047 record is one pertaining to the method adopted by the court of submitting the issue of insanity to the jury. Section 13932, Code, 1927, provides as follows:

“If the defense is insanity of the defendant, the jury must be instructed, if it acquits him on that ground, to state that fact in its verdict.”

The court did not follow the directions, of this statute. On the contrary it instructed the jury peremptorily to find, the defendant not guilty, if they found the issue of insanity sustained. In the course of their deliberations the jury returned to the court room by the permission of the court and submitted certain questions to the court hereinafter to be set forth.. Complaint is made of the procedure had at this stage of the deliberation, and of the failure of the court to reduce to writing the certain instructions which the defendant alleges were given by the court to the jury at such time. The record at this point is in full as follows:

“After the jury had retired to consider their verdict the following proceedings were had:
"‘ The Court: Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, you have been summoned into court at the request of your foreman. May I inquire the object of your asking the attention of the court?
“The Foreman: We want to know if this jury is entitled to an interpretation of the court’s instruction if the .content of them is not understood by this jury. That is the first thing we want to know.
‘'

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Bluebook (online)
237 N.W. 483, 212 Iowa 1043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mullenix-iowa-1931.