State v. Offutt
This text of 38 La. Ann. 364 (State v. Offutt) 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.
Opinions
On Application eor Certiorari.
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The accused complains of the refusal of the district judge to direct Iiis .clerk to include in the transcript, as part of the record, a supplemental motion for a pew trial made by his counsel, and the affidavit of a witness made in support thereof, after the trial had been concluded.
His object is to present his said motion together with the supporting affidavit and the judge’s refusal of the new trial to the action and revision of this Court.
His own petition shows that the motion in question was presented after a final disposition by the trial judge of a timely motion made by his counsel for a new trial, after sentence had been passed on him, and afterthc case liad been finally closed and an appeal taken. Hence, the motion and tbo affidavit form no part of the proceedings held in his. [365]*365trial. The appeal which he had taken from the sentence of the court, ■and from the verdict of the jury, before he presented the motion in ■question, can present for review only such things and matters as have •occurred during, and form parts and elements of, his trial.
It follows that we would be powerless to consider or give legal effect To the proceedings which his counsel is now seeking to bring up to our notice, even if they had been included in the transcript.
On appeal from a criminal prosecution, this Court'lias no more con- • cern with proceedings or other incidents connected with tho accused or with the charge under which he has been convicted, which have occurred subsequently to the trial and sentence, than it would have with the mode of incarcerating the accused, or with tho action of tho Executive Department of the State in enforcing the judgment of tho •court, or in commuting or remitting such sentence.
It, therefore, appears to us that far from erring in tho refusal complained of, the district judge would have committed a grievous error if ho had followed the suggestion of defendant’s counsel, and had thus ordered his clerk to inject in the transcript matters which were entirely foreign to the only issues which could have been tried on appeal.
The reliance of counsel on the decision in the case of The State vs. Bess, 31 Ann. 191, cannot avail him in the relief which he now seeks to obtain.
In that case the matters which were missing from tho transcript formed essential and vital parts of the defendant’s trial, and presented issues which the appellate tribunal had the undoubted right to consider and to dispose of.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the writ of certiorari herein applied for be denied.
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38 La. Ann. 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-offutt-la-1886.