State v. Rover

13 Nev. 17
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1878
DocketNo. 861
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 13 Nev. 17 (State v. Rover) 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. Rover, 13 Nev. 17 (Neb. 1878).

Opinions

[20]*20By the Court,

Hawley, C. J.:

When the transcript on appeal in this case was filed in this court it contained over eight hundred pages. Upon the oral argument it was ascertained that the clerk, at the request of counsel, had, with other irrelevant matter, inserted all the testimony submitted at the trial, although not embodied in any bill of exceptions.

At the close of the argument we made an order that the transcript be returned to the clerk of Washoe county,.with instructions to eliminate therefrom all matters contained therein that were not, by the provisions of sections 450 and 480 of the criminal practice act (1 Compiled Laws, 2075, 2105) made part of the record in a criminal case. It came back with only one hundred and fifteen pages, and still contains an affidavit made by T. W. W. Davies, of counsel for appellant, setting forth what is claimed to have been an irregularity upon the part of'the counsel for the state in his closing argument to the jury, and the instructions given to the jury by the court of its own motion.

These ought not to have been included in the transcript, because not embodied in any bill of exceptions.

After what has been said by this court in The State v. Forsha, 8 Nev. 137; State v. Burns, 8 Id. 251; State v. Huff, 11 Id. 17; State v. Larkin, 11 Id. 314; State v. Rover, 11 Id. 343; State v. Ah Mook, 12 Id. 369; and State v. Sam Mills, 12 Id. 401, there is certainly no excuse in incumbering the transcript on appeal with any matter not authorized by sections 450 and 480 of the criminal practice act. If the county clerks will remember that it is their duty not to insert anything in the transcript, whether asked for by counsel or not, except as provided for by said sections, and that they are not entitled to any pay for services performed in copying papers, documents or statements that are not made any part of -the record in a criminal case, they would hereafter save themselves some trouble and the counties considerable expense, to say nothing of the unnecessary task so often imposed upon- this court of sifting the tare from the wheat and expelling the chaff from the transcript.

[21]*21Tlie points made by appellant’s counsel, that are based upon the record, will be noticed in their regular order:

1. The question of jeopardy and the power of the court to grant a new trial, although not asked for by the defendant, is settled by the former decision in this case. (State v. Rover, 10 Nev. 388.)

2. The court did not err in admitting the voluntary statement of the defendant as taken down on his preliminary examination before Job Davis, a justice of the peace in Humboldt county. The justices of the peace can select clerks ad libitum to perform the clerical labor of writing out the testimony taken upon the preliminary examination, but must see that they correctly perform the duty. In this case the statement was written by clerks under the direction and in the presence of the justice. It was read by one of the clerks, at the request and in the presence of the justice, to the defendant. It was corrected in every particular desired by the defendant. The defendant, before making the statement, was fully advised by the justice of all his rights. In short, the record shows that sections 152,154,155 and 156 of the criminal practice act (1 Compiled Laws, 1780, 1782, 1783, 1784) were in every respect fully complied with. In the absence of any evidence tending to show that the witnesses were not excluded pending the examination of defendant, as provided for in section 158 (1 Compiled Laws, 1786), we cannot presume that the justice did not conform to this provision of the statute. The interlineations in the statement were satisfactorily explained and the missing portions of the certificate properly accounted for and supplied. The provisions of the law respecting the manner in which the statement of defendant may be taken having been complied with, the statement was admissible in evidence against the defendant, upon the trial of the case, under the general principles applicable to the admissibility of confessions. (1 Greenl. on Ev., secs. 216, 224; 1 Phil. on Ev., 535; 2 Id. 242; State v. Lamb, 28 Mo. 218; De Foe v. People, 22 Mich. 224; People v. Kelley, 47 Cal. 125.) The time of introducing the statement was optional with the counsel for the prosecution.

[22]*223. The prosecuting witness, McWorthy, after testifying that he came from the camp where the homicide had been committed to Clark and Osburn’s Station, and had gone from there to Mill City and to Winnemucca, where he made a complaint before a justice of the peace, accusing Rover of the murder of I. N. Sharp, was asked by counsel for the State: “What caused or induced you to make this complaint against Rover?” He answered, among other things, as follows: “By inquiries and from what Rover told me that Sharp said he was going to Wright’s ranch. When I inquired for him at Osburn’s ranch Mr. Clark stood there, and after Mr. Osburn saying he had not seen him, Mi*. Clark he says: ‘I just came from Wright’s ranch, and I do not think he is there.’ Mrs. Osburn then says: ‘That man Rover has murdered him;’ and I says: ‘I guess not; he was too cowardly — wouldn’t murder anything.’ Mrs. Osburn says: ‘It is cowards that do such things.’” The portions of this answer particularly complained of by appellant— viz: the declarations of Mrs. Osburn — were, upon motion, stricken out.. It was therefore the duty of the jury to disregard them, without any special instruction from the court to that effect. Where testimony is stricken out it is, we believe, the usual custom for courts, in the trial of criminal cases, to instruct the jury to disregard the evidence, and it is perhaps the better practice, out of abundant caution, to do so; but the appellant has no cause of complaint upon this ground, unless he affirmatively shows that the court, upon request, refused to so instruct the jury. The court did not err in.allowing the witness McWorthy, in answer to the question asked by counsel, to detail the efforts he had made to learn the whereabouts of the deceased. The defendant Rover, in his voluntary statement before the committing magistrate, had accused the witness McWorthy of being the murderer of Sharp, and the jury were called upon to determine, among other things, whether this accusation was true or false. The declarations of third persons were not called out by the prosecution for the purpose of being used as evidence against Rover, but were introduced simply for the purpose of explaining the conduct of the witness McWorthy, [23]*23so that the jury might determine therefrom whether lie acted in good faith, or whether, being himself the real murderer, he had falsely made the charge against Bover, for the purpose of directing the attention of the public to the accused and diverting it from himself. To that extent it was proper for the witness, in detailing the steps he had taken, to state what answers were given to the inquiries made by him. (1 Greenl. on Ev., secs. 100, 101; 1 Whart. Cr. Law, sec. 663; State v. Fox, 25 N. J. 567.)

4. The objections urged by appellant’s counsel, that the court erred in having the verdict read to the jury and recorded on Sunday, and in discharging the jury and designating a day upon which he would pronounce judgment, are wholly untenable.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Deutscher v. State
601 P.2d 407 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1979)
State v. Kuhl
175 P. 190 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1918)
State v. Hill
32 Nev. 185 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1909)
Pacific Window Glass Co. v. Smith
97 P. 898 (California Court of Appeal, 1908)
Smith v. Wells Estate Co.
29 Nev. 411 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1907)
Horn v. State
73 P. 705 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1903)
State v. Buralli
71 P. 532 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1903)
People v. Vereneseneckockockhoff
58 P. 156 (California Supreme Court, 1900)
State v. Maher
62 P. 236 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Nev. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rover-nev-1878.