State v. Schieler

37 P. 272, 4 Idaho 120, 1894 Ida. LEXIS 24
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 37 P. 272 (State v. Schieler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho 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. Schieler, 37 P. 272, 4 Idaho 120, 1894 Ida. LEXIS 24 (Idaho 1894).

Opinion

HUSTON, C. J.

The defendant was indicted for the crime -of murder, in the killing of one John S. Wilson, and, upon trial at the June term of the district court for Idaho county, was convicted of the crime of manslaughter, from which conviction, and judgment thereon, this appeal is taken. The record presents fifty-four assignments of error.

The first assignment of error is the excusing of one E. C. Smith from the grand jury. It seems from the record that said Smith was not only a deputy sheriff of the county, and had been engaged in serving process in the case on trial, but he was a witness in the case. The excusing him from the grand jury was in the discretion of the court, and was entirely proper.

The second assignment of error is the refusal of the court to set aside the indictment upon motion of the defendant, based upon the grounds: 1. That no preliminary examination had been had of defendant upon the charge upon which the indictment was found; 2. That the indictment was not found by a competent grand jury; 3. That the indictment was found upon incompetent and illegal evidence. As to the first ground, it is ■sufficient to say that under our statutes no preliminary examination is necessary to the finding of an indictment. The ■second ground is a repetition of the first assignment of error, and has already been passed upon. As to the third ground of the motion to set aside the indictment, it appears that certain depositions were introduced before the grand jury; but it does not appear, nor is it presumable, in the face of the fact that some seven witnesses were personally examined by the grand jury, that the indictment was found or predicated in whole or in part upon such depositions. And the parties who made the depositions — with, we believe, a single exception — were personally before the grand jury as witnesses. We find no error in the refusal of the motion to set aside the indictment.

The third assignment of error is to the overruling of the demurrer to the indictment. The demurrer was general, and was properly overruled.

[126]*126The fourth assignment of error is to the action of the district court in refusing the request of defendant’s counsel to be allowed the closing argument upon the trial. As this assignment was not urged on the argument, we presume the counsel*, upon reflection, had wisely concluded to abandon it.

The fifth assignment of error is the allowing of the witness-Frankie Wilson (wife of deceased) to remain in the courtroom: during the trial, against the objection of defendant. This, we-think, was a matter entirely within the direction of the trial' court, and inasmuch as the uncle of defendant was, at request of defendant’s counsel, permitted to remain in the courtroom during the trial, there is no good reason apparent why the wife of deceased should not be allowed the same privilege, if it seemed proper to the trial court.

The sixth assignment is covered by what has been said in regard to the second assignment.

The seventh to the sixteenth assignments of error, inclusive,, go to the admission of testimony. We have carefully and laboriously examined the testimony in the record, and we are convinced that more latitude was given the defense, in the introduction of testimony, than a strict enforcement of the rules-would have permitted. The error, if any, in this regard, was in permitting a mass of testimony on the part of the defense-which by no recognized legal rules could have any bearing upon, or pertinency to the issues on trial.

In a plenitude of caution, counsel have included in their assignment of errors many exceptions which we do not deem it essential to consider or pass upon separately, as they are mostly raised on objections to the admission of testimony by the defendant tending to disprove what defendant assumed was-claimed by the prosecution to be the motive actuating defendant in the commission of the homicide. In the presentation of the case on the part of the prosecution, certain witnesses testified to facts tending to prove that the defendant had been a suitor of the wife of deceased prior to her marriage with deceased, with the apparent object of predicating upon the rejection of his suit in that behalf a motive for his hostility toward’ the deceased, which culminated in the homicide. It was sought by defendant to negative the effect of this evidence by showing, [127]*127the bad character of the wife of the deceased prior to her marriage, to wit, that she was of notoriously bad character, was the inmate of a brothel, etc. It was not incumbent upon the prosecution to ¿low, in the first instance, any motive for the homicide, further than the same was developed by a proof of the circumstances of the killing. The absence of motive might be shown in defense, to be met by proof in rebuttal on the part of the prosecution. The prosecution, however, having offered proof tending to show the relations of defendant and the wife of deceased in the first instance, as supplying a motive for the homicide, it ivas entirely proper for thé defense to introduce testimony tending to disprove any such relations; and this, we think, the court permitted, to the fullest extent necessary to that end. It is not possible that any jury possessed of ordinary intelligence could, after hearing the testimony introduced, as the same appears in the record, have any doubt as to the character of the wife of deceased prior to her marriage. But the defendant, in seeking to avoid Scylla, has run upon Charybdis. In showing the character of the woman (the wife of deceased) , he has shown the relations that existed between her and the defendant at that time, which, it is evident from the record, were not of a purely platonic nature. It would seem to be the logic of the defense that, having done away with the presumability of marital aspirations on the part of the defendant toward the wife of deceased, he had thereby shown an absence of motive or ground of hostility on the part of the defendant .toward deceased. This assumption is entirely unwarranted.. All history, from King David down to Breckenridge, shows that, lust is a far greater incentive to crime than a love which seeks, only a pure and lawful consummation.

Several exceptions are taken to the instructions given by the court, as well as to the refusal of the court to give certain instructions asked by the defense. TVe have examined with critical care the instructions given by the court, and we find that, with one single exception, the law of the case was properly given. Nearly if not quite all of the instructions asked by the defense were given, in substance, by the court. Counsel, in criminal cases, are very prone to attempt to secure the benefit [128]*128of a closing argument to the jury by interpolating an argument into the instructions asked. The law of the case having already been correctly given by the court to the jury, to repeat it, with the embellishments of counsel, would tend, not only to distract the jury, but to impede the cause of justice.

The court having given the following instruction: “4. The jury are instructed that if they believe from all the evidence that at the time the defendant fired the fatal shot the circumstances surrounding the defendant were such as to induce in his mind an honest belief that he was in danger of receiving from deceased some great bodily harm, and that deceased was about to make a felonious assault upon him, or that deceased was wrong- .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 P. 272, 4 Idaho 120, 1894 Ida. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-schieler-idaho-1894.