State v. Ward

1 P.2d 620, 51 Idaho 68, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 91
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1931
DocketNo. 5636.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1 P.2d 620 (State v. Ward) 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. Ward, 1 P.2d 620, 51 Idaho 68, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 91 (Idaho 1931).

Opinions

*72 GIVENS, J.

—This appeal is from a conviction for murder in the first degree, and a sentence of life imprisonment. The appellant attacks the information because the original did not sufficiently allege deliberation and premeditation; that the court was without authority to permit an amendment of the information in this particular, because such amendment was one of substance and not of form, and that there was no plea to the amended information; hence the court was without jurisdiction to hear the cause.

The original information, dated November 11, 1929, designated the crime with which defendant was charged, as murder in the first degree, and one substantially the same was held sufficient in State v. McClurg (filed June 25, 1931).

The appellant was arraigned November 25, 1929, and plead not guilty. January 6, 1930, the information was amended by interlineation, and the wording as to premeditation elaborated.

At the first trial beginning January 7, 1930, the jury failed to agree; the second trial resulting in a verdict of guilty, was commenced April 21, 1930.

1929 Session Laws, chap. 72, p. 110, authorizes the amendment of an information as to form or substance after the plea, provided the defendant is not thereby prejudiced. The amended information was unquestionably sufficient. (State v. Rogers, 30 Ida. 259, 163 Pac. 912; State v. Askew, 32 Ida. 456, 184 Pac. 473; State v. Dong Sing, 35 Ida. *73 616, 208 Pac. 860; State v. Arnold, 39 Ida. 589, 229 Pac. 748; State v. Boykin, 40 Ida. 536, 234 Pac. 157; People v. Davis, 8 Utah, 412, 32 Pac. 670.) Appellant does not question that the jury was fully and accurately instructed as to what the state was expected to prove to sustain the charge of murder in the first degree, or that the jury did not know what issues .were before it, and it is clearly apparent from the record that the appellant was in nowise prejudiced by the amendment. Ample time was given for him to interpose any special plea after the amendment and before the second trial. Furthermore, the record shows that at the time of the second trial, the appellant and counsel being present in the court, the clerk read the information charging the appellant with murder in the first degree, and stated that a plea of not guilty had been entered by the defendant. Appellant raised no objection, and in his objection to the jurisdiction of the court interposed at the beginning of the second trial, did not specify lack of plea. Any irregularity was thus in effect waived. (State v. Poynter, 34 Ida. 504, 205 Pac. 561, 208 Pac. 871.)

After the first trial and before the second, appellant asked by appropriate motion, supported by affidavits, for a change of judges, on the ground that the judge who first tried the case was prejudiced against him. The judge who first tried the case granted the request, and commenting upon the fact that his associate judge in the eighth district was disqualified (who, it appears from the record, had been of counsel for the state, cause for disqualification under C. S., sec. 6499), named Honorable Miles S. Johnson, district judge of the tenth district, to try the case. Counsel before the second trial insisted that the court did not have jurisdiction, but did not specify the ground now urged by him, which is that Judge Reed, holding himself disqualified to try the case and granting the change of judge, because of prejudice, was without authority to name another judge, but that such judge should have been designated by the Governor, under sec. 12, art. 5, of the Constitution. C. S., sees. 6666 et seq., provide for a change of venue in civil cases; C. S., secs. 8888 et seq., provide *74 for a change of venue in criminal cases. C. S., secs. 6499 et seq., providing for a change of judge, however, apply generally to courts both in civil and criminal cases.

In Day v. Day, 12 Ida. 556, 86 Pac. 531, attention was called to the fact that prejudice of a judge was not a ground for a change under sec. 6499 (then R. S., sec. 3900), but that such ground existed under the Constitution.

This point has been directly passed upon in California under a statute at that time identical with ours, adversely to appellant’s contention (People v. Ebey, 6 Cal. App. 769, 93 Pac. 379), and such ruling was reaffirmed in Ex parte Burch, 168 Cal. 18, 141 Pac. 813. (See, also, State ex rel. Lamm v. Mid-State Serum Co., (Mo. App.) 272 S. W. 99.)

Appellant assigns as error the giving of Instruction No. 5, on the ground that it placed the burden of proof to lessen the degree of the offense on the defendant. Conceding that it did so place the burden, it did.not require the same beyond a reasonable doubt, or by a preponderance of the evidence, and such instruction was not out of harmony with the rule laid down in this court in State v. Rogers, supra, and State v. Jurko, 42 Ida. 319, 245 Pac. 685, to the effect that the burden is on the defendant to show facts which would cause the jury to have a reasonable doubt of whether the defendant was guilty of the greater grade of crime charged. (State v. Shuff, 9 Ida. 115, 72 Pac. 664.)

The testimony of one Ryan, who testified for the state in the first trial, was read to the jury in the second trial, on a showing, by the state that it was unable to produce the witness in person. The state made a prima facie showing to the effect that it was unable to locate the witness and had exercised due diligence, and while the appellant introduced evidence to the effect that the witness had been seen at various places and had been heard of, the question of the sufficiency of the showing was addressed to the discretion of the trial court, and as against appellant’s objection, the showing was sufficient. (State v. Brassfield, 40 Ida. 203, 232 Pac. 1.)

*75 Appellant’s criticism of the instruction with, regard to the definition of manslaughter is without merit, because the instructions taken together, correctly instructed on this point; and, furthermore, the action of the jury in finding appellant guilty of murder in the first degree, though instructed as to the elements of murder in the second degree, as an included offense, removed any question of prejudice with regard to the instructions on manslaughter, since, having found the appellant guilty of the greatest offense, it is evident that they did not consider the appellant guilty of any lesser offense. (State v. Alvord, 47 Ida. 162, 272 Pac. 1010.)

For a consideration of the other two errors assigned, it is necessary to briefly review the salient features of the case. The state’s testimony, in effect, showed that on Sunday afternoon, August 4th, the appellant drove to the city of St.

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Bluebook (online)
1 P.2d 620, 51 Idaho 68, 1931 Ida. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ward-idaho-1931.