Territory v. Kinney

3 N.M. 97
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 N.M. 97 (Territory v. Kinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory v. Kinney, 3 N.M. 97 (N.M. 1884).

Opinion

Bell, J.

The appellant was jointly indicted with several other persons in the district court for Dona Ana county, at the March term, 1883. The offense charged was the larceny of certain cattle. He-was tried separately, convicted, and sentenced to imprisonment for five years, and to pay a fine of $500. From this judgment against him he has appealed.

The errors alleged to have been committed in the court below are— First, an abuse of discretion on the part of the court in refusing to' change the venue. The rule of law is that the appellate court will not ordinarily entertain an appeal from the ruling of the court below on a matter that is purely in the discretion of that court. Before doing so it must appear that the discretion has been so grossly abused as to amount to a perversion of justice. The question of a-change of venue is addressed to the sound discretion of the court,, and is, perhaps, more than any other exercise of discretion, a difficult one to review. The appellate court can never have before it all the facts and circumstances as they appeared to the presiding judge in the court below, and upon which his ruling was founded. The change of venue was prayed for in this case because of the alleged prejudice which existed among the residents of Dona Ana county against the defendant. It was supported by the affidavits of several citizens of that county. These affidavits charge, in substance, that it would be impossible to secure in that county an impartial jury. 'The court thought otherwise, and denied the motion. In considering the appeal from that ruling, this court must be justly influenced by the fact that the learned judge who presided in the lower court has, for many years, been himself a resident and citizen of Dona Ana county. He was personally cognizant of the condition of feeling existing in that community, and was, of course, the very best judge of its possible effect upon the trial of the defendant. The ruling of the ■court on the question, therefore, may have been based upon much .better evidence than the record here affords us. . In addition to these considerations, this court will also take judicial notice that the panel •of jurors selected to try causes at the district court for the Third judicial district of the territory, and held at Las Cruces, were, under ■the law, drawn from the body of the whole district, which comprises “three of the largest counties of the territory, and that, therefore, local prejudice in Dona Ana county—if such prejudice existed—would not necessarily prevent securing a jury from the other counties of the district. We cannot say that there was" any abuse of discretion, and we are consequently of the opinion that there was no error in denying the motion.

The next alleged error is, second, an abuse of discretion in refusing a continuance. The motion for a continuance was made upon ¡the affidavit of the defendant himself, and asked that the trial be ■postponed until the following term of the court. Various reasons are assigned for the continuance in this affidavit, but the principal ■ ones are that witnesses were absent who could prove an alibi for him, ■ and also witnesses who could prove from whom he had purchased • •certain cattle, with the purchase of which he was charged, knowing them to be stolen. The affidavit also alleges that the defendant was not aware of the charges against him until the second week of the term of court at which he was tried, and too late to get his witnesses at that time. This latter charge is denied explicitly by an affidavit ■•of the officer who arrested him, who says that three days after the ■ arrest he visited the defendant in jail, and there informed him of all the charges against him; that he read to him a statement of the > charges, which he had fully written out.

As to the .first portion of the affidavit which we have recited, alleging inability to secure the attendance of witnesses to prove an alibi, •and of witnesses to prove how he became possessed of certain cattle ¡■alleged to have been stolen, it is quite enough to say that the record ¡shows that, though the defendant, of all other persons in the world, •was best informed on these subjects, he failed to take the stand as a •witness and testify to these facts in his own behalf. In considering the question of the alleged error for abuse of discretion in denying a continuance, the court cannot shut its eyes to so important a fact, ■¡disclosed by the record. On appeal from such a ruling, the court is authorized to examine the whole record, as well subsequent to as before the ruling, in order to determine whether there was any abuse. It is also entirely proper to take into consideration the fact that the •defendant did not himself take the stand as a witness, as it is only at his trial, and before the facts are passed upon by the jury, that failure to do so shall not raise any presumption against him. • After trial, and on the review,- the appellate court can consider it. That the defendant should have failed to lake the stand as a witness on his own behalf, under the advice of learned and zealous counsel, cannot change the effect which that course must necessarily have upon the court in considering this particular question. To say that the court below grossly abused its discretion, under such a state of the record, would be, in our judgment, wholly unwarranted. We find no error in the ruling.

The next assignment of error is upon the refusal of the court to give the following instructions:

First. “The jury is instructed that the testimony of the witness Sierra is not of itself sufficient to warrant the conviction of the defendant in this case: and further, if the jury believes from the testimony that the defendant Kinney was not present when the crime charged in this indictment was committed, but was in El Paso, then he must be acquitted.”
Second. “The court instructs the jury that the testimony of the accomplice is always received with caution, and that while the jury are the sole judges of the credibility of the witness and of the weight to be given to his testimony, that it is the duty of the court to caution you of the danger of convicting upon the testimony of an accomplice ■alone.”
Third. “I instruct the jury that they will not be justified in finding the defendant guilty upon the uncorroborated testimony of the accomplice, Margarito Sierra, and he must be corroborated, not only as to the circumstances of the commission of the crime, but he must be corroborated as to the defendant’s connection with it; for it will be presumed that as the witness was present when the crime was committed, and participated in it, that he will tell the circumstances truly. The danger is that after having stated the circumstances truly, that he may .accuse some innocent person of the crime in order that he may derive some fancied benefit himself.”
Fourth. “In weighing the evidence of the witness Margarito Sierra, they should remember that he is a self-convicted thief; that he •admits that he helped to steal the cattle; that he admits he was present when they were sold, and that there were witnesses to prove his presence at the sale and connection with the cattle, and that he was liable to prosecution therefor, and that he hoped and expected immunity from his own crimes as a reward for his testimony.”

It was not error, in our opinion, for the court below to refuse to -charge the first of these proposed instructions, taken as a whole.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.M. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-v-kinney-nm-1884.