Todd v. State

25 Ind. 212
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 25 Ind. 212 (Todd v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Todd v. State, 25 Ind. 212 (Ind. 1865).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

Todd was indicted in tbe Orange Circuit Court for the murder of Henry Hall, by shooting him with a pistol.

[213]*213On Todd’s application the venue was changed, and the case transferred to the Harrison Circuit Court for trial. In the latter court the issue, upon the defendant’s plea of “ not guilty,” was tried by a jury, and the defendant found guilty of manslaughter, and sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment in the State’s prison.

A motion made by the defendant for a new trial was overruled, and judgment rendered on the verdict. The defendant appeals to this court.

The reasons filed for a new trial are:

“1st. The verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence.
“2d. Surprise at the trial,'which ordinary prudence could not have guarded against.” The second reason is not, in terms, very specific, but a bill of exceptions shows that it was based on affidavits, which are set out, and the cause of surprise thereby properly brought before the court.

The evidence is all in the record.

Other errors are assigned, upon the refusal of the court to allow evidence of certain facts, offered by the defendant, to be given to the jury, but as they were not presented as reasons for a new trial, they are not-properly before us, and we cannot, therefore, notice them. If the court erred in rejecting the evidence, it was an error occurring at the trial, and should have been presented as a reason for a new trial, under the eighth specification of section 352 of the code. 2 G. & H., 211; Kent v. Lawson, 12 Ind. 675; Doe ex dem., &c., v. Hall, 2 Ind. 24; The State v. Swarts, 9 Ind. 221.

We will first consider the question raised by the second reason presented to the court for a new trial, viz, “ surprise at the trial.”

In support of the motion, the affidavit of the defendant, and also of Cyrus L. Dunham, his attorney, were filed and presented to the court.

Dunham swears that the defendant went into the trial of the case with the confident expectation that he could prove by [214]*214Jlenry Breclen, a witness for the defendant on the trial, that he saw the defendant and Hall, the deceased, immediately after the firing of the first shot, and that Hall was then in close pursuit of the defendant, his horse’s head nearly up to or lapping the crupper of the horse ridden by the defendant, brandishing a corn-knife at or over him, as if endeavoring to strike him. That after he thus saw them, defendant fired four shots, Hall all the time appearing to pursue, and endeavoring to strike defendant; that Hall did not seem to slacken his pace until he fell, or was in the act of falling, from his horse, after all the shots were fired. That before the evidence was commenced, he, Dunham, had a conversation with said witness, in which said witness narrated what he saw and heard of said transaction substantially as above stated, and he so informed the defendant. That said Dunham and the defendant were completely surprised by the testimony of said Breclen on the trial, in which he stated that a short space of time had elapsed after he had heard the first shot before he looked around where the parties were, and that when he did so look he did not see Hall, but saw the defendant; that he did not see Hall until after the second shot had been fired, and that when he did first see him he was about twenty steps behind said Todd. That he, Dunham, was sometime previously informed by Morrison Scott, and believed that defendant could prove by said Scott, that said Hall was close upon said defendant, endeavoring to strike with his corn-knife, and threatening to kill him, when defendant first shot at Hall, and that he continued to pursue and endeavor to strike the defendant with the corn-knife until after the last shot was fired. But that the said Dunham believed the defendant ought to, and safely could, go to trial on the evidence of said Breclen, as he expected, as before stated, it would be.

The defendant in his affidavit states that, on the trial, he was taken perfectly by surprise, by the testimony of said Breden, a witness called for the defendant, when he testified that he did not see Hall, the deceased, at the time of the [215]*215shooting, which resulted in. his death, until after the second shot was fired by the defendant, and that at that time said Hall was twenty steps behind the defendant, but riding toward him brandishing his corn-knife. The defendant further states that he had been informed before the trial, and before he had consented to go into trial, and believed the statement true, that said witness, Breden, saw both the defendant and Hall immediately after the first shot was fired, at which time Hall was close behind the defendant, the head of Hall’s horse being up to or lapping the crupper of the defendant’s horse, both parties riding rapidly, the defendant from said Hall, and he in pursuit of the defendant, with his corn-knife uplifted toward, or over, the defendant, and apparently gaining on» him, when the four shots were fired by the defendant in rapid succession, and all before Hall fell or slackened his pace. That he went into the trial mainly relying upon the testimony of said witness for his defense; that the facts were as he expected to> prove them by said witness, and that he could prove them substantially as stated, by Morrison Scott and Samuel Mix. That said Scott, at the time of the trial, was absent from the State, at Gape Girardeau, Missouri, as the defendant was then informed; that he had caused him to be duly subpoenaed as a witness on said trial. That said Mix is a private in- regiment and was not at said trial, and was then absent on duty with his regiment in the rebel States, and he could not therefore procure his attendance. That the defendant had been for some months confined in jail, and not able to give bail, and relying on what he believed he could prove by said Breden, and that it was sufficient for his defense, he went into the trial. That, if a new trial were granted'him, he believed he could, on such trial, procure the testimony of said Scott and Mix-, that, owing to their absence, he could not procure their affidavits in support of the motion for a new trial. That said Scott was nearest to- defendant at the commencement of the difficulty, and that he could further prove, by [216]*216him that Hall, the deceased, actually struck at the defendant once or twice with his corn-knife, and barely missed him, threatening at the same time that he would kill him, all befgre the defendant fired the first shot at said Hall.

The bearing of the facts which the defendant and his counsel swear they confidently expected to prove by the witness, Breden, upon the merits of the case, will more fully appear by a statement of some of the material facts of the ease as they appear from the evidence given on the trial. It appears that the defendant, a minor, was a member of a military company in the service of the State, encamped near Leavenworth. The company was ordered to Orange

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

Related

Walker v. State
189 N.E. 127 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1934)
Anderson v. State
161 N.E. 625 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1928)
Smith v. Clews
14 Abb. N. Cas. 465 (New York Supreme Court, 1884)
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Sponier
85 Ind. 165 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1882)
McGinnis v. Gabe
78 Ind. 457 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Ind. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todd-v-state-ind-1865.