Court Opinion

ID: 6605312
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:11:38.050637+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:09.972163
License: Public Domain

Oassoday, J.
The testimony is voluminous, and presented as it came from the reporter. There is no succinct statement of any portion of the record. There is no printed or written brief pointing out where the alleged errors may be found, nor of authorities in support of the propositions urged upon the oral argument. In view of these facts, we would be justified in affirming the judgment without looking into the record. But this is a criminal case, and so we have carefully considered the several questions suggested at the bar, to the end that no injustice should be done to the prisoner.
I. The principal contention is that the verdict is not supported by the evidence. But the facts are too numerous, and the testimony too circumstantial, as bearing upon the guilt of the prisoner, to justify a disturbance of the verdict on that ground.
2. The district attorney was under no obligation to furnish the defense with a copy of Christensen’s confession, and his refusal so to do was not error.
8. After having made seven strikes from the jurymen called, and expressed himself willing to take the jury, the district attorney was allowed, against objection, to strike from the list of jurors the name of a juryman upon the list when he so waived his strike. The district attorney was entitled to twelve peremptory challenges. Sec. 4690, R. S. Did the mere fact that he passed the list once without striking preclude him, before -exhausting his challenges, from thereafter striking any upon the list when he so passed ? "When the challenge was exercised by the state, the jury had not been accepted by both parties and sworn, and *67hence the case is distinguishable from State v. Cameron, 2 Pin. 496; S. C. 2 Chand. 172; and Lamb v. State, 36 Wis. 426. The peremptory challenges were not exhausted, as in the case of the juryman Fairfield in Schoeffler v. State, 3 Wis. 837. The intimation, in that case, that the juryman Morley might have been properly so challenged by either party before such challenges were exhausted, favors the ruling in this case. Id. 835. In the absence of any statutory regulation or rule of court on the subject, the order of challenging jurors seems to be within the discretion of the trial court, which will not be reviewed unless there appears to have been an abuse of such discretion. Thomp. & M. Juries, § 269, subd. 4; and cases there cited; Comm. v. Piper, 120 Mass. 185; Hubotter v. State, 32 Tex. 479. There was no statute or rule of court to prevent the district attorney in this case from exercising the challenge in question. The ruling of the court in allowing Such exercise is fully supported by Comm. v. Piper, supra; Fountain v. West, 23 Iowa, 9; Hubotter v. State, supra; Beauchamp v State, 6 Blackf. 307; Hooker v. State, 4 Ohio, 350.
4. It is said, in effect, that in his summing up to the jury the district attorney persistently referred to what had been testified to and found by the jury on the trial of Christensen. There is some ground for this criticism. But the trial judge has some latitude upon such questions. He was necessarily familiar with all shades of the evidence presented. The two cases related to the same murder. The line of defense appears to have been, to some extent at least, the same. Some of the witnesses appear to have been sworn on both trials, and some of them testified in this case that they had sworn the same as on the other trial, and others that they had sworn differently. Some of the evidence taken upon the other trial appears to have been used as impeaching testimony on this trial. Such be*68ing tbe nature of the evidence, we cannot say that the matters referred to were outside of the record.
By the Oourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.