Court Opinion

ID: 3678671
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:24:40.647477+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:26:49.272715
License: Public Domain

The defendant was tried for murder and convicted, and appealed to this Court. At the last term of this Court we decided that there was no error, and directed that our opinion be certified to the Court below, that that Court might proceed to judgment. At this term of the Court the defendant files a petition to have the case reheard in this Court, upon the ground that his counsel was not present when the case was heard in this Court, and that on that account the attention of this Court was not called to a defense which would have availed him.
Neither the learned counsel for the prisoner nor the Attorney General has been able to cite any authority showing that we have the power to rehear the case. In equity cases and in civil actions the practice has been common, but in criminal cases never to our knowledge. In the former cases this Court makes decrees and passes judgments, *Page 17 
which may be reviewed. But in criminal cases we do not pass judgment. Such cases are sent up for our opinion only which we certify to the Court below, and there our jurisdiction ends.
We should regret this if it appeared that any injustice had been done the defendant, either by reason of the fault of his counsel or the oversight of this Court; but in considering the defense set out in his petition in connection with the record in the case, it is apparent that it could not have availed him if it had been made in this Court upon the hearing.
The defendant was arrested not by a regular officer, but by one deputized for the purpose. And upon the trial below his Honor charged the jury that in order to make the killing of the deputy murder, it must appear that the defendant knew that he was authorized to arrest him, and that unless they were satisfied that the defendant knew that fact, they must acquit him of murder. This was all right. But the defendant in his petition says that there was no evidence that he did know it, and therefore it was error in his Honor to leave it to the jury. Suppose that to be so for the sake of the argument, the proper course was for the defendant to move for a new trial upon that ground, and then his Honor would have stated what the evidence was, and we could have reviewed him.
But no such objection was taken below, and therefore could not have been taken here, unless it had appeared in the record. It is true that the record does not state the evidence as to the knowledge of the defendant that the officer was deputized, nor does it state that there was any evidence upon that point. But then it is not usual to state all the evidence, but only so much as is necessary to present the points made below. And we infer that there was evidence of that fact, because his Honor distinctly calls the attention of the jury to it as one thing about which they must *Page 18 
be satisfied; and this he would scarcely have done if there had been no
evidence; or if it had escaped his Honor's attention, it would not have escaped the attention of his learned counsel. But no such point was taken below, and no such point was taken upon the hearing in this Court, although the defendant's counsel was attendant upon the Court at that term, and is put down in the report as appearing in the cause, and our recollection is that he did appear, and did argue the case in person, when the case was first called, when there was a certiorari ordered. Upon the return of thecertiorari we suppose the counsel was absent, but a brief would have presented the point. But we repeat that the point, if made here and not made below, would not have availed him.
PER CURIAM.               Petition dismissed with cost.