Court Opinion

ID: 7033222
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 06:42:59.619974+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:10:54.200364
License: Public Domain

Gookins, J.
The appellant was indicted in the Allen Circuit Court for the murder of Charles Chandler. The •indictment charges the killing to have been by throwing the deceased upon the ground, and beating and kicking him. Wheeler was tried and convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to the State’s prison for four years and six months.
Before proceeding to the trial, which occurred at the same term at which the indictment was found, the defendant made an affidavit on which he moved for a continuance of the cause. The affidavit set forth, that-he was a stranger in that county; that, until said charge, he had enjoyed at all times a fair name and credit among and-with all to whom he was known, wherever he had lived, for an honest,' peaceable, and law-abiding man; that he had been engaged and employed on .a boat on the canal the last year, and at the time the supposed crime was committed, about the close of navigation. The affidavit then details with great particularity his arrival at Fort Wayne upon a canal boat, and his stopping at that place; that immediately upon his landing, a quarrel occurred on another boat lying at the wharf, between the deceased and a person named Green, which was broken off, and again renewed; that the subject of the quarrel was a breast-pin which Chandler charged Green with having, or losing; that one Cartright finally succeeded in pacifying Chandler, after which, while Cartright and the defendant were standing apart from the crowd conversing upon a matter of business, it being dark, Chandler came to them and renewed the conversation concerning the breast-pin; that the defendant then, for the first time, spoke 'to *115•Chandler, and said to Mm in a mild manner and tone, “ There has been enough said about that breast-pin,” when Chandler replied in a very insulting and menacing manner and attitude, “It is none of your business, you God damned son of a bitch,” when he instantly shoved the said Chandler with his hand, and kicked him twice in the back, without any intention to injure said Ghandler, who was a stranger to him; that said kicks were not given with more force than a boy of fourteen years of age might give; that he could only prove by said Cart-right the said provoking words and attitude of said Chandler; that his counsel advised him it would be unsafe for him to go into the trial without the testimony of Cartright, who was then in Cincinnati, Ohio, and whose testimony he expected he could have by the next term; that he had lived at and about Dayton and Cincinnati for years; that he could prove his general character to be that of a peaceable, truthful, honest, and law-abiding man, by Thomas Ross and James Duncan, of Dayton, by Edward Hughes and John Draper, of Cincinnati, and other gentlemen, of equal respectability, in and -about said cities, as well as by George B. Walker, of Jjogansport, Captain Dale, of Dafayette, and Thomas McCarty, of Bagro, in this State, in all of whose employ he had been, and who knew him well — all of which evidence he expected to have by the next term; that being a stranger at the place of trial he could not have the benefit of his said character on said trial, and could not prove his said character, if compelled to go into trial at that term; that he had used all the diligence he could to be ready for trial, and that he asked a continuance not for delay, but for the furtherance of justice. The affidavit contained other matters which being deemed irrelevant need not be noticed.
On moving for a continuance upon this affidavit, the prosecuting attorney, in answer to the motion, said he would “ admit the affidavit,” and insisted upon a trial at that term — whereupon the Court permitted the trial to proceed.
*116The appellant insists that, notwithstanding the offer of the prosecuting attorney to admit the affidavit, the Court ought to have continued the cause; that a defendant charged with crime cannot waive his rights' — -the Court being bound to protect him. We have decided that, in criminal cases, the party accused is bound to except to a ruling of the Court against him, if he wishes to reserve the question. Hornberger v. The State, 5 Ind. R. 300. He seems to have acquiesced in this proceeding, without objection, and cannot assign it for error.
He also insists that he was not bound to take the admission of the attorney for the State, but was entitled to the personal attendance of the witnesses. Neither is this point reserved by an exception, and we cannot review.it. See 3 Ind.R. 552.
On the trial, the defendant offered to read'in his defense, as evidence to the jury, the foregoing affidavit. The Court refused to permit the entire affidavit to be read in evidence; but allowed the following parts of it to go to the jury: Eirst, the venue in the margin, and the entitling of the cause, of the Court and term, and then the following: “Be it remembered, that on this day personally appeared in open Court, Willard Wheeler, who stands indicted in this Court for the murder of Charles Chandler, and who being duly sworn, on his ■oath says, that he has been indicted for said crime at the present term of this Court; that he is a stranger in said county, .........when the said Chandler replied in a very insulting and menacing manner and attitude. ‘ It is none of your business, you Cod damned son of a bitch,’ when affiant instantly shoved the said Chandler with his hand and kicked him twice in the back,......... that affiant can only prove by said Cartright, the said provoking words and attitude by said Chandler, as aforesaid, just before affiant kicked him; .........that affiant can prove his general character to be that of a peaceable, truthful, honest, law-abiding man, by Thomas Boss, and James Duncan, of Dayton, and Ddward Hughes and John Draper, of Cincinnati.'1’
H. PI. Coleriek, for the appellant.
J. W. Gordon and D. C. Chipman, for the State.
To this ruling/>f the Court the defendant excepted.
The only question presented by this exception is, what was the effect of the agreement to admit the affidavit? ¥e think it was an agreement to admit the whole, of it as evidence in the cause. "We do not decide that the attorney for the State was bound to have agreed to admit the whole of-it. That question eould only be raised on an exception to the refusal to grant the continuance, which, as 'we have seen, is not before us. '
In Hamilton v. The State, 3 Ind. R. 552, which was a prosecution for a felony, it was", held that, if the State would admit that the absent witness would testify as alleged in the affidavit, a continuance should be refused. The 2 R. S. 1852, p. 109, s. 322, requires that the facts alleged shall be taken as true, not that the witness will so testify. Under this statute, the proper course would be for the Court to decide, before acting upon the motion to continue, what facts should be taken as true for the purposes of the trial. Thus, all irrelevant matter would be excluded. The party, if he thought the admission not broad enough, could except, and would proceed to trial fully understanding upon what facts he could rely as admitted.
In the case before us, the State having agreed to admit the affidavit as it stood, the defendant was entitled to the benefit of the whole of it; and the Court having excluded it, the judgment must be reversed.

Per Curiam.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed; and it appearing from the record in this cause that the appellant has served out more than half the period of time in the State’s prison, for which he was sentenced, it is ordered that the same be certified to the Governor of this State, to the end that the said appellant may be discharged.