Opinion
February 18, 1928.
1. JUROR: Formed Opinion. The fact that jurors have formed opinions regarding the guilt of defendant, based upon the reading of newspaper accounts and conversations with others, which it will require evidence to remove, does not disqualify them, if they further testify that, in reaching a verdict, they will be guided solely by the evidence produced and the law as declared by the court.
2. ____: Recent Immigrant to State. The citizenship in the county of a juror not being questioned, his competency is not affected by the fact that only a few weeks before the trial he had moved to the county from another state.
3. ____: Conscientious Scruples: Waiver. The statute (Sec. 4012, R.S. 1919) authorizes the State to waive the disqualification of a juror who states he has conscientious scruples against the infliction of the death penalty in a capital case.
4. DEFENDANT: Cross-Examination: Preserved for Review. An objection to the latitude allowed to the State in the cross-examination of defendant is not for review on appeal unless preserved in the motion for a new trial.
5. EVIDENCE: Correspondence between Defendants and Others. Letters and correspondence between the accused and persons affected by the crime, written before the crime was committed and tending to throw light on the pertinent issues of the case, and especially if written in answer to letters previously passing between the parties and actually received by them, even if not signed by the accused, are admissible in evidence.
6. ____: Letter Written to Defendant's Son. A letter written by the woman killed in the same assault in which the man whom defendant is charged with having murdered was shot, to defendant's son, with the request that it be shown to defendant, and actually shown to and read by him, and tending to throw light on the pertinent issues, became in effect a communication from the deceased woman to defendant, and is admissible in evidence.
7. ____: Collateral: Rebuttal: Divorce. It is not error to permit the introduction in rebuttal of testimony pertaining to a collateral matter, which cannot be prejudicial to defendant. Where defendant shot a man and woman sitting together on a doorstep and is being tried upon a charge of having murdered the man, oral testimony of the divorce of the woman from a former husband, introduced in rebuttal and in answer to defendant's testimony relating to his marriage to her, its only purpose being to show that the decree was invalid and hence that his claim that she was his wife was unfounded, was collateral to the main issue, pertained to no material issue in the case, did no prejudice to defendant, and hence its introduction was not error.
8. INSTRUCTION: Reasonable Doubt: Applicable to Whole Case: Special Issue. If the instruction on reasonable doubt, given at the request of the State, applies to the entire case, it is not required that an instruction on the subject be given in connection with any particular phase of the defense, or that one applicable in express terms to any specific issue be given.
9. ____: Manslaughter: Refusal of Defendant's Request. The court having given an instruction on manslaughter which fully conforms to that grade of homicide, an instruction on the subject asked by defendant is properly refused.
10. ____: ____: Not Authorized. Notwithstanding the defendant under the facts in evidence is not entitled to an instruction on manslaughter, a correct instruction on that subject is to his benefit, and is an error of which he cannot complain.
11. ASSIGNMENT: Review: Life Imprisonment. The sentence imposed in this case being imprisonment for life, errors in the instructions complained of, though not preserved in a manner to authorize their consideration, are reviewed.
12. ARGUMENT TO JURY: Must be Set Out. Alleged objectionable remarks of the prosecuting attorney in his argument to the jury cannot be considered on appeal, unless set out in the brief or it indicates where they may be found.
13. ____: Presumption of Right Action. If appellant's presentation of the cause does not set out the inflammatory remarks alleged to have been made by the prosecuting attorney, or what steps were taken to remedy their hurtful effect, if made, it will be presumed that they were not prejudicial, and that the court directed the jury not to consider them, if made and prejudicial.
14. REMARKS OF COURT. If remarks alleged to have been made by the trial court in ruling upon objections are not pointed out, but are left entirely to conjecture, it is utterly futile to assign them as error.
15. OBJECTIONS: No Ruling. It will not be held that the trial court failed to rule on objections, where the record shows that the court's failure to rule was confined to instances in which repeated objections of the same nature had been previously ruled upon.
16. MURDER: Outraged Husband: Repeated Shooting. There is no room in the case for palliation, on the theory that defendant, an outraged and injured husband whose wife had been weaned away from him by a seducer, on unexpectedly finding them together became inflamed with righteous and uncontrollable anger, and in destroying her seducer, killed her, where the evidence shows that, after having shot both of them, he deliberately walked to where they were lying, dead and dying, and fired four or five additional shots into their bodies, and that the woman had had numerous husbands and flitted from one to another in a desultory and unstable way, as he well knew.
Corpus Juris-Cyc. References: Criminal Law, 16 C.J., Section 1202, p. 612, n. 79; Section 1525, p. 742, n. 45, 47, 53; Section 2202, p. 878, n. 42; Section 2475, p. 1035, n. 57; Section 2493, p. 1049, n. 82; Section 2506, p. 1063, n. 85; 17 C.J., Section 3335, p. 68, n. 34; Section 3350, p. 89, n. 63; Section 3422, p. 138, n. 52; Section 3475, p. 181, n. 38; Section 3561, p. 217, n. 61; Section 3581, p. 240, n. 33; Section 3662, p. 319, n. 15; Section 3688, p. 340, n. 66; Section 3729, p. 360, n. 71. Homicide, 30 C.J., Section 557, p. 310, n. 25. Juries, 35 C.J., Section 189, p. 249, n. 7; Section 370, p. 341, n. 63: Section 392, p. 356, n. 52.
Appeal from Jackson Circuit Court. — Hon. James H. Austin, Judge.
AFFIRMED.
W.E. Walsh and Eaton, Burroughs Cavanaugh for appellant.
(1) The examination of jurors touching their qualifications to sit in criminal cases should be conducted with the utmost fairness, and without a desire on the part of the State's representative to procure jurymen more favorable to the State than to the defendant. State v. Hudspeth, 159 Mo. 178. A juror who has formed and expressed an opinion is incompetent, though he may state on his qualification that he could give the defendant a fair trial. State v. Foley, 144 Mo. 600; State v. Culler, 82 Mo. 623; State v. Taylor, 134 Mo. 109. (2) It is not proper to permit the defendant in a criminal case to be cross-examined about matters not testified to on direct examination. State v. Grant, 144 Mo. 56; State v. Kyle, 177 Mo. 659. Under the statute defendant in a criminal case can only be cross-examined as to those matters referred to by him on his examination in chief. State v. McGraw, 74 Mo. 573; State v. Turner, 76 Mo. 350; State v. Douglas, 81 Mo. 231; State v. Patterson, 88 Mo. 88; State v. Brannan, 95 Mo. 19. The court erred in permitting the county attorney to examine defendant touching the letters he had written to the deceased May Erickson, nee Hicks. Also as to the letter written by the said deceased to George Hicks, son of the defendant, these matters being clearly outside the examination in chief. The defendant was cross-examined as to other matters not brought out in his testimony on direct-examination, all of which were highly prejudicial to the defendant. (3) The court erred in permitting the introduction of the letter written to George Hicks by May Hicks, the deceased. This letter was hearsay pure and simple. It related to matters not proper to be brought out and was wholly incompetent for any purpose. Statements of the deceased made long prior to the homicide, or letters written to third parties, or even to the defendant, could not be introduced against him on a trial for killing a third party. Defendant was not even being tried for killing the writer of the letter in question, but was on trial for killing Martin Erickson. Statements or declarations of third persons not made in the presence of, or authorized by the party to be affected, are hearsay, unless they are such as to constitute a part of the res gestae. Fougue v. Burgess, 71 Mo. 389; Dunn v. Altman, 50 Mo. App. 231; State v. McCoy, 111 Mo. 517; State v. Harris, 150 Mo. 56; Gordon v. Burris, 141 Mo. 602; State v. Bauerle, 145 Mo. 1. A postal card written by a stranger, and not addressed to one connected with a criminal prosecution, is hearsay, and inadmissible for any purpose against the defendant. State v. Mintin, 116 Mo. 605. A note found on the person of deceased is inadmissible in a prosecution for murder. State v. Punshon, 124 Mo. 448. Statements of the deceased in order to be admissible in evidence, must either be a part of the res gestae or made in articulo mortis. Deceased is not a party to the prosecution, and such evidence is hearsay. State v. Terry, 172 Mo. 213. After deceased was forced to marry the defendant and had refused to live with her, he brought suit against her for divorce. Held, that, on her subsequent trial for killing him two days thereafter, it was not competent to read this petition to the jury, since it was nothing more than verbal statements of deceased made in his lifetime, and was, therefore, incompetent for any purpose. State v. Kennedy, 177 Mo. 98. Hearsay evidence should be excluded whether offered by plaintiff or by defendant to meet plaintiff's hearsay. Allen v. Transit Co., 183 Mo. 411. (4) The oral testimony of a witness is not the best evidence to establish a public record, and such testimony should be excluded. Therefore the oral testimony admitted to establish the claim that May Erickson was divorced from Carter Roberts, October 9, 1924, was wholly incompetent. Martin v. Brand, 182 Mo. 116. The Act of Congress and the statute of Missouri provide that a judgment or court record of another State shall be proved or admitted in any other court within the United States by the attestation of the clerk and the seal of the court annexed, if there be a seal, together with a certificate of the judge that said attestation is in due form, and where the judge's certificate to the judgment fails to state affirmatively that he is the presiding judge of the court wherein the judgment was rendered, it is insufficient to authorize the admission of such transcript in evidence. Moyer v. Lyon, 38 Mo. App. 635; Williams v. Williams, 53 Mo. App. 617. (5) Instructions requested by defendant should have been given. Those relating to reasonable doubt cover phases of that question not contained in the instruction on reasonable doubt given by the court. Defendant's proffered Instruction 8 required the jury to find every fact necessary to constitute the crime charged beyond a reasonable doubt, and that if they had a reasonable doubt arising from the evidence as to the proof on any of such facts they should acquit the defendant. It is proper, on a trial for murder, to instruct the jury that they must find all the elements of either degree of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt before they can convict of either of such degrees. State v. Martin, 124 Mo. 514. (6) Instruction 9 offered by defendant required the jury to consider all the facts and circumstances in evidence, and if from all the facts and circumstances in evidence they had a reasonable doubt as to the defendant's guilt, they should acquit him. This is undoubted law and the defendant had a right to the instruction regardless of the instruction on reasonable doubt given by the court. That given by the court did not cover the question in that way. It is not sufficient that an instruction given by the State correctly defines reasonable doubt, though such an instruction is given, yet if the court refuses an instruction asked by defendant that he is entitled to an acquittal if the jury have a reasonable doubt of his guilt, is reversible error. State v. Farnum, 158 Mo. 149. The reasonable doubt which the law throws around the accused is a humane and beneficent rule in favor of life and liberty, and is too sacred to be whittled away by the encroachment of qualifying expletives. State v. Owens, 79 Mo. 619; State v. Young, 105 Mo. 634. (7) Instruction 16 requested by defendant defines fully the meaning of manslaughter. The court erred in refusing it, for the reason that the instruction given on that question on behalf of the State fails to define manslaughter, and especially as required under the facts of this case. If the homicide be committed under the influence of passion or in heat of blood, and is the result of temporary excitement by which control of the reason was disturbed, it is only manslaughter. State v. Holmes, 54 Mo. 153. Heat of passion is recognized by law, whether produced by a just cause of provocation or a lawful, adequate or reasonable cause. State v. Berkley, 109 Mo. 665. The passion which will reduce homicide to manslaughter is an excited state of the mind produced by some lawful provocation. State v. Ellis, 74 Mo. 207; State v. Grugin, 147 Mo. 39. The testimony of the defendant that deceased assaulted him, together with the statement of an eyewitness that he saw defendant and deceased engaged in a scuffle, is sufficient evidence of provocation to reduce the killing to manslaughter. State v. McKenzie, 177 Mo. 699. (8) Other instructions erroneously refused by the court relate to the marriage and the co-habitation of the defendant and the deceased May Hicks as husband and wife. It was proper to inform the jury of the law governing marriage, so they might determine whether the parties were married under the forms of law. In order to determine that fact, it was necessary that the jury know what constituted a legal marriage and the law concerning common-law marriage as well. The defense had proven the law of the State of Texas relating to common-law marriage and had established facts bringing the deceased and the defendant under that law. The effect was to show at least a common-law marriage and to meet the possible contingency of the marriage in the county of Mexico being illegal on account of May Hicks not having been divorced before that time. And it was certainly an important fact to go to the jury that the relation of husband and wife existed or had existed between them. Such facts would go far to explain and to palliate the conduct of defendant at the time of the homicide. (9) Counsel for defendant objected and excepted to certain remarks of the county attorney in arguing the case before the jury. The statements of the prosecutor were highly inflammable and extremely hurtful to the defendant before the jury. The reason that these remarks were so prejudicial to the defendant was because of the admission of the incompetent testimony contained in the letters and other evidence relating to the life of the defendant and the deceased May Hicks. For that reason we insist and urge upon this court that the admission of the testimony referred to constitutes the grossest error and should reverse this cause.
North T. Gentry, Attorney-General, and Smith B. Atwood, Assistant Attorney-General, for respondent.
(1) Even though a juror may have formed or expressed an opinion from reading newspaper accounts and general talk of the crime, if he states he can lay aside such opinion and render an impartial verdict according to the law and the evidence, he is qualified. State v. Herring, 268 Mo. 514; State v. Garrett, 226 S.W. 4; State v. Woodard, 273 S.W. 1047; State v. Samis, 246 S.W. 956; State v. Sherman, 175 S.W. 73; State v. Williamson, 106 Mo. 162; State v. Poor, 228 S.W. 810. The question of a juror's qualification is one of fact to be tried by the court, and all doubt should be resolved in favor of its findings. State v. Cunningham, 100 Mo. 382; State v. Baker, 285 S.W. 416; State v. Liolios, 252 S.W. 621. (2) Formerly, persons conscientiously opposed to the death sentence were disqualified. Sec. 4012, R.S. 1919. This objection may now be waived by the prosecutor. Laws 1925, p. 196. (3) Letters and correspondence between accused and persons affected by the crime written before the crime was committed which tend to contradict pertinent testimony given by the accused is admissible in evidence, especially where such correspondence is invited, and was actually communicated. State v. Adams, 108 Mo. 208; State v. Winningham, 124 Mo. 423; State v. Sibley, 131 Mo. 519. (4) Such a letter written to a third party, containing a request of the writer to show it to the accused, and which was so shown, is, in effect, such a communication to the accused as is admissible in evidence. (5) The defendant testified that he was the lawful husband of the deceased woman at the time of the tragedy. Such evidence was properly admitted, because if true, would tend to reduce the grade of the crime from first degree murder to second degree murder. But it was also competent for the State to show in rebuttal that she had a living husband at the time of the alleged marriage. This fact was shown by the fact that she was not divorced until 1924, defendant having already admitted that she was married when he first became acquainted with her. Such marriage is void. State v. Wilson, 278 S.W. 679. A divorce may be proven by the parole testimony of one present in court during the proceedings, just as marriage may be shown by one present at the ceremony, especially when such fact is not directly, but only collaterally in issue. State v. Caulder, 262 34 S.W. 1023. (6) Defendant went into his life history at great length and testified to a marriage ceremony between himself and the deceased woman. It was proper to admit such testimony since it might tend to reduce the grade of the crime. Thereupon, the State was properly permitted to go to corresponding length in rebuttal, and show that defendant's alleged ceremony could not have been valid, and thus counteract defendant's drive to reduce the crime to murder of second degree. So wide is the discretion of the court in admitting rebuttal testimony, that evidence which should have been introduced in chief, may properly be admitted in rebuttal. State v. Steelman, 273 S.W. 409; State v. Keller, 281 S.W. 960; State v. Baker, 172 S.W. 350; State v. Hobson, 177 S.W. 374; State v. Bales, 181 S.W. 601.
The defendant was indicted in the Circuit Court of Jackson County for the murder of one Martin Erickson. Upon a trial defendant was convicted and sentenced to an imprisonment in the penitentiary for life.
The murder occurred in Kansas City, Missouri, on the evening of May 21, 1926. Two women, who testified for the State, witnessed the tragedy. They were, at the time, sitting on a porch of the residence of one of them. They saw, sitting on the doorstep of a building about seventy-five feet away, a man and a woman. The woman screamed, the man caught her by the hand, and they rose and ran towards the door of their house. They were quickly followed by a man, afterwards shown to be the defendant, who as he ran held a pistol in his hand pointed at the man and woman. Just as they reached the door their pursuer shot each of them down. Running up to where they had fallen, he fired five more shots into their prostrate bodies. He then turned and fled.
Attracted by the first shot, two boys, who were playing ball on a lot near at hand, saw the defendant fire the subsequent shots at the fleeing or prostrate couple. A witness, named Golden, followed the defendant as he fled and intercepting him asked what was the matter. The defendant replied that a yellow bastard had stolen his wife and that he would never steal another man's wife. Another witness, named Berger, who heard the shots fired by the defendant, saw the latter fleeing from the scene, and after parking his car followed the defendant several blocks, overtook him and taking him into custody delivered him to the nearest police station. Upon being searched an automatic pistol with two unfired cartridges in the magazine was found on his person. He was held to await the action of the prosecuting attorney, who filed the information upon which the prosecution was based.
A deputy coroner answered the call and repaired to the scene of the tragedy soon after it occurred. He found the dead bodies of the man and the woman lying where one of the women, who had witnessed the shooting, said they had fallen when shot. There were several bullet wounds in the body of each, from which he testified that Erickson, for whose murder the defendant was being tried, and the woman had died. No weapon of any character was found on the bodies of either.
The moving cause of this murder was the infidelity of the woman. Sometime prior to the tragedy she had lived with the defendant as his wife. Becoming enamored of Erickson she left the former and when killed was living with the latter.
The defendant testified that at about six o'clock, P.M., he was walking down the street when he was greeted by a woman's voice. He recognized it as that of his wife, who was sitting on a doorstep with Erickson. She arose and made a step towards the defendant as if to shake hands with him, when Erickson seized her hand and drew her towards the door of the house. As he did so she screamed, and the defendant fired one shot, but does not remember that he shot more than once. The defendant said he shot Erickson because he thought the latter was about to shoot him. He denied that he intended to shoot the woman.
Threats by Erickson against the defendant were testified to by the latter. On one occasion, the night before the defendant's wife left him, he met Erickson on the street and the latter said to him: "You need not be fooling around that woman now, for I am going to have her; and if you want to keep on living you had better stay away from her." On another occasion, as the defendant was alighting from a street car, Erickson stepped up to him and said: "Is your name Boat Hicks?" Defendant said: "Yes," when "Erickson pulled out a little pistol from his hip pocket and said: `You had better beat it down the street.'"
The bill of exceptions is burdened with much wholly irrelevant matter, which, having been incorporated into the statements of the State and the defendant, tends to confuse rather than enlighten. We will consider such portions of the same as have been preserved by the defendant as material to his defense.
I. The contention is made that the members of the trial jury were not chosen with a due regard for the rights of the defendant, and hence he was not awarded a fair and impartial trial by a jury of his peers, or as stated in our Jurors. Constitution (Art. 2, Sec. 22) "a public trial by an impartial jury of the county."
The refusal of the trial court to sustain challenges to certain jurors on the ground that they had formed opinions in regard to the guilt of the defendant is urged as error. These opinions, it was shown, were based on having read newspaper accounts of the killing and from conversations with others, which opinions it would require evidence to remove. This particular phase of the question concerning the qualification of jurors we discussed in State v. Woodard, 309 Mo. l.c. 27, in which we said in effect that:
"A juror is not disqualified who has read newspaper reports or has talked to persons concerning the case in which he is being examined, if, in reply to inquiries in regard thereto, he states that the information thus obtained will not influence him in rendering a verdict, but that he will be governed by the evidence adduced at the trial. Further than this, if he answers that the information obtained has caused him to form an opinion as to the merits of the case this will not disqualify him if he states that he will be governed by the evidence in reaching his verdict regardless of his former opinion. [State v. Samis, 296 Mo. l.c. 487; State v. Poor, 286 Mo. l.c. 656; State v. Herring and Baldwin, 268 Mo. l.c. 529 and cases; State v. Smith, 228 S.W. l.c. 1060 and cases.]
"In the Poor case we reviewed the earlier rulings on this question and discussed the large discretion confided in the trial court in the performance of the duty of selecting a trial jury. The conclusion there reached may pertinently be referred to as applicable in the instant case.
"From these cases may be deduced the general rule that when a defendant, to use the quaint phrase of the common-law, `put himself upon the country,' the limit of his rights in the selection of the triers of the facts is that they be unprejudiced, or in other words, with that discrimination which should characterize the performance of their duty, that their minds may be open only to the consideration of such facts as are admitted in evidence."
The jurors objected to in this case met this measure and the appellant has no just ground of complaint on this score.
The citizenship in the county of the juror named Carlisle not being questioned, his competency was not affected by the fact that only a few weeks before the trial he had removed to Jackson County from Minnesota. [Sec. 6607, R.S. 1919; State v. France, 76 Mo. 681.]
A juror named Harlow stated that he had conscientious scruples against the infliction of the death penalty. This disqualification was waived by counsel for the State and the juror accepted. Authority for this waiver is found in Section 4012, Revised Statutes 1919, as amended, Laws 1925, page 196.
The objection urged in the brief of the defendant to the latitude allowed the State in the Cross-Examination cross-examination of the defendant was not of Defendant. preserved in the motion for a new trial and is not for review.
II. Error is assigned in the introduction of letters and correspondence between the accused and persons affected by the crime. They were written before the crime was Letters as committed and tend to throw light on the pertinent Evidence. issues of the case and were therefore admissible in evidence, especially when in answer to letters previously passing between the parties, and actually received by them. Such letters were admissible even though not signed by the defendant. [State v. Winningham, 124 Mo. 423.] In State v. Sibley, 131 Mo. 519, it was held that a letter written by the defendant at the dictation of his wife was admissible, although the letter was signed only by the wife. To a similar effect is the holding in State v. Adams, 108 Mo. 208.
It was objected that the court erred in admitting a letter written by the deceased woman to defendant's son. The writer asked that it be shown to the defendant, and it was actually shown to and read by him; hence it became in effect a communication from the deceased woman to the defendant himself, and therefore was admissible under the rulings in the cases above cited.
III. The defendant objected to oral testimony of the divorce of the deceased woman from a former husband. This evidence was introduced in rebuttal, and is not an issue in the case, but is merely collateral and in answer to defendant's Collateral testimony as to the marriage, and defendant was not Matter: prejudiced by its introduction. Where the fact of a Divorce. divorce is only collateral and is not an issue in a case it may be proved by the parole testimony of one who was present when the decree was rendered. [State v. Caulder, 262 S.W. (Mo.) 1023.] There can be no pretense that this testimony was material to any issue in the case and the only purpose of its introduction in evidence in rebuttal was to show that the decree was invalid and hence the claim that the woman he slew was his wife was unfounded. The discretion of the court in permitting the introduction in evidence of testimony of this character will not be disturbed unless it is manifest that the defendant was thereby prejudiced.
IV. In view of the instruction on reasonable doubt, given at the request of the State, which applied to the entire case, it is not required that an instruction on this subject be given in connection with any particular phase of the Reasonable defense or applicable in express terms to any Doubt: Applicable specific issue. An instruction is sufficient to Entire Case. if it applies the doctrine of reasonable doubt to the whole case. [State v. Arnett, 210 S.W. (Mo.) l.c. 84 and cases.] The oft-repeated rule is applicable here that instructions are to be read and considered as a whole. [State v. Hembree, 295 Mo. l.c. 11 and cases; State v. Emory, 246 S.W. (Mo.) 950.]
V. The court gave an instruction for manslaughter which conformed to the requirements of an instruction on this grade of homicide, not only under the statute but the numerous judicial interpretations of the same. The instruction asked by the defendant, therefore, on this subject was properly Manslaughter. refused. It may be said in passing that under all of the facts, the defendant was not entitled to the instruction, given by the court, nevertheless it redounded to the defendant's benefit in affording the jury an opportunity to find him guilty of a lesser offense than that charged and he has no cause of complaint in this regard. An error in the giving of an instruction must be prejudicial to furnish a tenable assignment of error. A case directly in point as furnishing a precedent for this ruling is that of State v. Webb, 205 S.W. (Mo.) l.c. 190, and cases, in which it was held that where there was no authority, under the evidence, for the giving of an instruction for manslaughter in a charge of murder and the defendant was found guilty as charged he was not injured and will not be heard to complain.
VI. Malice, as used in the information and the instructions given, was clearly and correctly defined and the trial court did not commit error in refusing the instruction asked by Malice. the defendant on this subject.
The errors complained of by the defendant concerning the instructions were not preserved in a manner to authorize their consideration; but a life sentence has been imposed in this case, and we have examined the instructions that the Review of defendant may be afforded every opportunity to Instructions. secure a review of any error which may have been committed by the trial court in declaring the law to the jury.
VII. Neither in the motion for a new trial nor in the defendant's brief or argument are the alleged objectionable remarks of the prosecuting attorney preserved in such a manner as to entitle them to consideration. To state that such remarks were "highly inflammable and extremely hurtful to the Argument defendant" coupled with conclusions of a like general to Jury. nature as to their probable effect on the jury, without even indicating what they were, will not enable the court to review them. Further than this, the defendant's presentation of the case does not show what, if any, steps were taken to enable the trial court to remedy the alleged misconduct of the prosecuting attorney at the time.
In this condition of the record we will presume that the remarks complained of were not prejudicial and if so, that the court, in the exercise of that discretion with which it is clothed, would not have permitted them to have been made, and if made that it would have directed that they be not considered by the jury. Any other course would result in an injustice to the court and a disregard of the presumption that always obtains in the absence of evidence to the contrary, as to the legal propriety of judicial proceedings.
VIII. It is assigned as error that the trial court, in ruling upon objections made, discussed matters foreign to the points involved in the objections which were prejudicial to the rights of the defendant. What the remarks were is left to Remarks conjecture. It is enough to say that this manner of of Court. attempting to preserve and present errors for our consideration is utterly futile. Our province is to consider facts as preserved in the records in determining the existence of error. This contention is therefore overruled.
IX. It is further contended that the court failed to rule upon objections made by counsel for the defendant in the progress of the trial. The record discloses that the court's Objections: failure to rule was confined to instances in which No Ruling. repeated objections of the same nature had theretofore been ruled upon. The conduct of the court in this respect left no doubt as to its rulings upon any matter arising in the conduct of the trial, and defendant suffered no injury therefrom.
X. There are no palliating features in this case. It was attempted, possibly not as a defense, but to reduce the grade of the crime, to portray the defendant as an injured, nay an outraged husband, whose wife had been weaned away from him by a seducer; and that the defendant unexpectedly finding Outraged them together became inflamed with righteous and Husband. uncontrollable indignation, and in destroying the author of his undoing killed his wife.
The extent to which he was undone is shown by his deliberately walking up to where they were lying, dead or dying, and firing four or five additional shots into their bodies. This final act of the defendant is sufficient in itself to put the seal of condemnation upon any effort of the defense to lift this crime out of the category of a ruthless murder. However, the testimony in rebuttal for the State completely dissipated any probative force that may have remained in this defense. It was shown that the woman had not once or twice, but oftener, for short periods, ambled along life's highway in double harness. Not as a reflection, but as an ensampler of her character, it may be said that her husbands were almost as numerous as the lovers of Catherine H. Not unkindly or to point a moral or adorn a tale, but simply to illustrate her variant moods in regard to matrimony, it may be noted that with her, as with Anne of Austria: "Neither gift or gain, could hold the winking Light of Love, or Fancy's flight restrain."
The defendant was aware of this idiosyncrasy. Armed with this knowledge he must have realized that sooner or later she would leave the kitchen, where she was employed as a cook while he was hunting work, and flit to another flower. After weeks of desultory trystings with Erickson in which there was nothing more hectic than lover's meetings, she abandoned whatever relations she had sustained with the defendant and went to Erickson, and after a marriage ceremony they began living together. This occurred several weeks before the commission of the crime. Defendant's knowledge of these facts, if not evident from her declarations, were rendered patent by Erickson's growl to the defendant, made as one animal to another, when claiming his mate, that defendant "must quit fooling around this woman, that he" (Erickson) "intended to have her." Defendant's delay therefore in resorting to the primal way, the forceful plan that "he may have who has the power and he may keep who can," tends to dispel the effort made to show that his crime was not the result of passion suddenly aroused, but was an act clothed with the indicia of deliberation and premeditation ample to sustain the charge made and the verdict found. Not only these facts but the entire atmosphere of this case shows that instead of the asserted marital relation being sacred it was purely sordid, and it cannot be otherwise designated by the right thinking mind. It was so found by the jury, whose finding, in the absence of prejudicial error, authorizes the affirmance of the judgment. It is so ordered. Blair, J., concurs; White, P.J., concurs in all except Paragraph II.