State v. Linhart
State v. Linhart
Opinion of the Court
First. That the court appointed a special term, and had the cause continued to the same, at a time when the defendant was not personally present in the court. It is
At a subsequent term when the prisoner was held for trial, the said MeGrIathery was the presiding judge, having in the interim been duly elected and qualified as such. But in law he was incompetent to preside at the trial of the defendant, for the reason above suggested.
His power under the circumstances, however, to appoint under the Revision a special term for the transaction of the legal business of the county, suited to the convenience of a neighboring judge, is not seriously questioned. The point of the objection goes to the continuance of the prosecution to that special term in the personal absence of the prisoner, although his counsel was at the time in court agreeing and consenting thereto.
Our reply to this seeming error in the proceedings is one that will not interfere with the general rule relating to the personal presence of the defendant. In this cáse the continuance resulted from the operation of the statute, and not the act of the court.
The court was disqualified from acting in the premises, and if it had ordered a continuance, which it did not, it would have been an act of supererogation, and without prejudice to the defendant.
The record shows that when a special term was appointed, the counsel for the State and the defendant consented that the cause should stand continued to the special term. But this agreement was wholly superfluous, for in its observance the same result would have been accomplished under the operation of law. No different result would have been obtained if the prisoner had been
Second. It is again said that the verdict was not warranted by the evidence; we find from reading the same as set forth in the record, that it is almost exclusively circumstantial, nevertheless, that the circumstances occurring just before and subsequent to the death of the murdered man, do so connect the defendant with the murderous transaction, as that it could reasonably justify the jury in finding that the defendant was the guilty perpetrator of the act. We could not, therefore, say that the court below did wrong in refusing a new trial for the alleged ground that the verdict was against the evidence.
The proceedings are
Affirmed.
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