State v. Holden
State v. Holden
Opinion of the Court
This was a criminal prosecution brought in the district court of Eiley county, charging J. F. Holden and Hiram Hamilton with the larceny of a gelding and a mare, the property of Mahlon Parsons. The case was tried before the court and a jury, and the defendants were found guilty, and each was sentenced to the penitentiary for the term of four years. They now appeal to this court. ' The principal grounds urged by the defendants for a reversal of the judgment of the court below are as follows: 1. Incompetency of the defendants’ own counsel. 2. Neglect and failure on the part of the court to properly protect the rights and interests of the defendants. 3. Incompetency of much of the evidence introduced on the trial. 4. Leading questions asked by the attorney for the prosecution. 5. Erroneous and misleading instructions given by the court to the jury. 6. Insufficiency of the evidence for a conviction, it being in part the evidence of a supposed accomplice, and claimed to be unreasonable in itself and not corroborated by the other evidence. 7. The hearing of the defendants’ first motion for a new trial in the absence of the defendants. 8. The refusal of the new trial, notwithstanding the newly-discovered evidence.
While it is possible that a trial court, in the exercise of a sound judicial discretion, might properly in some rare instance grant a new trial on the ground of incompetency of a party’s own counsel, yet we have never known or heard of a case where such a thing was done. In the present case, the defendants were defended by two counsel, one of whom was appointed by the trial court seven days before the trial was commenced, and the other appeared in the case on the trial without any showing as to how or by whom he was appointed or employed. Presumably, however, he was employed by the defendants themselves or by their friends. But were the defendants’ counsel incompetent, or did such counsel improperly manage the defendants’ case? We cannot say that the record shows incompetency, or any such unwarranted neglect or mis
As to the sixth ground for a reversal, we would say that ■ we think there was ample evidence to support the conviction of the defendants. The accomplice’s testimony, if true, was enough, and it was corroborated in several particulars by the other evidence, and the instructions of the court below were correct and amply sufficient upon this subject.
It is claimed that the hearing of the defendants’ first motion
It is further claimed by the defendants, that a new trial ought to have been granted on the ground.of newly-discovered evidence. Now it does not sufficiently appear that the evidence supposed to be newly-discovered evidence was really newly discovered; but if it was, still it does not appear that such evidence could not have been procured and introduced on the trial by the exercise of reasonable diligence. The offense for the commission of which the defendants were prosecuted, was committed on the night of July 5, 1885. The defendants were arrested for such offense on September 1, 1885. One of the counsel for the defendants was appointed for them on September 7, 1885. When the other was appointed or employed is not shown. The trial was commenced and completed on September 14,1885; and the defendants’ first motion for a new trial, and all their affidavits relating to newly-discovered evidence and for a new trial, were filed on September 15, 1885; and all these affidavits were from persons whose testimony could have been procured and introduced on the trial, and out of the nine persons whose affidavits were filed, four of them did in fact testify on the trial, and in behalf of the defendants. In all probability these affiants were all present at the trial except one, who was in jail, and his testimony could have been had if the defendants had desired the same. Other objections might be mentioned to the supposed newly-discovered evidence, but we do not think that it is necessary.
The judgment of the court below will; be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.