Feltner v. Commonwealth
Feltner v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
Oscar Feltner appeals from a conviction of voluntary manslaughter with a penalty of ten years imprisonment imposed.
His brief points to no error except the general statement that he “should have been given a new trial.” The long brief recites the evidence. It shows that the question of guilt was one for the jury. If an appellant’s lawyer does not find any error in the proceedings, this court will not search the record to find one.
The point that the- trial court should have granted a new trial is based upon two statements. One is that “London Clemons and several other persons were present at the time or during part of the time of the trouble” and did not testify. The other statement is that one of the jurors, Green Morris, had visited the scene of the killing and talked to a witness introduced by the prosecution and that the defendant “has been reliably informed” that he stated on voir dire examination that he had not talked with anyone and knew nothing about the case. Aside from the fact that the motion does not even
Reference
- Full Case Name
- FELTNER v. COMMONWEALTH
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published