Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1922

State v. Cain

State v. Cain
Supreme Court of Louisiana · Decided January 2, 1922 · Baker
150 La. 127; 90 So. 537; 1922 La. LEXIS 2550

State v. Cain

Opinion of the Court

BAKER, J.

Appellant was indicted for the crime of shooting with intent to commit murder, and was convicted of shooting with intent to kill. The record contains three bills of exceptions.

[1, 2] The first bill was reserved to the overruling of defendant’s motion for a continuance. The motion was founded upon the alleged absence of three witnesses, whose testimony, it appears, would have been important and material. The bill contains the statement that one of the witnesses referred to was present in court during the trial; that another “was away on a summer trip and had not been summoned”; and that the defendant had just then learned, on the day his case was called for trial, of the facts which the absent witness would testify to, and had thereupon obtained a subpcena for the witness to appear instanter. The bill contains the statement also that the third witness referred to “was very ill with tuberculosis, and it was not shown, nor did the court believe, there was any hope that he would be in court at any future time.”

It does not appear that any evidence was taken in support of the motion for a continuance. ' As to the witness who was said to be away on a summer trip, no showing was made of any diligence having been used to have him present.

As to the witness who was afflicted with tuberculosis, the motion for a continuance, which was made part of the bill of exceptions, contains the averment that defendant’s counsel gave an order to summon him in due time; that defendant understood and believed that the subpcena was issued, but that, because of the illness of the witness, the sheriff did not serve the subpoena. The sub-pcena was not offered in .evidence on the trial of the motion for a continuance, and it is not in the record. We assume that the sheriff made a return on the subpoena, showing how it was served, or why it was not served. There is no reason that the defendant was denied the right, which the Constitution guaranteed him, to have compulsory process for obtaining the testimony of the witness. As no request was made to have the jury taken to the bedside of the witness, we assume that he was so ill there was no hope for ever obtaining his testimony, or that the defendant was not insistent upon having the testimony.

The second bill of exception was reserved to the overruling of defendant’s motion for a new trial. Besides reiteration of the complaint against the overruling of the motion for a continuance, the motion for a new trial contained only the formal averment that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence, which averment, of course, does not present any question of law for this court to review.

[3-fr] The third bill of exceptions was reserved to the overruling of the motion in arrest of judgment. The motion contained four complaints, all of which are without merit, viz.: (1) That the charge in the in*131dictment did not set forth or define the crime either of shooting with intent to murder or of shooting with intent to kill; (2) that the indictment did not inform the defendant of whether he would be prosecuted for shooting with intent to murder or for shooting with intent to kill; (3) that shooting with intent to murder and shooting with intent to kill were separate and distinct offenses, which could not be charged in one indictment; and (4) that the verdict convicting defendant of shooting with intent to kill was not responsive to the indictment, if the latter was a valid indictment for shooting with intent to murder. '

The indictment charged, very accurately and according to the statute, that—

On the date stated the defendant “feloniously did shoot one John S. Crowson with a dangerous weapon, commonly called a pistol, with the intent then and there him the said John S. Crow-son, willfully, feloniously, and of his malice aforethought to kill and murder, contrary to the form of the statute,” etc.

It is not possible to accuse a person of the crime of shooting with intent to murder without at the same time accusing him of shooting with intent to kill. One who is indicted for the more serious of the two crimes is well informed that he may be convicted either of that or of the less serious crime.

For the foregoing reasons, the verdict and sentence appealed from are affirmed.

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