DocketNumber: FILE Nos. MV 15-4005, 15-4007
Judges: KINMONTH, J.
Filed Date: 10/16/1962
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
In a trial to the jury, the defendants were convicted of racing. General Statutes §
The defendants in their assignment of error refer to two pages of the transcript. On cross-examination of Trooper Dunbar, the arresting officer, *Page 398
reference was made by the attorney for the defendants to a written report furnished by the officer to the prosecuting attorney. Trooper Dunbar had not used a report on the stand to refresh his recollection. The court properly held that the report was a confidential communication. The defense attorney then stated that he had been permitted by the prosecutor to see the report and that this was common practice. The court then remarked, "I don't know what right he [the prosecutor] has to violate the confidence of the communication between the police department and the prosecutor's office." The remarks were made in the presence of the jury, the defendant's attorney not having requested that they be excused, although the prosecuting attorney did make the request, which the court denied. It is not proper to conduct an interrogation before the jury on any document not in evidence or that will be withheld from the jury's inspection.Johnson v. Charles William Palomba Co.,
"The conduct of the trial must necessarily be left largely to the discretion of the presiding judge, a discretion which in its very nature cannot be made the subject of review . . . except in a clear case of the abuse of that discretion." McKiernan v. Lehmaier,
We are unable to discern any real probability of harm to the defendants, since the court's remarks did not so exceed the bounds of propriety as to be prejudicial. No objection having been taken at the time the alleged error occurred, the appeals are dismissed.
There is no error in either case.
In this opinion KOSICKI and GEORGE, JS., concurred.