State v. Carlisle
Decision Date | 31 July 1874 |
Citation | 57 Mo. 102 |
Parties | STATE OF MISSOURI, Defendant in Error, v. JOHN T. CARLISLE. Plaintiff in Error. |
Court | Missouri Supreme Court |
Error to Saline Circuit Court.
Jno. P. Strother, for Plaintiff in Error.
I. The court erred in admitting the statement of Wecker, taken in the preliminary examination, for it was not signed by him, and we have only the statement. The court erred in allowing the jury to separate. Whitney vs. State, (8 Mo., 165)was a larceny, not a murder case. In State vs. Burns, (33 Mo., 483) the jury had already found a verdict before they separated, and then only one left. This case was also larceny, and the court blindly followed Whitney vs. State, without argument. But in neither of those cases, was there any such separation as in this. Here the jury are allowed for two days and nights to roam about town, when the very air was pestilential with prejudice and invective against a man on trial for his life. It is time the Circuit Court were taught that this cannot be tolerated. The prisoner is afraid to object to a separation, because that would at once prejudice the mind of the jury against him.H. Clay Ewing and S. J. Davis, for Defendant in Error.
I. It is the settled law of this State, that the mere separation of the jury in a criminal case--without proof of misconduct or of the fact that they have been tampered with--is no ground for new trial in the Circuit Court, or for reversal in the Supreme Court. (See State vs. Harlow, 21 Mo., 446; State vs. Igo, 21 Mo., 459; State vs. Brannon, 45 Mo., 329; State vs. Matrassey, 47 Mo., 295; Compton vs. Arnold, 54 Mo., 149; State vs. Barton, 19 Mo. 227; Whitney vs. State, 8 Mo., 165; State vs. Mix, 15 Mo., 153.)
II. The mere fact that the prisoner was in the custody of an officer, makes no difference, when no undue influence is used. (State vs. Simon, 50 Mo., 370; Green vs. State, 13 Mo., 382; State vs. Martin, 28 Mo., 530.)
III. The statements made by the prisoner in this case are not confessions of guilt, but statements made in denial of guilt, and the only rule in such cases is, that the whole statement should go to the jury. (See instructions in Green vs. State, 13 Mo., 382.)
IV. The statement made by the deceased, before the committing magistrate, in the presence of the prisoner, was admissible as evidence on the trial. (See State vs. McO'Blennis, 24 Mo., 402; State vs. Baker, 24 Mo., 437; State vs. Houser, 26 Mo., 431; State vs. Harman, 27 Mo., 120.)
The law does not require such statements to be signed by the witness. (Wagn. Stat., 1077, § 18; Rex vs. Flemming, 2 Leach's Cr. Cas., 3 Ed., p. 996; Rex vs. Osborn, 8 Car. & P., 113; Comm. vs. Richards, 18 Pick., 434.)
The defendant was indicted for killing Geo. Wecker, and was convicted of murder in the first degree. The evidence against him was mainly circumstantial, but it formed a chain which unquestionably supports the verdict, and as the facts were for the jury, we have only to see whether the court ruled correctly on points of law.
One of the principal objections raised is; that the court permitted the jury to separate after they were impaneled, and whilst the evidence was being introduced. The evidence shows that this separation was consented to by both parties, and it is not in anywise shown that the jury were guilty of any misconduct, or that they were in the slightest degree tampered with. The rule has been consistently acted upon in this State that a mere separation of the jury will not vitiate a verdict, unless it is made to appear that the jury has been tampered with; or that they have been guilty of some improper conduct. (Whitney vs. State, 8 Mo., 165; State vs. Mix, 15 Mo., 153; State vs. Barton, 19 Mo., 227; State vs. Harlow, 21 Mo., 446; State vs. Igo, Id., 459; State vs. Brannon, 45 Mo., 329; State vs. Matrassey, 47 Mo., 295.)
In the case of the State vs. Igo, supra, Leonard, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, after referring to various cases holding that a separation of the jury will not render a verdict bad in the absence of misconduct, remarks:
As the court can set aside a verdict when it is contrary to either the law or the evidence, the rule established is certainly the best for the administration of criminal justice.
It is insisted that the court committed error in permitting one Phillips, who was deputy constable, and who had the prisoner in custody, to give evidence of certain statements made by the prisoner. But the evidence is positive and pointed that no threats or inducements whatever were made by the officer or held out to the prisoner, and whatever statements were made were merely voluntary. The mere fact that a prisoner was in charge of an officer at the time a statement or confession was made, is not sufficient to render the same inadmissible in evidence; but it must further appear that it was made or induced by the flattery of hope, or extorted by fear or intimidation. (State vs. Simon, 50 Mo., 370.) As there was an utter absence of any influence whatever, calling forth or inducing the statement, the evidence was clearly admissible.
On the trial the State offered in evidence the testimony of Wecker, the deceased, taken upon the preliminary examination before a magistrate. This was objected to because it was not signed by the witness.
The objection was overruled and the testimony was admitted. The record shows that the witness' name was signed to the evidence by another person, at witness' request, he being too weak to sign the same. I am inclined to the opinion that this would be a sufficient signing. When a person is unable from any cause to write his own name, and requests another to do it for him, and in his stead, this is a signing by himself. The statute (2 Wagn....
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