147 F. 32 | 9th Cir. | 1906
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
It is assigned as error that the court overruled the motion of the plaintiff in error to require the district attor
It is contended that the court erred in sustaining the objection of the district attorney to questions propounded to the witness Noble as to certain conversations which he had with Dackins and with the plaintiff in error on the day of the homicide. The witness testified that he had a conversation with Dackins in the afternoon of that day. He was asked: “Q. In that conversation did he say to you that the next time these men met one of them would be killed? A. No, sir. Q. Did he make any declaration in substance anything like that? (To which objection was made by the district attorney, and the objection was sustained by the court.)”
The witness was then asked: “Q. Did you say to Mr. Ball, after your conversation with Dackins, that one of these two men would get hurt the first time they came together? (To which an objection was also sustained.)”
It is claimed that the purpose of these questions was to show threats made by the deceased against the accused. We do not see how the testimony which was sought to be elicited can be said to indicate that threats were made. The questions called for no testimony as to what the deceased had said. They referred to conversations only between the witness and Dackins, and the witness and the accused, and called for testimony as to what opinion Dackins had expressed concerning the probability of trouble
Error is assigned to the introduction in evidence of minutes of the election of officers of the marble company and a letter of the secretary of that company to Noble, which was taken by Deppe when he went to Fox Island and there delivered to Noble. The objection made to the admission of this evidence is that the election of officers referred to in the minutes was absolutely void, and that said officers had no authority to direct Deppe to do the assessment work. The testimony was introduced for the purpose of showing the good faith of Deppe in going upon the property of the company to do the assessment work. We think it was admissible for that purpose. The homicide was not the result of any controversy over the possession of the property, and the evidence did not go to the jury for the purpose of showing that the plaintiff in error was not rightfully there. The court was careful to .instruct the jury that if they believed from all the evidence that the plaintiff in error, in good faith and in the honest belief that he had the legal right so to do, entered upon the company’s property for an honest purpose, he had the right to retain such possession, and it could not be forcibly interfered with or taken from him, except by due process of law, and that to defend such possession he had the same right as though he were legally the possessor thereof and in his own house.
It is contended that the court erred in striking out testimony given by the plaintiff in error as to what occurred when Deppe, Dackins, and Weir arrived on the property.
It is assigned as error that the district attorney was permitted to ask the plaintiff in error on cross-examination whether he had not formerly, and under the name of Charles R. Mains, been convicted in the Northern District of California of the crime of using the United States mails in a scheme to defraud. To this it is sufficient to say, for reasons stated below, that the district attorney clearly had the right to ask the question. Under the ruling of the court the witness was not required to answer the question, and did not answer it.
The trial court,-over the objection of the plaintiff in error, admitted the record of the District CouT of the United States for the Northern District of California of the conviction of the plaintiff in error of said offense. It is contended that this was error on two grounds: First, that to admit in the trial court, for the purpose of impeaching or affecting the credibility of a witness therein, the record of his conviction in the United States court for the District of California, was to give extraterritorial effect and force to a judgment of that court, the effect of which is necessarily limited to the jurisdiction in which the offense was committed, and in which the judgment was rendered. To this proposition Commonwealth v. Green, 17 Mass. 515-536, is cited. What the court held in that case was that a witness was not rendered incompetent to testify in the courts of Massachusetts by proof of his conviction of a felony in the state of New York, the effect of which, under the law of New York, was to render him infamous and incompetent there to be sworn as. a witness, and that the judgment of conviction in that state had no extra-territorial effect. But that decision did not deny the admissibility in evidence of such testimony to affect the credibility of the witness. On the contrary, the court took pains to say of such witnesses: “Their for
The second ground of objection to the record is that it proved a conviction, not of a felony, but of a misdemeanor, and that it was therefore not admissible under the Code of Alaska. Section 669, p. 4, of Carter’s Codes of Alaska provides: “It may be shown by the examination of the witness or the record of the judgment that he has been convicted of a crime.”
Section 67S provides: “But a witness must answer as to the fact of his previous conviction of a félony.”
These sections were taken from the statutes of Oregon, Sections 852, 859, B. & C. Comp. Before they were adopted for Alaska, the Supreme Court of Oregon had in State v. Bacon, 13 Or. 143, 9 P. 393, 57 Am.Rep. 8, so construed these provisions as to sanction the admission in evidence, for the purpose of impeaching a witness, proof of his prior conviction of a misdemeanor. It is true that in Oregon a defendant in a criminal • case, who testifies in his own behalf, may not be asked whether he has been convicted of a crime, but that is because the statute which permits him so to testify expressly restricts cross-examination to the testimony which he has given on direct examination. State v. Lurch, 12 Or. 99, 6 P. 408; State v. Saunders, 14 Or. 300, 12 P. 441; State v. Bartmess, 33 Or. 110, 54 P. 167. In that respect the statute of Oregon differs from that of Alaska, as section 148 of the Penal and Criminal Code of that territory gives to the prosecution, without express restriction, the right to cross-examine a defendant who offers himself as a witness. We find no error in the admission of the record in evidence.
The further objection is made that the indictment was included in the judgment roll, which was admitted in evidence to prove the prior conviction of the plaintiff in error. It is a sufficient answer to this to point to the fact that the objection was not made in the court below. But, if timely objection had been made, we see no ground upon which it should have been sustained. The indictment
It is urged that the trial court erred in permitting the district attorney to take from the plaintiff in error a newspaper clipping which he held in his hand while testifying. The district attorney, while cross-examining the plaintiff in error, said: “I see you hold in your hand a paper to which you have referred. Do you refer to that for the purpose of refreshing your memory? A. I am referring to this because to my recollection that scandal originated with Allan Weir. Q. Then you do refer to it to refresh your memory? A. Yes, sir; I do on that point.”
The district attorney then requested permission to see the paper and took it from the hand of the witness. Objection was made, on the ground that the district attorney had no right to look at it. The objection was overruled. The district attorney thereafter propounded this question. “The article referred to in this paper is headed, ‘Deppe’s Slayer Said to be an Ex-Convict.’ Is that true? (Objection was made to the question, the objection was overruled, and the witness answered:) Yes, sir; that is true.”
Conceding that it was error to read in the presence of the jury the heading of the newspaper clipping, that error was cured by the proof which was made by the record which was admitted in evidence of the former conviction. . The heading of the newspaper clipping went no further than did the record proof which imported verity, of the fact that the plaintiff in error had been so convicted.
It is contended that the trial court erred in permitting the district attorney to ask the plaintiff in error on his cross-examination if it was not a fact that Deppe had told him that he would bring forward his record in Michigan and California and that he wanted to take a snapshot or kodak picture of him for the purpose of identifying him. It is argued that this question could have been asked only for the purpose of degrading the plaintiff in error, and that it had that tendency. The question was propounded after the plaintiff in error had testified that, while he and Deppe were both at Seattle, the latter was constantly lurking around his offices, invading the same, and daring him to come out; that he encountered Deppe at many
It is contended that the failure of the trial court to instruct the jury that the evidence of the prior conviction of the plaintiff in error was to be considered only as tending to affect the credibility of his testimony was error. There was no request for such an instruction, nor was any objection made to the omission of the court so to instruct, nor is the failure of the court so to instruct assigned as error. In Kentucky, Tennessee, and Missouri it is held, contrary to the general rule, that in criminal cases the omission of the court to charge the jury fully as to any branch of the law of the case, though not requested, is ground for reversal, unless it is clear that no injury could have resulted therefrom. Potter v. State, 85 Tenn. 88, 1 S.W. 614; Heilman v. Commonwealth, 84 Ky. 457, 1 S.W. 731, 4 Am.St.Rep. 207; State v. Banks,, 73 Mo. 592. These and other decisions are cited by the plaintiff in error. Among the cases cited are State v. Cody, 18 Or. 506, 23 P. 891, 24 P. 895, and Winchester & Partridge Mfg. Co. v. Creary, 116 U.S. 161, 6 S.Ct. 369, 29 L.Ed. 591. In State v. Cody, the majority of the court held with the rule of the states above mentioned, and thereby overruled prior decisions of that court; but State v. Cody was itself overruled in State v. Foot You, 24 Or. 61, 32 P. 1031,
We understand this expression of the court to mean that, if there had been proper foundation for 'the admis°sion of the declarations, it would have been the duty of the court, in instructing the jury in connection therewith, to limit such declarations to their proper use. This is far from saying that the mere -omission of the court so to instruct the jury, in the absence of a request for such an instruction, would have been reversible error. We think it may be said to be the general rule that the mere omission of the court, in the absence of a specific request, to limit the effect of evidence admitted only for a certain purpose, is not error. People v. Ah Yute, 53 Cal. 613; People v. Collins, 48 Cal. 277;. Dow v. Merrill, 65 N.H. 107, 18 A. 317; Roebke v. Andrews,'26 Wis. 312.
It is contended that the court erred in modifying the instruction requested by the plaintiff in error on the subject of self-defense by adding thereto the following: “The court charges you that in order to justify the homicide it must have appeared to the defendant’s apprehension that he was actually in danger of his life or of receiving great bodily harm, and to avoid such danger or harm it appeared necessary to him to take the life of the deceased.”
It is assigned that the court erred in giving an instruction requested by the plaintiff in error by omitting the following portion thereof: “Any demonstration with a deadly weapon which puts another in fear is an assault. Any act done which constitutes menace and the beginning of violence toward another is an assault.”
The court charged the jury that: “An assault is an unlawful physical force partially or fully put in motion creating a reasonable apprehension of immediate physical injury to a human being.”
No fault is' found with that instruction, but it is contended that the requested instruction should have been given. We do not think the court erred in refusing it. It is not true that any demonstration with a deadly weapon which puts another in fear is an assault. A careless demonstration with a deadly weapon might put another in fear, and yet it would not be an assault, and the same is true of other demonstrations that might be suggested.
Error is assigned to the refusal to give an instruction to the effect that if the jury believed from the evidence that Deppe was a man of violent or vicious character, and this was known to the defendant, that fact, taken together with threats against the life of the defendant, if any were proved, would give him the right to act in self-defense upon a less aggressive act indicating apparent danger to life than if his assailant was a man of ordinarily well-disposed character for peace. In that connection the plaintiff in error cites the case of Roberts v. State, 68 Ala. 166, in which it was said: “Where the character of a man is notoriously turbulent and bloodthirsty, and his threats
We think the court was justified in refusing the instruction, for the reason that it included the word “vicious.” Whatever may be the rule as to the threats of a man of violent character, there is certainly no ground for instructing the jury that the threats of a man of vicious character are to give any greater right to a defendant to kill in self-defense than would the threats of a virtuous man. A man of vicious character may be as peaceable as another. We find no ground of reversal in the-refusal of the court to give the requested instruction, especially in view of the fact that the court gave correct and ample instruction on the subject of the law of self-defense.
It is contended that the court erred in giving an instruction defining manslaughter. This is said to be error for the reason that the evidence, if it proved the plaintiff in error to be guilty at all, proved him to be guilty of murder in the first degree, and that there was no evidence upon which to find him guilty of a different offense. It is contended, further, that, if the evidence authorized the court to instruct the jury on the subject of manslaughter, the instruction which the court gave by reading the statute of Alaska was wholly insufficient. We find it unnecessary to consider the merits of these contentions, for the reason that no objection was made to the instruction when given, and no request was proffered for further instructions.
It is contended that the court erred in charging the jury that no mere threats made by the deceased before or at the time of the killing, unaccompanied at the time of the killing with any intent to carry them into execution, are sufficient to justify the killing, or to reduce it to a lower degree of homicide than murder. It is said that this instruction is contrary to the rule announced in Thompson v. United States, 155 U.S. 271, 15 S.Ct. 73, 39 L.Ed. 146, in which the court said: “An instruction that former threats to kill defendant cannot excuse' him if there was nothing indicating a deadly design against the defendant
But the charge as given by the trial court did not omit, all reference to deceased’s conduct. It expressly referred to the conduct of the deceased and correctly announced the rule that threats unaccompanied at the time of the killing with any attempt to carry them into execution are insufficient to justify homicide. As applied to the facts of the case, we think the instruction given was correct. If the evidence had been that the deceased came into the cabin where the plaintiff in error was, holding a pistol or other weapon in his hand, a different instruction might have been called for; but the evidence all is that he came empty-handed, and that if he made any attempt, as to which the evidence was conflicting, it was an attempt to reach for his pistol after he observed the threatening acts of the plaintiff in error.
It is earnestly insisted that the court erred in giving the following instruction: “You are instructed that the law of self-defense was as much the right of the deceased, William Deppe, as it was that of the defendant; and if you shall find and believe from the evidence in this case, beyond all reasonable doubt, that the deceased, William Deppe, was attacked by the defendant when deceased was attempting to retreat through the door of the house where the homicide happened, and that he would have withdrawn or retreated if given a reasonable opportunity to do so, then you are instructed that the defendant is not entitled to be acquitted on the ground of self-defense.”
It is claimed that this was an invasion by the court of the province of the jury, forbidden by section 191 of the Alaska Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that in charging the jury the court “shall not present the facts of the case, but shall inform the jury that they are the exclusive judges of all questions of fact.” It may be conceded that an instruction which assumes the existence of a fact which should be left to the jury for ascertainment is erroneous, and that such error is not cured by a general instruction that the jury are the exclusive judges-of all the facts. But does this instruction assume the existence of a fact which should have been left to the jury
There are other assignments of error, directed to portions of the charge and to refusals to charge, which we have carefully considered, but in which we find no ground for reversal.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.