57 Wis. 472 | Wis. | 1883
The plaintiff in error was tried in the circuit court upon an information charging him with the murder of his wife. The jury found him guilty of murder in the second degree, and the court sentenced him to imprisonment in the state prison for the term of fourteen years. After verdict, and before sentence, the plaintiff in error made a motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial, for errors occurring in the course of the trial, and because the verdict is not supported by the evidence. The death of the wife-of the accused occurred either on "Wednesday the 11th, or Thursday the 12th, of January, 1882, at the house of the accused. The evidence shows that for several days previous to the 12th of January the accused and his wife had been on a drunken debauch, and that on Wednesday, the 11th of January, they had been to the city of Columbus, drinking quite freely, and when they went home in the afternoon took with them one gallon of whisky and half a gallon of wine. They went home in a double sleigh; were seen by several persons on the way.' Most of the way home the deceased sat with the accused on the seat, but at one time she got down from the seat and was leaning over the dash-board with her breast against it, and accused helped her up on the seat again. After they got home, on the evening of Wednesday, they were not seen by any one until the afternoon of Thursday, when the accused came out of his house with his overcoat on and called to a neighbor who was near by to come quick; that his wife was dead. He said to another witness that she died about two o’clock. The accused seemed stupefied and could not talk plainly. When the deceased was first seen by the witnesses after her death, she was lying on the front side- of the bed,
From an examination of the expert testimony in the case it is not made perfectly clear that the deceased came to her death by violence inflicted upon her by any one. The only marks and appearances upon her person which would indicate that fact with any decree of clearness, were the discolored spots in her neck, and the condition of some of the vital organs immediately after her death. The fact that the discolored spots on the neck of the deceased had entirely disappeared at the time of the second examination tended to show that the force which made them, if caused by force at all, was not very great or violent in its character, and shows the pertinency of the evidence offered by the prosecution tending to prove that death might be caused by strangulation without leaving any external marks of violence. It became, therefore, a question of the greatest importance in the case that the expert testimony which was offered on the part of the prosecution tending to show that the condition of the vital organs immediately after her death was such as would indicate death by strangulation, should be of an unexceptionable character, as it is very clear that the slight discolorations on the neck of the deceased were not in themselves sufficient evidence of strangulation. It is claimed by the accused that they might have been caused by her leaning against the dash-board of the sleigh with her head over the same on her return home the day before her death. These discolorations, if accompanied by the other conditions of the vital organs and the general appearance of the dead body which are usually present after strangulation, would strengthen the conclusion that the death was caused in that way. It became necessary on the trial that the expert witnesses should be able to tell the jury what appearances the
Upon the trial, Dr. Cody, a witness for the state, was-permitted to answer a hypothetical question, including a statement of the appearances which the state claimed to have proved were found on the deceased, except the marks on the throat, calling for his opinion as to what was the cause of her death, and he answered, “I judge the deceased died from suffocation; asphyxia, sometimes called.” He was then asked that if, in addition to these appearances, marks were found on her throat, what his conclusion would be, and he answered, “ That she died of strangulation.” The following question was then put to the witness: “Do you know, from books or otherwise, whether death is ever produced from strangulation without leaving marks upon the throat; that is, your own personal observation ? ” This question was objected to; objection overruled, and exception taken. He answered, “In Taylor’s Jurisprudence such cases are recorded.” Q. “In standard medical works?” A. “Yes, sir.” Q. “Is Taylor’s standard?” A. “Yes, sir.” The following questions and answers were permitted by the court: Q. “Were you called to a person soon after death and found the face suffused with blood, dark purplish color; lips livid, dark; eyes prominent, colored; mouth open more or less; tongue bruised,— in such a case as that your judgment would be that death resulted from strangulation?” Objected to; objection overruled, and exception taken.
The comment made by Chief Justice Stow in the case of Luning v. State, 2 Pin., 284-288, is quite pertinent as applied to this case, viz.: “From this examination alone, and aside from the objection of the district attorney that the witness could not testify to facts not within his knowledge, it is manifest that the purpose of the question and proposition was to extract from the witness evidence of facts derived from his scientific, and not his personal, knowledge; or, in other words, that he was to swear to facts, the existence, of which he only knew from his reading; and this, upon no principle of evidence, could be admitted.” The effect of the evidence given under objection by Dr. Cody was to put before the jury as evidence what the medical works laid down as evidences of strangulation. If this may be done indirectly by the oral testimony of the person who has read the medical works, it would certainly be a much safer rule to permit the books themselves to be read to the jury as being better evidence of the fact. We think the learned circuit judge also erred in permitting the counsel for the state to read the medical authorities to the jury in the opening of his argument. It is evident they were not read by way of'illustrating the argument of the counsel, but to give the jury a clear view of what such medical writers laid down as the evidence of strangulation. The jury must have understood that the extracts read to them were so read for the purpose of having them considered in determining the question of fact whether the deceased came to her death by strangulation. Many of
The reason for prohibiting the reading of such works to the jury on the argument is briefly stated by Baron AldeR-soN in the case of Queen v. Crouch, supra. He said to counsel: “I should not allow you to read a work-on foreign laws. Any person who was properly conversant with it might be examined, but then he adds his own personal knowledge and experience to the information he may have derived from books. We must have the evidence of individuals, not their written opinions; we should be inundated with books if we should hold otherwise.” Clarkson, of counsel, remarked: “I shall prove the book to be one of high authority.” To this Baron Alderson replied: “ But can that, mend the matter? You surely cannot contend that you may give the book in evidence, and if not, what right have you to quote from it in your address, and do that indirectly which you would not be permitted to do in the ordinary course ? ” It seems to me that the answer of the learned judge to the counsel in that case, that he should not be permitted to do indirectly what he could not do directly, is an insuperable objection to allowing the counsel to read to the jury, in his summing up, extracts
On account of the error in permitting the witness, Dr. Cody, to testify as to what certain medical works stated upon the subject of inquiry, and for permitting the counsel for the. state to read from medical works to the jury, the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, and a new trial ordered.
The learned counsel for the plaintiff in error urged upon the court that the circuit judge erred in refusing certain instructions asked on behalf of the defendant, and in some parts of the general charge given. We have not deemed it necessary to give these alleged errors a very careful examination ; but after a careful reading of the charge given by the learned circuit judge, we think it presented the main questions in the case fairly and fully, and that the instructions asked and refused were given in the general charge, so far as the defendant was entitled to have them given to the jury. The only matter in the charge upon which we have any doubt is that part of it which relates to manslaughter in the
It is evident the learned judge failed to give the exact definition of manslaughter in the first degree by omitting the words “not amounting to a felony” after the word “ misdemeanor,” in the first part of the sentence; by inserting the word “or” before the last part of the sentence; and in using the word “ intent ” instead of “ malice ” in several places. But this is of no very grave importance, as he instructed the jury that they could not, under the evidence, convict the defendant of manslaughter in the first degree, in any event. This position taken by the circuit judge is defended by the attorney general in a very pointed argument, in which he attempts to prove that the crime of manslaughter cannot be committed under the present statute, when the only crime or misdemeanor in which the accused is engaged at the time of the killing is a personal assault or assault and battery upon the deceased; and he insists that the case of Rowan v. State, 30 Wis., 129, which holds the contrary doctrine, ought to be overruled. The argument is,
The attorney general argues that every assault which endangers life or threatens great bodily harm must be a felonious assault under the provisions of sec. 4377, R. S. 1878, which reads as follows: “Any person who shall assault another with intent to do great bodily harm shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison not more than three years, nor less than one year, or in the county jail not more than one year, or by fine not exceeding $500, nor less than $100.” This kind of an assault is made a felony by sec. 4637, R. S. 1878. It may well be claimed that if the jury find that the assault which resulted in death was made with intent to do great bodily harm, then they would be justified -in finding the party making such assault guilty of murder in the third degree, and that in such case they ought not to find him guilty of manslaughter in the first degree, because the crime in which he was engaged at the time of the killing
We think the learned circuit judge erred in saying to the jury that they would not be justified, upon the whole evidence, in convicting the accused of manslaughter in the first degree, but that if they convicted him at all they should convict of murder in the first or second degree, or of manslaughter in the second degree, And the error is equally manifest on the theory of the learned attorney general, for if the jury found that the accused did not, in fact, intend to kill the deceased, but did intend to inflict upon her great bodily harm, then they might have convicted him of murder in the third degree, coming within the provisions of sec. 4345,.
By the Court. — • The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. The warden of the state prison will surrender the plaintiff in error to the sheriff of Dodge county, who will hold him in custody until he shall be discharged or his custody changed by due course of law.