1 App. D.C. 246 | D.C. Cir. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court:
The appellants were convicted of the theft of a pocket book containing a few dollars in money, and sentenced to serve during their minority in the reform school of the District.
The errors charged in the proceedings are set out in the bill of exceptions, and will be considered in order:
1. In his opening statement to the jury, the attorney for the government said: “And I expect to show you, gentlemen of the jury, if the court will permit me, that these defendants habitually infest the markets and engage in this kind of business.” Objection was made to this language on the ground that “ he was stating matter of which the court would not permit him to offer proof.”
“The court overruled the objection, saying that counsel for the government may be allowed some latitude in an opening statement of what the government expects to prove, but the court will not admit testimony when offered of the character objected to. Counsel for the defendants then noted an exception, when the court said that the statement objected to was not, after the court’s caution, a matter for exception, and that an exception would not be allowed.”
Considering this as an exception, we do not think there is anything in it for which a new trial ought to be awarded. It is the duty of the prosecutor to be perfectly fair in his opening statement, and he should carefully avoid the appearance even of an attempt to prejudice the jury by reciting facts as-intended to be proved which would be inadmissible under the well-established rules of evidence. If he over
In general, however,. the interference of the trial justice must be a matter of discretion, the exercise of which is not subject to exception. Walsh v. People, 88 N. Y., 458. In the case at bar, the court did caution the prosecutor, and inform the jury that evidence with respect to the character of defendants would not be admitted if offered; and we do not see what more he could have well done under the circumstances.
2. The government offered to prove by one of the officers, named Carson, confessions made by defendants. Defendants were permitted to cross-examine this witness as to the voluntary nature of the confessions. The witness said that no threat or inducement was offered and that the confessions were voluntary. The witness further said, as shown by the bill of exceptions, that two of the defendants, West and Brady, were out of his presence some time before the confessions were made, and that he did not know whether or not an inducement to confess had been held out to them by Officer Judge. The court then stood this witness aside for a time and had Judge called, who testified that he offered no inducements or threats to cause Brady and West to confess. Defendants then offered to prove, by themselves as witnesses, “ that the confessions were not voluntary, but were obtained by inducements on the part of Carson and threats on the part of Judge, and moved the court to hear the counter proof as to the voluntary nature of the confessions before said confessions were given in evidence.” This offer was refused, “ because the court had examined all the witnesses having custody of the defendants, and there had not appeared any trace of effort to influence by inducements or threats.”
The sufficiency of the evidence to show the competency of the confession is, primarily, a question for the court. As to how he shall satisfy himself with respect to this question of competency, or to what extent he will hear proof thereon, is necessarily a matter almost entirely within his discretion, the exercise of which should not be revised except in case of palpable abuse. If there be any suspicion cast upon the manner in which the confession shall have been obtained, it would be decidedly proper to inquire further before its admission. 1 Roscoe Cr. Ev. (8th Ed.), marg. pp. 57-8. This further inquiry seems to have been made with great propriety in the following cases cited on the brief for appellants, viz., Commonwealth v. Harman, 4 Barr., 269 ; Nicholson v. State, 38 Md., 140.
Other cases, cited in support of appellant’s contention, with one exception, fail to sustain it. In one of these, Rufer & Egner v. State, 25 Ohio, 464, the court held merely that it was the right of the defendant to cross-examine the witness offered to prove the confession before it could be offered. In the course of the opinion it was said: “ It is the right of the defendant to show by preliminary proof, at least to the extent that such preliminary proof can be made by the witness offered to prove the confession, that it was not voluntarily made.” It was also said that the case should not be reversed unless it was made to appear that the defendant was prejudiced by the denial of this right.
In another case, People v. Soto, 49 Cal., 67, the deposition of the prisoner, taken before the examining magistrate was offered in evidence and admitted, without any proof whatever as to its voluntary character. Defendants’ offer to prove that it was made under inducements and threats was
The case of Commonwealth v. Culver, 126 Mass., 464, strongly supports the contention of appellants. The officer who had charge of the prisoner testified that the confession had been freely made and without undue influence. Defendant produced five witnesses, and offered to show by them that the confession was made in consequence of inducements held out by this same officer. The judgment of conviction was reversed because of the refusal to hear this evidence. We are not prepared to dispute the soundness of this decision as applied to the facts of that case. The learned court, for whose opinions we entertain the highest respect, might well have made that case an exception to the general rule, on the ground that the refusal to hear defendant’s offered proof, was, under the circumstances, an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court. But we cannot accept its doctrine as a sound rule for all cases.
We think it would be unwise to attempt to prescribe any fixed rule for the government of the trial courts in matters of this kind. Hopt v. Utah, 110 U. S., 574. The action of the presiding judge, who is presumed to be controlled by an earnest desire to fully protect the rights of the prisoner, as well as to guard the interests of society in the prevention of crime, is to be determined by the peculiar circumstances of each case as it comes before him; and it is only in a clear case of abuse of his discretion that a judgment should be reversed. As recited in the bill of exceptions, the court “ found no trace of any effort to influence the prisoners by inducements or threats.” This being the case, it was proper to admit fixe evidence of the confessions. The defendants had the right afterwards, if they had demanded it, to introduce their evidence to the jury with respect to the manner in which the confessions had been obtained, and then it would have been the duty of the court to instruct the jury to weigh the evidence on this issue, and to reject the confessions as
We cannot say that appellants have sustained injury or that there is any error shown by the record, and the judgment must therefore be
Affirmed.