171 Wis. 490 | Wis. | 1920
The only question raised by plaintiff in error is that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict of guilty and the judgment of conviction.
The fire, evidently of an incendiary nature from the manner of its burning and the odor of kerosene detected by those whó first reached it, was discovered shortly áfter midnight by Mrs. Hickman. The fire was then burning well up on the side of the granary next to the barn and from there it spread to the barn, which was substantially destroyed.
The following situation is disclosed as existing between .the Bruno and the Hickman families:
In October, 1916, a so-called charivari was held in front of the home of defendant’s father; the occasion of such party appearing to be that it was claimed by the participants that Hazel, the foster-daughter of defendant’s father, was just married to one William Karpinski, both of whom were at the house on this occasion. One of the Hickman boys was shot, at that time by Leander Bruno, the father. He was convicted for that offense and brought his case to this
After such assault the defendant caused a criminal prosecution to be instituted against the Hickman boys, Casimir Karpinski, and others, in which action the defendants were convicted of such assault and battery. Thereupon the defendant here brought a civil action against the same parties for the injuries received at that time, and they in turn counterclaimed for damages against him on account of the transaction at the charivari party in October, 1916. This civil action was tried the day following the verdict in this case, and the jury found for the plaintiff there,' defendant here, and assessed nominal damages only.
The only evidence which can be considered or is urged here as supporting the verdict is based upon the testimony of defendant’s foster-sister, Hazel Karpinski, and that of her husband, William Karpinski, and testimony concerning the apparent identification of defendant’s rubber boots with certain foot-marks discovered the day following the fire in the cornfield south of the Hickman barn and in the woods still further south.
Hazel Karpinski testified in substance on the trial that after the charivari party of October, 1916, and again after the assault committed on defendant in August, 1917, the defendant Bruno, referring to the Hickmans and Karpin-skis, said that he would “burn them up or blow them up or something,” and that old man Hickman was just as bad as the boys if not worse.
On cross-examination she admitted that on the prelimi
On redirect examination she testified that she answered that way at the preliminary because she did not dare to make any other answer because the two Brunos sat there and she was then and still is afraid of defendant.
William Karpinski, her husband, testified on the trial that he heard the defendant say, referring to Joseph Hickman, that “if the law didn’t even I will even it up; I will take the law myself,” and the further statement that defendant would “poison the-stock, and if he didn’t poison the stock to burn them up or blow them up.” On the preliminary examination, in answer to the question as to whether he heard defendant say how he was going to get even with the Hickmans, this same witness answered: “He didn’t say how, but he said they were going to get even some way.”
At the close of the testimony the defendant moved for his discharge on the ground that the testimony was insufficient. The court in overruling the motion said: “Well, it isn’t strong, of course; it is a very weak case.” After the verdict of the jury the defendant moved to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial! In disposing of these motions the court said in substance:
“Well, there are a number of things in respect to this case that were not entirely satisfactory to the mind of the court, and I might mention them.”
He then recites the facts concerning the awakening of Mrs. Hickman, the first to discover the fire, by the passage, of an automobile along the highway in front of their home,
“I have in my own mind a great deal of hesitancy in believing that testimony. The other case I have just listened to as to what occurred on the 1st day of August, 1917, leads me to think and feel that the testimony of Plazel and her husband is very unsatisfactory. They seem to be actuated by a feeling of animosity, and in these two cases that have been tried before me I have been so convinced that there has been a great deal of perjury committed in these that I feel some reluctance to credit that testimony. But however I think, that was clearly matter for the jury to consider.”
He then stated that the question of the credit to be given to the witnesses and the fact that the fire was undoubtedly through incendiary causes were proper considerations for the jury. And further:
“Now the only way the defendant is connected with that testimony is the foot-prints in the field towards his house through the cornfield. I confess that when the evidence was first offered, in view of the length of time that existed since the field had been cultivated, that I felt some doubt as to whether or not those foot-prints could be as distinct as would be necessary to have them in order to identify them positively.”
He refers to the standing, reputation, and undoubted integrity of the witness who made the plaster casts, and said that were it not for that,
“I should have felt very strongly like directing an acquit*495 tal.” .-. . “Now the evidence of these casts is on all-fours with the evidence of finger-prints. While it is true that rubbers of that size and of that make undoubtedly exist in great numbers, it is not one chance in a million probably that any two rubbers worn to the extent that these have been could be found that would show the exact amount of wear, the same amount of wear exactly, so as to leave the lines and imprints precisely the same. It seems that this cast of the track 'and the bottom of the rubber do show precisely the same wear, the same number of ridges left. If that is so, there is little chance to doubt that the foot-prints were made by a man wearing these rubbers. The rubbers were found in the defendant’s room; it was practically conceded they were his rubbers. This evidence all taken together I think justifies, that is it warrants, the finding of guilt in my judgment. I do not think the court ought to undertake to set up his judgment against the judgment of the jury. I want to say, however, that the impression made upon my mind by the deportment and appearance of the defendant was extremely favorable. He told his story with a great deal of frankness and apparent honesty. And it is an unpleasant thing for me to be forced to conclude that he is guilty of such a crime as this, but it is the conclusion that I feel I am forced to take.”
The examination of the record in this case convinces us that the trial court was more than warranted in feeling as he did that the record at most made a very weak case against the defendant. He was particularly warranted in what he suggested as quoted above with reference to the testimony of the foster-daughter, Hazel Karpinski, and her husband.
We think also that too much weight ánd reliance was placed by the trial court upon the evidence as to the finding of foot-marks as of some one walking in the cornfield south of the barn in the general direction between the Bruno home and the Hickman barn.
The cornfield over which the tracks were traced was loose clay which had been cultivated about two months before then and was'- at the time dry. To warrant a legitimate inference that such foot-marks were made by the defendant
. Much stress was laid by the trial court, as indicated in his quoted statement, as to the standing and reputation of the witness who made the plaster cast of the foot-marks and the comparisons with-the rubber boots. It is not here, however, a question of the veracity of the witness that is involved in considering the weight which is to be given to that which is but a conclusion of the witness upon certain physical facts.
There is mo suggestion in the record, so far as we can discover, as to how it happened that the- one foot-print from which an impression was taken was in the Lockbaum woods and directly south of the Hickman premises and southwest of the defendant’s home and therefore not in the line be
Loath as this court has always been and still is to set aside a judgment based upon a verdict of guilty by a jury and -which has passed the careful consideration of a trial court, we are nevertheless compelled in a case such as this, involving a crime of such a grave nature and in which the verdict of guilty by the jury was followed by punishment measured by a sentence of ten years’ imprisonment in the state prison, to feel the necessity of bearing steadfastly in mind the" well established- rule of law that no person shall be convicted of a penal offense unless the testimony be such as will sustain .the rigid test of satisfying beyond, a reasonable doubt.
Our judgment, after a consideration of the entire record, compels us to the conclusion that defendant’s guilt was not sufficiently proven, and the verdict therefore cannot be upheld as the result of such a fair and impartial trial as every accused person is entitled to have under the law of this state. Gerke v. State, 151 Wis. 495, 139 N. W. 404; Koscak v. State, 160 Wis. 255, 269, 152 N. W. 181; Kuhl v. State, 167 Wis. 495, 499, 167 N. W. 743.
The testimony in this case, in our judgment, when reasonably and fairly construed, creates no more than a suspicion that the defendant committed this offense. A suspicion-merely is insufficient to support a judgment of conviction. Lonergan v. State, 111 Wis. 453, 460, 87 N. W. 455; State v. Vandewater (Iowa) 176 N. W. 883.
The evidence being insufficient to warrant a conviction, the defendant must be discharged.
By the Court.- — Judgment reversed, with directions to discharge the defendant.