265 Mass. 166 | Mass. | 1928
The questions raised by the defendants’ bill of exceptions arose in the trial of two indictments together, at a sitting of the Superior Court for the county of Essex.
At the trial the defendants took numerous exceptions, some of which were briefed and argued before this court; others are not briefed and are “submitted for the consideration of the court.” An excepting party cannot impose on the court an obligation to consider exceptions which he does not consider of sufficient importance to be briefed; and a failure to brief an exception is in law a waiver of that exception. Fay v. Hunt, 190 Mass. 378. Eastern Advertising Co. v. Shapiro, 263 Mass. 228, 234. We shall consider the exceptions of the defendants in the order of their presentment in their brief.
Exceptions 1 and 16 relate to a plea in bar. In open court they were orally waived at the argument of the bill of exceptions.
Exception 8 is to the admission in evidence of a statement, in the nature of a confession, by the defendant Ruel S. Getchell to one William J. West, a special agent of the department of justice of the United States. When called as a witness West, in substance, testified that on August 18,1924, he had a talk with Ruel S. Getchell in the nature of a confession, as a result of which he testified for the United States
The following cross-examination of the witness by the defendants’ counsel then took place: “Q. Now, did you say — you talked with Getchell for some time, didn’t you? Didn’t you say to him ‘it would be best for you to tell the truth? ’ Didn’t you say that in substance, Mr. West? A. I, in substance, told him that he had — the only thing for him to do was to tell the truth . . . about the entire situation. Q. And you told him it would be better for him and all concerned if he told the truth, didn’t you, in substance? A. Well, I don’t remember ... as to whether or not I said it would be better for him and all concerned to tell the truth. Q. You told him it would be better for him to tell the truth, didn’t you, Mr. West? A. I don’t think, Mr. Lewis— Q. You wouldn’t say you didn’t say that? A. No, I wouldn’t want to say I didn’t say ‘It would be better for you to tell the truth,’ but my best recollection, sir, is that I told him this was a time for a man to come forward and tell the truth and tell all that he knew about the situation. Q. And you told him it would be better for him to tell the truth, didn’t you? A. No, sir, I don’t remember that. Q. You wouldn’t say you didn’t, Mr. West? You are an experienced officer, Mr. West? You have been in the service ever since I was in the district attorney’s office, haven’t you? A. Yes, around that. Q. Some 25 years? A. Yes. Q. Twenty years? A number of years. A. I have no hesitancy in telling you the entire situation. Q. So
Upon the foregoing evidence the judge was clearly right in finding as a fact that the statement was voluntary, that is, that it was not induced by the pressure of hope or fear in order to obtain a promised relief or to avoid a threatened danger. Commonwealth v. Morey, 1 Gray, 461. Commonwealth v. Tuckerman, 10 Gray, 173, 191. The statement
There was no error in the refusal of the court to require the witness West on cross-examination to answer the question: “Doesn’t make any difference to you that you got the statement from these men after you had told them you wanted the statement to use in an investigation for the Federal courts and that the district attorney of the State courts had nothing to do with it? ” The defendants’ exception 15 rests upon their contention that the statements to the witness West were privileged statements which the court .should not allow to be divulged or received without evidence that the privilege was waived by the United States of America, to be evidenced by some letter or authority from the Attorney General of the United States, citing Worthington v. Scribner, 109 Mass. 487. Indisputably the accepted law in relation to privileged communications to the government is that “Courts of justice . . . will not compel or allow the discovery of such information, either by the subordinate officer to whom it is given, by the informer himself, or by any other person, without the permission of the government.” Worthington v. Scribner, supra, page 489. Vogel v. Gruaz,
The exception to the charge “on the ground that it was argumentative in form, and the court over-emphasized the Commonwealth’s case” is overruled. An exception to a whole charge cannot be sustained. Commonwealth v. Duncan, 250 Mass. 405, 407.
The remaining exceptions to specific parts of the charge are overruled. When such parts are read with their context and with the entire charge, they are not obnoxious to the criticisms that they were unfair, argumentative, or were charges with respect to matters of fact.
Exceptions overruled.