219 Mass. 1 | Mass. | 1914
The defendant who has been convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree alleged exceptions at the trial to certain remarks of the presiding judge
After nine jurors had been called, examined and accepted as required by R. L. c. 176, §§ 26, 28, the next juror drawn from the ballot box, upon being asked by the judge, “Are' your opinions such as to prevent you from returning a verdict of guilty against the defendant for an offense punishable by death,” answered in the affirmative. A colloquy followed, the evident object of which was an effort by the judge to ascertain whether the views of the juror were so firmly held that he could not vote for conviction even if satisfied upon the law and the evidence of the defendant’s guilt. The juror still exhibiting by his answers that, while desirous of doing his full duty, "I would not want to send a man to the chair,” the judge said, “None of us want to, but the question is whether we are willing to do what the law stands for, and be content to do our duty if the evidence and the law justifies it; that is the question. You must understand that it is not a desirable task for judge or jury to sit upon capital cases, but for the safety of the community it is our duty to act. Neither your life nor mine is safe unless we try capital cases, and now the question
It was uncontroverted that the defendant killed the decedent. Indeed as a witness in his own behalf he gave his version of the details. The evidence for the Commonwealth was wholly derived from alleged statements made by him at various times to the arresting officers and to most of the alienists who were called as witnesses. The jury could find from this testimony that on the morning of the homicide the defendant, while sitting in the kitchen of his own home, looked through a window and saw the decedent, of whom he had become jealous, at the door of the house occupied by a woman with whom the defendant had been for a long time criminally intimate. Immediately he went upstairs and, taking a revolver which he had been licensed to carry,
The principal if not the only contest was over this question. By the fourteenth request the defendant asked for a ruling that, if “the jury find the defendant had the mental disorder called ‘ constitutional inferiority,’ and if the jury find that such disorder carries with it a limited, that is, a diminished degree of responsibility for the act, he cannot be found guilty of murder in the first degree.” The consensus of opinion of the alienists, based upon his family history and their examinations, classified him as constitutionally defective, or possessed of weak and diminished will power and self control, although they were not agreed that he lacked sufficient capacity to distinguish “between right and wrong.” It is clear that, unless Commonwealth v. Rogers, 7 Met. 500, reaffirmed and followed in Commonwealth v. Johnson, 188 Mass. 382, 388, is to be overruled, the ruling requested should not have been given; and the question to Dr. Quimby, “From your examination of the defendant, from the history of the family as testified to in court, and from what you have learned from the defendant, and from the evidence you have learned during the trial, did the defendant in your opinion appreciate the enormity of his crime,” was excluded properly.
Exceptions overruled.
Dubuque, J.