4 Pa. 269 | Pa. | 1846
We consider the evidence to be inadmissible. The nature of the transaction in the magistrate’s office was such as to exclude it. “ If you do not tell the truth, I will commit you,” was the language used to her; language sufficient to exclude any confession induced by it. The administering of an oath by the magistrate, under such circumstances, was a gross outrage upon the accused; any information drawn by it, or subsequently given on its basis, is inadmissible. Here there was an interval of only a night and part of a day between the evidence as thus extracted, and that
A question having arisen as to the duty of the coroner to call in medical assistance, in case of a post mortem examination—
There ought to be post mortem examinations in all cases of death by violence. An action lies against the county at common law by a physician for trouble and labour expended in such examination. A case to this effect was decided by us last spring at Pittsburgh.
In the country, so far as my experience goes, it is always the practice for the coroner in such cases to have an examination by medical men. The court, in fact, always has exacted it.
The prisoner offered no evidence.
Stokes, and Read, Attorney-general, for the Commonwealth, and Daugherty and Lehman, for the defence, having addressed the jury, they were charged as follows:—
You have heard the law■ of homicide so accurately defined by the counsel who assists the attorney-general, that it is unnecessary to discuss it. at length. Murder is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought, express or implied. If the prisoner at the bar drowned her child, she is guilty, by the law of Pennsylvania, of murder in the first degree. There is no middle ground or questiofi of degrees. If she is guilty of the killing, there is but one verdict which you can give. With this instruction it is our duty to tell you, that what you have to determine, is a question of fact; that it is for your exclusive decision ; and that we intimate no opinion as to the conclusion which you ought to draw.
The evidence is so simple and has been so thoroughly discussed, that a further attempt to analyze it, or collate it, or pass it in review, wmuld render you no assistance ; and I therefore shall confine my remarks to the distinctive character and valué of it. No witness has been produced who saw the act' committed ; and hence it is urged for the prisoner, that the evidence is only circumstantial, and consequently entitled to a very inferior degree of credit, if to any credit at all. But that consequence does not necessarily follow. Circum
The only difference between positive and circumstantial evidence is, that the former is more immediate, and has fewer links in the chain of connection between the premises and conclusion; but there may be perjury in both. A man may as well swear falsely to an absolute knowledge of a fact, as to a number of facts from which, if true, the fact on which the question of innocence or guilt depends must inevitably follow. No human testimony is superior to doubt. The machinery of criminal justice, like every other production of man, is necessarily imperfect, but you are not therefore to stop its wheels. Because men have been scalded to death or torn to pieces by the bursting of boilers, or mangled by wheels on a railroad, you are not to lay aside the steam-engine. Innocent men have doubtless been convicted and executed on circumstantial evidence; but innocent men have sometimes been convicted and executed on what is called positive proof. What then ? Such convictions are accidents
Two minor points of defence to which I will advert have been made. It has been pressed that there can be no conviction where there is no evidence that the deceased was alive immediately preceding the period of the supposed homicide, and for this, we are referred to the United States v. Hewson, 7 Boston Law Rep. 361, S. C., Whart. Crim. Law, 225, in which Mr. Justice Story held,' that a mother who, in a fit of puerperal fever, had thrown- her child overboard, could not be convicted of murder without proof that it was alive at the time. This is not the case; for there the child may have died a natural death at so tender an age, and the instinctive love of the mother would render it more probable that the fact was so, than that she threw her child into the sea when it was alive. But if Judge Story meant to say that this probability amounted to a legal presumption of antecedent death till it should be rebutted by proof, I dissent from him, notwithstanding the great respect I entertain for every thing that has come from him. The presumption that a person proved to-have been alive at a particular time is still so, holds till it is rebutted by lapse of time, or other satisfactory proof. The prisoner’s child was seen alive in her arms, at half-past six o’clock in the morning, healthy and vigorous; and at eleven at night it was
You have been told that to doubt of the prisoner’s guilt is to acquit her. But a doubt, to work an acquittal, must be serious and substantial—not the mere possibility of a doubt. If the evidence convince you of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, you are bound to convict. You are the judges of its effect; and if you can reconcile it to any reasonable hypothesis of innocence, you may acquit; if not, you are bound to say so. The issue is in your hands.
After a deliberation of about three hours the jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were made, resting chiefly on the alleged inadequacy of circumstantial evidence, such as was adduced on the trial, but were not pressed by the counsel for the prisoner, and were finally overruled by the court. On Saturday, November 27th, sentence of death was pronounced on the prisoner by Gibson, C. J., Coulter, J., and Bell, J., being with him on the bench.