15 Miss. 475 | Miss. | 1846
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error was indicted in the Wilkinson county circuit court, for the murder of one Holmes. Upon his being •called to the bar for trial, he filed his affidavit for a continuance of the cause on the ground of the absence of material witnesses
The substitution of depositions for oral testimony belongs to civil trials. In no state of circumstances, under our constitution, can a deposition of a witness be used against the accused in a criminal prosecution, and a similar rule seems to hold as to depositions of witnesses in his favor, unless by his consent. The system of criminal jurisprudence appears to require the presence of the witnesses, both for and against the accused. Very often, in such prosecutions, much depends upon the appearance, manner and mode of testifying of a witness, and it is
The practice in criminal cases of proposing to admit what was expected to be proved by absent witnesses, is not calculated to advance the ends of public justice; and if indeed regular and competent, should not be allowed or encouraged except in very extreme cases. But when such an admission has been once made, it constitutes an admission not merely that the absent witnesses would have sworn to certain alleged facts, but also that the facts alleged are absolutely true. Such an admission is an absolute concession of the facts stated by the accused upon his part, because that alone would be a fair substitute for what might have been the result of the evidence upon an oral examination of the witnesses whose actual presence was sought to be obtained.
Judgment reversed, and a new trial directed to be allowed by the court below.