90 Neb. 390 | Neb. | 1911
On the 30th day of June, 1910, Louise Flege was- shot and killed at her home in Dixon county. She was then residing with, and keeping house for, her brother, the defendant, and he was afterwards charged with her murder. Upon trial in the district court for Dixon county he was found guilty of murder in the second degree, and has brought the record of the" proceedings here for review by petition in error.
It was at first supposed that a tramp that had been seen in the neighborhood bad committed the crime. The defendant and his brother employed a detective, and the defendant took the detective from place to place, as the detective dictated, searching for evidence as to who had committed the crime. After this had gone on for about
The evidence covers about 2,000 pages of the record. We have not attempted to state all of the circumstances tending to indicate who was the guilty party. An outline of the principal facts appears to be necessary to an understanding of the questions presented.- The defendant had lived at this place since his infancy. Many respectable witnesses testified to 'his good character and' correct life. There was an attempt made by the prosecution to show a motive for the crime of which the defendant was charged. A neighbor testified to a trifling conversation that took place some time before. The time and circumstances were not stated, and afterwards this evidence was stricken from the record. The evidence, then, in this record which is supposed to show a motive for this crime comes wholly from the witness Eichtenkamp. He testified that the deceased objected to the defendant using his automobile so much as he did. The evidence upon that point is very meager, and relates principally to the time when the ■ defendant went into the house on the day of this murder to prepare for his trip with his brother. The witness did not hear the conversation, but he appears to have inferred that they were quarreling about the defendant’s leaving his work to go to town with his automobile. The witness also testified to a former occasion when the deceased told the defendant that the house was on fire, and they went out and found that the chimney was’burning' out, and the defendant, he says, made some severe, remarks about
“(25) The court instructs the jury, as a matter of law, that the doubt which a juror is allowed to retain in his mind, and under which he should frame his verdict of not guilty, must always be a reasonable one. A doubt produced by undue sensibility in the mind of a juror, in view of the consequences of his verdict, is not a reasonable doubt, and a juror is not allowed to create sources of doubt by resorting to trivial and fanciful suppositions and remote conjectures as to possible state of fact differing from that established by the evidence. You are not at liberty to disbelieve as jnrors, if, from the evidence, you believe as men. Your oath imposes upon you no obligation to doubt where no doubt would exist if no such oath had been administered. You are instructed that, if after a careful, impartial consideration of all the evidence in the case, you can say and feel that you have an abiding conviction of the guilt of the*401 defendant and are fully satisfied to a moral certainty of the truth of the charge made against him, then you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Instruction No. 25 was prejudicially erroneous in this case. This court has had occasion more than once to criticise this instruction, and under some circumstances has held it to be so prejudicial as to require a reversal. Brown v. State, 88 Neb. 411. In Blue v. State, 86 Neb. 189, this court quoted from a decision of the supreme court of California, severely criticising some of the trial courts of that state who persisted in giving this instruction which has many times been declared erroneous, and in some cases is so prejudicial as to require a reversal.
. The writer considers instruction No. 24 as also erroneous and prejudicial, especially in connection with No. 25. A jury in.such a case ought not to be told that they must “justify an acquittal,” or that they must find something in the case “to authorize a verdict of not guilty.” It is not necessary, however, to repeat the views expressed in Blue v. State, supra, and in the opinion of the supreme court of California, therein referred to. The majority of this court, however, considers that instruction No. 24 is not prejudicially erroneous in this case.
The witness Eichtenkamp, as we have seen, testified at the coroner’s inquest, and his evidence there was wholly inconsistent with his evidence given upon the trial. He attempted to explain this fact by stating that, when he testified at the inquest, he was actuated wholly by fear of the defendant. Upon his cross-examination he was asked: “You were around to parties and beer drinks with your friends yourself, and never told any of them, did you?” The question was objected to as improper cross-examination, and immaterial, and assuming a state of facts not in the evidence. The objection was sustained and the evidence excluded. The evidence seems to be material and proper in cross-examination, and ought not to have been excluded for the reason given in the objection. Other similar questions were also erroneously excluded. Also the witness was not allowed to answer whether he had during the intermission of
There was some evidence tending to show that, after the defendant left home on the afternoon of the murder, the deceased had been working in the garden, and had there been criminally assaulted by some person, and afterwards murdered, and that the deceased was accustomed to taking care of and working in the garden. The defendant produced a witness who testified' that some hoeing had recently been done-in the garden, and the defendant offered to prove that early the next morning the weeds and grass that had been hoed in the garden indicated that the work had been done during the afternoon previous. This evidence ought to have, been received, but it was excluded by the court. The weather Avas warm and the sun Avas bright on the afternoon of the murder, and the evidence strongly indicates, if it does not show, that if this work was done during that afternoon it must have been done by the deceased, and that none of the work was done in the garden during the forenoon of that day.
The Avitness Eiehtenkamp was asked if he was “pretty badly scared” by the defendant, and whether he could run faster than the defendant, and whether he could have run down to one of the neighbors and told them about the murder; whether he said anything about the murder until after he knew that he himself was suspected; whether he knew that he himself was suspected at the time he told the sheriff about it; how badly the gate between the hog lot and the yard where the deceased lay was broken; hoAV long it would have taken him to repair the gate; whether he made certain statements at the preliminary examination as to the condition of the gate, and why he did not close it; whether, when the witness was with his family immediately after the murder, anything was said about the murder; whether
Other matters are discussed in the briefs, but it is not thought that their discussion would be of assistance in another trial, and we do not consider it necessary to further extend this opinion, already, perhaps, too long.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.