196 So. 507 | Miss. | 1940
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from a death penalty for murder. While the appellant and Charlie Clemons were engaged in robbing Pat and Eliza Bingham, at their residence, about eleven o'clock at night, Pat called to Richard Priestly, who lived a short distance away, and who then came to the Bingham residence. When he arrived at the steps from the ground to the gallery of the residence, *711 Clemons was on the gallery and the appellant on the inside of the house. The appellant, according to the undenied State's evidence, told Clemons to "kill the son-of-a-bitch" and both of them began to shoot. One bullet only struck Priestly. The appellant fired three shots through a door leading from the room he was in onto the gallery, and one in another direction which struck the floor of the room. An unchallenged confession of the appellant admits practically all the State proved, except that he told Clemons to kill Priestly, and states that the appellant did not shoot at Priestly, but shot only "to scare the man outside away". The appellant offered no evidence except that of an engineer who produced a diagram drawn by him to a scale of the Bingham residence from which it appears that no bullet from within the room of the residence from where the appellant was said by the Binghams to be standing when he was shooting could have struck a man standing at the foot of or on the gallery steps. The accuracy of this diagram was not challenged.
The appellant complains of the refusal of the court below (1) of his request for a view by the court and jury of the scene of the homicide, and (2) for an instruction charging the jury "that the testimony of an accomplice in a crime should be received and considered by the jury with great caution, suspicion and jealousy."
The granting of a request, under Section 2066, Code of 1930, for a view by the Court and jury of the place at which the crime, for which a defendant is being tried, was committed, rests in the discretion of the trial judge. The appellant's contention is that this discretion was here abused in that a view of the premises would have demonstrated to the jury that Priestly was not struck by a bullet from the appellant's pistol, which fact might *712
have induced the jury not to impose the death penalty on him, but to fix his punishment at imprisonment for life. It is difficult to perceive from the evidence how a view of the premises could have given the jury any more definite information in this connection than did the engineer's diagram introduced in evidence, and when such is the case a view by the jury of the premises is unnecessary and should not be granted. National Box Co. v. Bradley,
Leaving out of view the particular language in which this refused instruction is couched, the granting of such an instruction "rests in the discretion of the presiding judge, and his refusal so to do is not assignable as error." Cheatham v. State,
Affirmed; sentence to be executed on Thursday, the 11th day of July, 1940.
Concurrence Opinion
In the case of Green v. State,
In the opinion of Wilson v. State, supra, the Court, speaking through Judge Campbell, said: "The appellant complains because the court refused to instruct the jury `that the evidence of an accomplice should be weighed with great caution, jealousy, and distrust, and the jury may disbelieve such testimony altogether.' The court said to the jury that such testimony `should be weighed with great care and caution,' and was to be rejected, if believed untrue. This was enough. The court was not bound to pile up words suggestive of a desire for the jury to dismiss, as unworthy of consideration, the testimony of an accomplice. Having cautioned the jury as to the suspicious source of such testimony, it was proper to leave the jury to deal with it according to its *714
effect on the minds of the jurors, who are not likely to accept too readily such testimony. The rule is for the presiding judge to inform the jury that the testimony of an accomplice is to be received and considered with caution, as from a polluted and suspicious source; but it must, in large measure, be left to the judge to choose the language in which this caution shall be given. There is no uniform rule. Cases vary with circumstances. In some cases, stronger words of caution might be more appropriate than in others. In Green v. State,
The Court in that case cited, or referred to, the case of Cheatham v. State,
In White v. State,
In the case of Fitzcox v. State,
In Owens v. State,
In the case of Watkins v. State,
It is well known that many witnesses, and confederates in crime, seek to curry favor, or to escape punishment or to mitigate punishment on their part by testifying against their co-defendants. Many states hold that the testimony of an accomplice alone will not support a conviction; but our State holds that it may, and to guard against the danger of fabrications and self-seeking the law itself looks upon such testimony with suspicion and applies caution; and as jurors are not presumed to be familiar with the details of law and evidence they should be told in a particular case how the law looks upon such testimony. What is said in the Cheatham case is contrary to previous cases not referred to in that opinion, and evidently were overlooked in that case. In the Wilson case, supra, the court re-approved the idea that the jury should be instructed in certain cases to receive the testimony of an accomplice with caution, but left the selection of the language in which caution should be given *718 to the trial judge with the understanding that it would not be disapproved by the Supreme Court where the idea was carried to the jury.
I do not believe that any part of the law affecting the right of a citizen can be left to the arbitrary or uncontrolled discretion of the trial judge. I make these observations for the purpose of keeping the principle alive, and deem these principles vital in some cases where the evidence may be such as to cause distrust of its truth.