43 So. 614 | Miss. | 1907
delivered the opinion of the court.
The case is one of the most mysterious we have ever had to
The court also gave for the state the following instruction:
“The court instructs the jury for the state that circumstantial evidence in law is as good as any other kind of evidence, and, whenever circumstantial evidence rises high enough in the scale of belief to generate full conviction in the minds of the jury of the guilt of the defendant beyond a reasonable doubt, the jury should act upon such evidence as readily as they would in any other kind of evidence.” We think the statement that circumstantial evidence, in law, is as good as any other kind of evidence, is a fundamental misconception, and in this case was fatal error, and most probably misled the jury in making up their verdict. It is undoubtedly true^that, when circumstantial evidence excludes every other reasonable hypothesis than that of guilt beyond all reasonable doubt, the jury should convict; but it is equally true that, where the evidence is positive and direct by eyewitnesses to a killing, that kind of evidence, thus establishing the killing, is not the same kind of evidence as evidence wholly circumstantial from which the killing may be deduced. Circumstantial evidence is a different kind of evidence, wholly different from evidence consisting of the direct and positive testimony of eyewitnesses. In the one case, if the jury believe the testimony of the witnesses, the fact of the killing is established by their direct statements that they saw the party killed. In the other case, if the jury believe the party was killed beyond all reasonable doubt, they do so believe it from a chain of circumstances, the absence of any one link in which
The clear difference between circumstantial evidence and direct evidence is pointed out by Prof. Wigmore in the first volume of his work on Evidence (section 25), in a quotation from Wills on Circumstantial Evidence, cited with approval by him as follows: “The different writers, ancient and modern* on the subject of Evidence, have concurred in treating circumstantial evidence as inferior in cogency and effect to-direct evidence, a conclusion which seems to follow necessarily from the very nature of the different kinds of evidence.” And Mr. Wills points out the fallacy of Mr. Paley’s declaration “that circumstances cannot lie”; that fallacy being that, if you concede certain facts, of course the facts do not lie, but whether the facts existed depends on the truthfulness of the witnesses deposing to the,facts. That is just the point we make. There may be ten links in the chain of circumstantial evidence offered to convict the defend
It will not stand the test, and for the error in giving it, and for the error in refusing to allow the witness Gertrude Evans to make answer to the questions indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a. new■ trial.