104 S.W. 872 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1907
At September term, 1904, of said District Court, sitting at Tishomingo, appellants were indicted jointly'1 for cattle stealing. The venue was changed, upon their motion, to Ardmore, in same district. They were tried, found guilty, and sentenced to the penitentiary for the term of five years each, and to pay a fine of $500 each. From this judgment they appeal.
The sole error complained of is the alleged improper remarks of the attorney for the government in his closing speech to the jury. The entire speech is set out in the bill of exceptions. The objectionable language, condensed by counsel for appellants and set forth in their brief, is as follows: “I asked Mr. Jamison, ‘Did you go by Mr. Furr's house?' and Jamison said that he came by Furr's house. Nobody ever saw him, then, except the nigger and the horse doctor. Was Jamison alone? So far as this evidence goes, he was alone. That is what he says about it. He was alone. Where was his wife and children? He has a daughter 12 or 14 years old. Where are they? Are they 'here, lending aid and support to your defense? No, sir. Are they here testifying when he came into the house? No, sir. Who knows better when he arrived home that morning than his wife? To which defendants then and there objected, upon the ground that the wife of Jamison was not a competent witness, and that therefore her not being upon the witness stand could not be used against these defendants, and moved the court to exclude said remarks from the jury. Whereupon the district attorney continued: ‘She can be unless I object. The statute say^s she shall be allowed to testify unless objected to by the prosecution. She is not
It appears from the record that the attorneys on both sides in their arguments to the jury were proiie to go outside the record. Necessarily the breach must be made before there can be 'cause for objection. Therefore, the remedy for the evil can only be curative rather than preventive, where it appears that the trial court omitted to apply this sole remedy; and, if the court of review shall be clearly of the opinion that the improper remarks were prejudicial to a fair trial to defendant, it should reverse the cause and return it for another trial. It is the absolute right of every defendant in a criminal prosecution to have a fair and impartial trial, and the benefit of every reasonable doubt as to his guilt. In this instance, the burthen is upon the appellant to show 'that the said remarks were prejudicial to his rights, to the extent that he had not a fair trial. From the argument, which is set out in full in the record and above quoted: “Where was his wife and children? He has a daughter 12 or 14 years old. Where are they? Are they here le'nding aid and support to your defense? No, sir. Are thejr here testifying when he come into the house? No, sir. Who knows better when he arrived home that morning than his wife?” At this point counsel for defendants objected to statement of United States attorney as to the wife. Thereupon the court remarked: “There is no evidence in reference to the wife.” There could
The case of State vs Weaver, 165 Mo. 1, 65 S. W. 308, 88 Am. St. Rep. 406, cited by attorneys for the appellants, is in point, and by an elaborate and able opinion discusses the question here under consideration. In that case Weaver and two others were indicted for murder. Weaver was tried separately. In his argument the attorney for the state commented upon the failure of the appellant and defendant to produce as witnesses his codefendants to explain or deny some assumed damaging testimony which appeared against him, and the permission of the trial court to allow this statement of the prosecutor to continue after objection of defendant was held prejudicial error, under a statute which permitted a defendant to testify in his own behalf, or to call a co-defendant to testify for him. Yet this was a personal privilege of the defendant and codefend-ant, and a failure of either to avail himself o'f the privilege was not subject to comment before the jury, and cited People vs Hendrickson, 53 Mich. 525, 19 N. W. 169, in support of its position. A stronger reason must exist where the witness is not privileged, but wholly incompetent. The error complained of is fatal to the judgment. It is therefore reversed, and cause remanded.