64 Ind. 473 | Ind. | 1878
The appellant, Alonzo B. Jones, and Lee Jones, Milton P. Toliver, Thomas Toliver and Eli Lowry, were jointly indicted in the Orange Circuit Court, for the murder, in the first degree, of Thomas Moody, by shooting him with a gun.
Eli Lowry pleaded guilty to the indictment, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the state-prison for life. The other defendants pleaded not guilty, and, on their mo- • tion, a -change of venue was granted, to the county of Monroe.
In the Monroe Circuit Court the defendants elected to be tried separately, and the appellant was put upon his trial separately, before a jury, which resulted in his conviction and sentence to imprisonment for life in the state-prison.
Three errors are assigned, as follows:
1. The court erred in overruling the motion to quash the indictment •
3. The court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion in arrest of judgment.
In thebrief of counsel for the appellant no reason is pointed out for the quashing of the indictment, or for the arrest of judgment, and we see none. We therefore proceed to the consideration of the motion for a new trial.
It may be gathered from the evidence, that Alonzo B. Jones and Lee Jones were brothers, and sons-in-law of "William Toliver, and that Milton P. Toliver and Thomas Toliver were brothers to each other, and sons of William Toliver. It does not appear that Eli Lowry was related to either of the parties. William Toliver, having become a widower, married Polly Moody, a sister of Thomas Moody, the deceased. William Toliver having-died after his marriage with Polly Moody, much ill feeling seems to have arisen, on the part of his sons and sons-in-law, against the Moody family, and especially against Thomas Moody, apparently growing out of the settlement of his estate. At the time of the homicide Thomas Moody was living at the town of Orleans, and the Joneses and Tolivers were living at or near Mitchell, some five miles distant from Orleans. On the evening of March 2d, 1875, Thomas Moody, as he was about entering his gate at his residence in Orleans, was shot with a gun and wounded by some one from the outside, from which wounds he died the next day.
The evidence in the cause is set out in a voluminous rec-ox-d, contaixxing over fifteen hundx-ed pages of manuscript, from which it appears, beyond a x-easonable doubt, as we think, that the appellant, if he did not pex-petrate the homicide with his owxx hand, counselled, aided, and abetted in the perpetration thereof.
With this brief statement of the general features of the
The other grounds may be conveniently divided into classes, as follows:
1. Such as relate to the admission of evidence objected to by the defendant;
2. Such as relate to the exclusion of evidence offered by the defendant; and,
3. Such as relate to the charges given and those refused.
It was proved by William Moody, a brother of the deceased, that, on the night of the 24th of June, 1871, when the Moody family, consisting of the witness, Thomas Moody, now deceased, Polly Toliver, and one or two other members of the family, lived elsewhere than at Orleans, the house was broken into by persons from the outside, and sundry explosive and inflammable missiles were thrown into the house, which exploded therein, scattering their destructive contents, such as buckshot, nails and pieces of ii'on, about the house, ixxjuring the inmates and doing much damage by bux’ning axxd otheiwise. In this raid Thomas Moody, now deceased, was severely injured by some of the missiles, or by a gun or pistol shot. The ■evidence was received on the statement of the prosecutor, that he would afterward give evidence connecting the de■fexxdaixt with the transaction, which was done. The fanxily afterward moved to Oxleans.
The witness was then asked by the counsel for the State the following questions:
“ I will ask you, when you lived at Orleans, what condition you lived in, as to going out, or keeping your house barred up? ”
The witness answered : ‘'When we first went there we lived at McDonald’s ; we rented a portion of that house, slept up stairs and fastened the doors up, and when we moved down where we live now we fastened all the doors, and generally stayed in after dark. The deceased generally “ came in about dark, and ” the witness did “ not remember of any occasion when ” the deceased “ was out after dark, excepting the night he was shot, and on occasions when he was away on business, and was gone from home all night.”
We can by no means say that the evidence thus objected to was inadmissible. Motive is generally an important element to be considered in cases of alleged murder, especially where the identity of the supposed murderer is controverted and required to be established.
The supposed motive of the appellant in making the raid upon the house of the Moodys in 1871, and in afterward taking the life of Thomas Moody, was his malice and ill-will engendered by the settlement of the affairs of the estate of William Toliver ; and it might be supposed that if such was the motive that prompted the murder, it would have been much sooner accomplished. But the careful and guarded manner in which Thomas Moody lived at Orleans may sei’ve to explain why no safe opportunity was sooner presented for taking his life, and, therefore, why the murder, prompted by such motive, was not sooner perpetrated. In this aspect of the case, we think the evidence was competent, and we need not consider whether there was any other ground on which it was admissible.
The State proved by Zachariah Burton, that, after the death of Thomas Moody, the appellant spoke to the witness about a compromise with the Moodys. He wanted the witness to tell the Moody family, in substance, that he wanted them to pay him $5,000, and the widow Toliver to deed back the land she had got from the estate, and pay rent
The State introduced Eli Lowry, as a witness, who had pleaded guilty to the indictment and had been sent to the state-prison, and proved by him, among other things, that, before the day on which the deceased was killed, the appellant had threatened to kill him, and had tried to induce the witness to do so; that, .on the morning of that day, the appellant told the witness he was going to kill Moody that night, and wanted the witness to go along. During the day Parks Toliver gave the witness some shot, and told him to take them to the appellant’s mill, for Lee Jones. This the witness did, and found Lee Jones there. Lee Jones loaded some guns, and fired them at a target, to try them. During this time the appellant came there ; and it was arranged that the witness and Lee Jones should go by themselves from Mitchell, and that the appellant and Parks Toliver and Thomas Toliver should go by themselves, and that the parties should all meet at a designated place a little less than a mile from Orleans, to go and kill Moody. Accordingly the parties all met at the designated place. It was then an’anged that Lee Jones and Parks Toliver should go forward to Orleans and commit the deed, while
The witness, in the course of his examination, spoke of his having been down town after the arrangement above mentioned had been made, and ivas asked by the State who of the parties he saw down town, to which he replied that he thought he saw Tom Toliver. The State then proved by the witness, that, at the time, Thomas Toliver asked the witness whether he was going to go with them to do the work, that the witness replied that he did not know whether he was or not, and that Toliver told him to “get ready.”
This conversation between the witness and Thomas Toliver is objected to by counsel for the appellant, because the appellant was not present. ¥e think, however, that the evidence of it was properly admitted. The conversation evidently had reference to the common design and purpose. The statements of Thomas Toliver were, according to the evidence, the statements of a co-conspirator in reference to the subject of the conspiracy, and in furtherance of its objects.
Though he does not appear to have been present when the arrangement was made, testified to by Lowry, to go to Orleans that night and kill Moody, yet the fact that he did go on that occasion, if such he the fact, as testified to by Lowry, shows sufficiently that he was one of the conspirators, and this made his statements in furtherance of the common purpose competent evidence against his co-conspirators. 1 Greenleaf Ev., sec. 111; Williams v. The State, 47 Ind. 568.
The appellant objects that this evidence was totally irrelevant. "We do not think it was so clearly so as to justify a reversal for its admission.
It might serve to illustrate the feelings and relations between the .appellant and the witness. The appellant might have desired to befriend the witness, as an act of kindness and generosity, or he might, tor other reasons, having relation to the murder of Moody, have desired to keep on good terms and not break with the witness. We think the evidence was competent to go for what the jury might regard it to be worth.
Mrs. Alice Patterson testified as a witness in the cause-, om behalf of the State. It appeared in the evidence, that she- and her husband lived at Mitchell, at the time of the murder, and that Eli Lowry boarded with them at that time:. On the preliminary examination of the cause before a justice of the peace she had testified, that Eli Lowry was at their house, on the evening of the murder, took supper' there, and stayed all night. This was contrary- toiler'evidence delivered on the trial below. It also appeared: by;
The last statement, as to Lowry himself being afraid of Jones, we understand the court to have ruled out as incompetent.
It is insisted that the statements thus made by Lowry to the Pattersons were hot 'competent.
But we are of opinion that they were clearly competent, as tending'to explain the discrepancy between her present evidence and that delivered by her on the examination before the justice.
The statements of Lowry, if made, were in the nature of facts tending to show that Mrs. Patterson’s evidence before the justice was given under the influence of fear and intimidation ; and, if the jury believed such to have been the case, they probably would not think the discrepancy should detract, so much as would otherwise have been the case, from the credit that should attach to her evidence.
Columbus Moore was examined as a witness by the State, and he testified, that, after' the death of William Toliver,
It is objected that this evidence was incompetent, put we are of a different opinion. The facts detailed might be regárded as having a tendency to show a purpose on the part of Parks Toliver to shoot Moody. If what was said and done by him was said and done in the presence and hearing of the appellant, it was competent to go in evidence, and it was for the jury to judge, from all the circumstances, how far the appellant concurred in, '.or dissented from, the supposed purpose. The bar-room was small, and it was for the jury to judge whether the appellant heard and saw what was said and done. But, aside from this view, there was evidence tending to show a conspiracy, as we have already seen, between the appellant, Parks Toliver and others, to kill Moody ; and Greenleaf says : “ It makes no difference at what time any one entered into the conspiracy. Every one who does enter into a common purpose or design is generally deemed, in law, a party to every act which had before been done by the others and a party to every act which may afterwards be done by any of the others in furtherance of such common design.” 1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 111.
William E. Clark was afterward called by the State, and the State proved by him that when the appellant was ai’rested he had two revolvers in his boot leg. The evidence of Clark is objected to, but we think it was competent.
Though the time of the arrest and that of the conversation are not precisely shown, the evidence tended, as we think, to corroborate and sustain the evidence of Mrs. Patterson.
The" State was allowed to give in evidence the transcript of the record in the. cause sent from Orange county. This is complained of as en-oneous. We.see no good purpose that was subserved by giving this transcript in evidence. It was an unnecessary but harmless piece of evidence.
This disposes of the points made on the evidence given.
We come now to that offered by the defendant and rejected.
The defendant, at the proper time, offered to prove hy other witnesses, that one Jefferson Huffstetter. had, at. various times prior to the death of the deceased, threatened to kill him ; and, after his decease, admitted that he did kill him ; that he had hired Eli Lowry to kill him ; that he did not himself kill him, but that his money did, and that, on the night of his death, he had slept with his boots on.
These threats and admissions of Huffstetter were rejected, and we think correctly. If Huffstetter had been on trial for the murder, his threats and admissions would
The defendant offered to prove, that, upon the trial of a cause in the Masonic Lodge, before the Masonic body, at Mitchell, in which Huffstetter had preferred charges against the appellant of striking and kicking him, the appellant, making his defence, said, in the presence ofHuffstetter, amongst other things, that Huffstetter had accused him of the killing of Thomas Moody, when he, Huffstetter, knew that he himself was the murderer of Thomas Moody; when he knew that the appellant knew, and others knew, that he, Huffstetter, was the murderer of Thomas Moody; that Huffstetter hung his head, and, after the appellant finished his speech, made no denial, in any way, of the charge thus made against him.
This evidence was rightly rejected. We see nothing in it that could legitimately have tended to prove either that Huffstetter was, or that the appellant was not, guilty of the murder.
The defendant introduced as a witness one Thomas D. Lindsey, and, having examined him generally in the case, put to him the following question :
“ Has there been any effort made by Robert Teagarden, Charles Keith and Ed. Millis and Ward, to prevent you from testifying in this case ? ”
On objection being made by the State, the counsel for the
The objection was sustained, and, as we think, properly. It will be observed, that the question was not asked with a view to the impeachment of any of the persons named; no foundation had been laid for that. It will also be observed, that there was no offer to prove any thing definite. What the “means and appliances” and“influences”were, was not stated. But, assuming that the persons named in the question had been actively instrumental in aiding the prosecution, and that they had made efforts to prevent the witness from testifying, we do not see how that fact could have had the slightest influence in determining the guilt or innocence of the appellant. The persons named might, doubtless, when examined by the State, have been asked, on cross-examination by the defendant, with a view to test their credibility, whether they had made such effort, and, if they had denied it, they might have been contradicted by proof of the fact.
This disposes of all the questions arising upon the admission or rejection of evidence.
We pass to the instructions.
The appellant’s counsel prepared twenty-six charges, and asked that they be given to the jury, but the court refused them all, and gave thirty-eight of its own motion. We may remark, that the charges given were more than usually full and explicit, and placed the law of the case fully and fairly before the jury. Some objections to portions of them will be hereinafter more fully considered. The chief question arising on the charges is, whether those given by the court embraced the substance of all those asked by the appellant, which should have been given in the absence of those given by the court. The charges asked and refused,
The first and second charges asked contained a general outline of the case as shown by some of the evidence, and stated a theory of the case, but did not contain any statement of law whatever. There was no error in refusing these charges, because they had reference to matters of fact and not of law.
The third charge asked was as follows:
“ There is no other theory of the killing having been done .by the defendant, or participated in by him, upon which any evidence has been offered, or as tending to establish which any evidence has been offered by the State, than .the above mentioned. The court therefore instructs the jury, that if, upon all the evidence in the case, the jury entertain a reasonable doubt of the truth of this theory, that is, entertain a reasonable doubt that the defendant, .in the manner set forth in Lowry’s evidence, killed, or participated in the killing of, the deceased, Thomas Moody, then they should acquit the defendant; for the State can not assume a theory as to the manner and circumstances of the killing, and, upon finding that that manner and method of killing ha.s not been established to the satisface tion of the jury, ask the jury to supply the defect in such proof by surmise or mere conjecture.”
"We think there was no error committed in refusing this charge, because we can not say that there was no evidence tending to showthat the appellant participated in the murder of Moody, though it may not have been committed “ in the manner set forth in Lowry’s evidence.” There was, on the contrary, some evidence tending to show that he participated in that murder, or counselled, aided and abetted therein, though it may not have been done as stated by Lowry.
We here copy the following charge given by the court, because it states the views of the court below upon the point we have been considering, and also because it is claimed to-have been erroneous in another respect:
“And so, also, I have, indicated, and now charge you, that if this evidence, or any evidence in the case, causes you to entertain a reasonable doubt of defendant’s guilt, you should acquit. .But, in considering the question of alibi, it is important that you look into all the testimony in-the case, and determine whether it is necessary, in order to establish the guilt of defendant, that the State should convince you beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant and those indicted with him, should have left Mitchell in the evening of said 2d day of March,-1875, or at all that day, and should have participated in said homicide, by the performance of the several and identical parts assigned them by the testimony of the witness Eli Lowry, and that Lowry himself should have participated in said homicide in the manner and form he himself asserts, or should have been at the several places on that day and at the several times he asserts; and in this connection I instruct you, that, if you are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, from the whole testimony in the ease, that, at the time and place mentioned in the indictment, the said Thomas Moody was unlawfully slain-by the hand of some
It is objected that the part of the charge which informed the jury that they might find the defendant guilty, in case they were satisfied by the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, of his guilt, though they might find that the alibi asserted by him, both as regards himself and his confederates, and also the witness Lowry, may be true, is erroneous.
"We think the word “ confederates,” as used in the charge, was used in the sense of “ those indicted with him,” words used in the former part of the charge, and that it must have been so understood by the jury. With this meaning attached to the word, the charge', in our opinion, was correct. The appellant may have been guilty of counselling, aiding or abetting in the commission of the murder, and yet neither he nor those indicted with him may have been at the place of the murder at the time thereof, but elsewhere.
Again, the appellant and his confederates may have been elsewhere when the murder was committed, and yet the appellant may have been guilty of having procured its
The 4th, 5th and 6th charges asked related to the credibility which should attach to the testimony of the witness Lowry, he being a convict under life sentence for murder. We think the law on that subject was correctly and sufficiently stated in the charges given by the court. The court did not, it is true,.state to the jury, as was asked, that in times past such convict was incompetent to testify at all; but this was unnecessary. It was sufficient that the jury were given to understand that his infamy as such convict went to his credibility, without stating what the law had been in former times. The then present, and not the past, state of the law was what governed.
The 7th, 8th and 9th related to the testimony of Lowry as an accomplice, and we think their substance was embraced in the charges given.
The 13th related to the credibility of witnesses who have committed perjury on a former occasion, and was substantially embraced in the charges given.
The 14th was as follows, and was correctly refused:
“ When a witness pretends that he or she has sworn to a different state of racts from that to which he or she now swears, because of fear of some person, the jury are’ not bound to, or justified in accepting the statement that such witness was operated upon by such pretended fear. But the jury should look behind that statement at all the facts, and if they find that there were no facts existing sufficient to inspire such fear, they may, and if they can find
The charge was an invasion of -the province of the jury, who had the exclusive right to determine what credit should be attached to the testimony of the witnesses. The idea is embodied in the charge, that, if there were no facts sufficient, in the opinion of the jury, to inspire the fear, and if they could find no other reason for the conduct of the witness, his evidence ought to be rejected entirely.
This cannot be laid down as a rule of law. • "What might seem to the jury as not sufficient to inspire fear might, in point of fact, have inspired fear on the part of the witness. Indeed, fear is inspired on many occasions and in various situations in life when there does not appear to be any sufficient cause for it. Much must depend upon the temper-' ament and mental constitution of the person whose fears are supposed to be wrought upon. What might inspire terror in one might excite no apprehension in another. Such questions should be left to the untrammelled determination of the jury, who seldom fail to pass upon them intelligently.
In the brief of counsel for the appellant, it is said of instructions 15 to 19 inclusive, that “ these instructions, in substance, ask the court to charge the jury, in view of the theory of the prosecution, that the presence of the defendant in Mitchell, on the night of the alleged murder, or the presence of the witness Lowry at Orleans, on the afternoon of the 2d of March, 1875, would, both or either, be fatal to the cause of the State,” etc.
What has been already said shows that these instructions were properly refused.
Instructions asked, numbered 20, 21 and 22, relate to the subject of threats and admissions, upon which, it seems to us, the court fully charged.
“ As to murder in the first degree, the statute submits to your discretion a choice between two modes of punishment. The Legislature has made it a part of the law of the State that you shall have the right to prescribe tlie penalty of death for such offence. Just how far such legislation has changed or modified, or to what extent it is in accordance with, the eternal laws of the Author of Life, you must determine on your own responsibilities to TIim. I do not attempt to determine this for you, and, on the other hand, would not be understood by this charge as giving any personal sanction to this feature which our law-makers have borrowed from the barbarisms of the past. The other form of punishment prescribed by the statute is that of impi’isoument for life in the state-prison. The punishment for murder in the second degree is imprisonment in the state-prison for life. The punishment for manslaughter is imprisonment in the state-prison for not more than twenty-one, nor less than two, years.”
It is urged by counsel for the appellant, that this charge was wrong, as being calculated to impress on the minds of the jury a conviction that the judge thought him guilty. We do not think the charge open to the objection. The jury might well have concluded from the charge, that the judge wTas opposed to capital punishment; and it is by no means certain that the charge did not have some influence on the minds of the jury in fixing the lighter punishment; but of this the appellant can not complain.
We have thus considered the questions involved, and find no error in the record.
The judgment below' is affirmed, with costs.