44 Fla. 81 | Fla. | 1902
This cause was referred by the court to its commissioners for investigation, who reported that the judgment of the Circuit Court ought to be reversed, in which view the court concurs:
The plaintiff in error was indicted for murder in the first degree in the Circuit Court of Columbia County, and on his trial there in June, 1901, was convicted of manslaughter, and to review the judgment takes writ of error from this court.
. The first assignment' of error is the denial in the court below of the defendant’s motion for new trial. The first sis grounds of this motion are presented together and question the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. As there will be a reversal of the judgment below because of other errors hereinafter to be pointed out, it will be improper to discuss the sufficiency of the evidence for conviction. The seventh ground of the motion for new trial is as follows: “Because the court enred in refusing to give the following charges, numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7 and 8, respectively, as requested by the defendant, by and through his counsel, which are as follows.” Then follows at length in the motion a copy of the several refused instructions. This ground of the motion, treated
The seventeenth assignment of error is as follows: “The court erred in refusing to charge the jury in the several matters and things requested, and appearing of record—charges 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7.” What has already been said in reference to the seventh ground of the motion for new trial applies alike to this assignment, and it must fail for the same reasons. The eighth, ninth, tenth and eleventh grounds of the motion for new trial question severally the giving by the court of four several instructions as follows: “You are to determine the credence which shall be attached to the alleged confession and every part thereof. And it is your duty to give such con
The next charge questioned is as follows: “If you have, after having considered a,ll the evidence both as to facts and circumstances, entertain a reasonable doubt as to whether or not the deceased was shot by the defendant with a pistol at the time and place of the alleged homicide, then you should' find the defendant not guilty.” There is no prejudicial error in this instruction, inasmuch as the indictment charged the shooting with a pistol; nor in the next one questioned as follows: “The law in its humanity presumes all persons charged with the commission of crime to be innocent, and this humane presumption continues until every material element that constitutes the crime is proven to the satisfaction of the jury trying such person beyond a reasonable doubt.” The court after charging the law upon hypothesized cases of murder in the first and second degree, respectively, followed it up, as a continuation of the same charge; with the following: “But should you not so find, and from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant, at the time and place and by the means and in the manner set forth in the indictment, slew the deceased unlawfully in the heat of overwhelming passion, superinduced by sudden and sufficient provocation on the part of the deceased, to throw a reasonable and cautious man into a sudden and uncontrolable passion, and that the defendant then and there instantly fired upon and slew the
The twelfth ground of the motion for new trial is for the alleged error of the court in charging the jury as follows: “And should you further find from the evidence that on the morning of the homicide they fell out with each other in regard to language used by the deceased An regard to the mother of the accused; and should you further find from the evidence that the defendant was without fault and that the deceased was then and there armed with a deadly weapon, or with the wooden mallet offered and shown in evidence, made an assault on the defendant before the defendant had attempted to do any wrong or act of violence to him; and from the evidence should further find that the deceased attempted to strike the defendant with said wooden mallet, and thereby designed to do the defendant great bodily harm, and that the defendant as a reasonable man believed the danger of such design being accomplished was then and there imminent and impending, and that he fired the fatal shot that killed the deceased, alone to prevent his own life from being taken, or alone to prevent great bodily injury being
II. The second assignment of error is abandoned.
III. The third assignment of error is based upon the ruling of the court below in admititng the testimony of one Saussy, a witness for the State, to the effect that Miss Ives said to him that Kirby (defendant) had shot Ed. (the deceased) which led him to go to the scene of the shooting. This was objected to as being hearsay evidence. It was proper for the witness to say that he went to the scene of the shooting because of something said to him by Miss Ives, but not to repeat the assertions of fact made by her in said conversation, the defendant not being present.
IV. The fourth assignment of error states matter that is erroneous for the reason last stated.
V. To the matter assigned as the fifth error there was no exception, consequently it can not be considered.
VI. The next error assigned is the ruling of the court-in permitting the State’s witness, Edward®, to testify as to the instructions or caution given the defendant by the committing magistrate before he testified at the preliminary hearing. The objection made to this is that the best evidence on this point is the testimony of the justice, and his docket, both accessible to the court. When this objection was made it was first sustained by the court, and the committing magistrate examined without shedding light upon the question, nor did his docket do so. Edwards was then recalled and examined as stated. Under these circumstances there was no merit in the objection made, as the “best evidence” rule had no application.
VIII & IX. A State’s witness, one Futch, was called to prove admissions made to him by the defendant in relation to the homicide, and before relating such admissions was asked the following questions by the State Attorney: Q. You can state whether or not before he made such statements to you or anyone else present, you spoke any words to him as an inducement to make a statement either from fear or from hope of reward or betterment. Q. Then if he made a statement to you that morning or answered any question from you or any one else present, was what he said freely and voluntarily said or not? The first of these questions was objected to by the defendant on the ground! that it calls for the opinion of witness, and the second question was objected to on the ground that it was too general and leading. The court overruled both objections and such rulings constitute the eighth and ninth assignments of error. The first of these questions, though clumsily worded, sought in substance to draw from the witness the proper predicate for the.detail of admissions, i. e., whether or not anything was done or said by him or. any one else present to put the defendant in fear or under duress, or excite in him the hope of reward or escape from punishment, as an inducement to the admissions, or.whether such admissions were freely and voluntarily made, and there was no eror in either of such rulings.
X. The'tenth is that the court erred in overruling defendant’s- objection to the following question propounded to Miss Ives, witness for the State, i. e. “Now state what you know about his (defendant’s) habits as to carrying a weapon, and the kind of weapon, with him to the college
XI. There is no merit in the eleventh assignment of error nor is it contended that the question objected to was leading, which was the only ground upon which objection was made to it in the court below.
XII & XIII. The twelfth and. thirteenth assignments are that the court erred in rejecting the evidence of the witness Vaughn, as offered by the defendant as to statements made by defendant, after the State had used such statements against him; and in refusing to allow said Vaughn to testify on behalf of defendant, whether the defendant had previously made the same statement as that made by him at the preliminary hearing, and after the State had in part used that against him. .The record shows that Vaughn was permitted to give his version of the statements or confessions as to which evidence had been offered by the State, and that which was excluded was testimony as to other statements made by defendant at some previous time. The defendant endeavors to support these assignments only by citation of authority to the effect that where testimony as to a confession is offered, the whole statement should be given. No violation of this rule is shown.
XIV. The fourteenth assignment of error is based upon the action of the court in permitting the docket entry of the committing magistrate to be read to the jury as follows :
Affidavit of C. A. Finley taken. Warrant issued and returned, served by W. N. Cone, Sheriff. And the defendant was on this day given a hearing on said charge, and the court being satisfied that there is probable cause to hold the defend'ant and believing the presumption of his guilt to be great, he holds the defendant to Circuit Court, without bail. Given under my hand and seal this 4th day of April, 1903.
O. R. PARKER, Justice of the Peace.”
The only apparent purpose for which this record was offered at this time was to show that the committing magistrate, who at the time of the trial was one of the defendants attorneys, had as such magistrate found the presumption of defendant’s guilt to be great. This was clearly improper, and was highly prejudicial to defendant’s case. The objection to the docket entry should have been sustained, and the failure to do so was error for which the judgment of the court below must be reversed. The only objection urged to -the introduction of this matter in the court below was the general objection, “that it was improper.” While this court has repeatedly announced the general rule to the effect, “that general objections to questions addressed to witnesses, without stating the precise ground of objection, are vague and nugatory, and if entitled to weight anywhere are without weight before an appellate court” (Gladden v. State, 12 Fla. 562; Jacksonville, T. & K. W. Ry. Co. v. Peninsular Land Transp. & Manf’g Co. 27 Fla. 1, 9 South. Rep. 661;
XY. The fifteenth assignment of error Is that the court erred in permitting the State’s witness Saussy to testify that the defendant’s witness Bird had pointed out to him, Saussy, the spot where he saw the pestle lying when he found Barnes on the floor wounded, and that the place pointed out was about four feet from the hand of Barnes. Bird had testified that the pestle was about one foot from Barnes' hand, and this was in the nature of impeaching testimony, and is objected to on the ground that no proper predicate had been laid for it in the examination of Bird. Upon iciross-axamination, when recalled, Bird had been asked whether he: had not at the time and place mentioned, pointed out to Sauissy the place where the pestle stood, and he denied that he had done so then or at any other time. This sufficiently directed the attention of
The remaining assignments of error have been disposed of in considering the propriety of the refusal of the court below to grant defendant’s motion for a new trial.
For the errors found the judgment -of the Circuit Court is reversed and the cause remanded for new trial.