| Mich. | Oct 6, 1880

Campbell, J.

McGuire was convicted before the Superior Court of Grand Rapids of robbery, while armed with a dangerous weapon, committed on one Albertus Meyer. Meyer testified positively to the robbery on the night of November 17, 1879, while he was walking home with his little boy. He was approached from behind, gagged and thrown down, and his money stolen. He could not recognize the two men who robbed him before they ran out of sight, but the boy recognized McGuire and identified him. The most important * evidence, therefore, was that of the child, who was a few months over six years old.

An exception was taken to the examination of this boy, on account of his extreme youth, and the judge who tried the cause had some hesitation about it. He, however, took the lad into his own room and had a long conference with him, in addition to what appeared in court, and he finally' came to the conclusion that the child was sufficiently conscious of the duty of speaking the truth that he might be received as a witness, subject to such cautions to the jury as were proper concerning his statements.

We held in Washburn v. People 10 Mich. 372" court="Mich." date_filed="1862-07-17" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/washburn-v-people-6632743?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6632743">10 Mich. 372, that the reception of such testimony was permissible where the judge was satisfied. We think that in the present case the course taken was such as to justify the judge in doing as he did. The boy was the only witness who could recognize the prisoner, and it was therefore .important to receive him if there was any sound reason to believe he could give reliable information. There is of course some danger that a child of tender years may be influenced to tell what is not true. But the *288inability of such an inexperienced boy to keep up a consistent false story through the various questionings of a trial is a pretty safe guard against any great danger on that head. He is far more likely to answer wrongly from not fully understanding questions put to him, than from deliberate falsehood. His method of telling his story here was simple and childlike, and, so far as we can tell from a paper description of it, was candid and honest. At any rate the jury must have thought so, and we are not surprised that they did. The judge cautioned the jury fully and clearly on the necessity of sifting his testimony very thoroughly. He could not well have been more explicit. "We cannot think the danger of receiving such a witness is any greater than that of rejecting him.

On the cross-examination, in answer to some questions concerning his recognition of the respondent at the police station, he was asked whether his father had not told him respondent was the man, and he answered in the.affirmative to this and one or two similar questions about' the recognition. And while the questions were not quite broad enough to exclude any other knowledge, they had with the answers a bearing on the fact of his knowledge. When the father was examined as a witness he was asked if he had ever told the boy respondent was the man who assaulted him, and allowed to answer, and replied in the negative. This is also assigned as error.

We do not think this was improper. It was in no sense an attempt to impeach the lad, for it did not refer to any contradictory statements, out of court. It seems to us competent evidence to show facts making it unlikely that the boy had made a conclusion of identity from any but proper data. The whole facts were before the jury. If they thought.he had intentionally stated what was not true as to his source of knowledge, or if they thought the father had prompted him and then denied his own action, they had seen both when testifying and could judge accordingly. They evidently concluded that the. cross-examination did not bring to the child’s attention the point whether his recognition was spontaneous *289or only the result of prompting from Iris father. Perhaps one of the best means of judging whether testimony is proper is to consider what would happen from its exclusion; and we think that where a child or a person not familiar with the full bearing of such questions as are put to him makes answers that appear ambiguous, or that raise suspicions of collusion, it is not improper to show what the facts are. It must be borne in mind that the recognition of the assailant is in itself •a circumstance bearing on the merits, and not a mere collateral matter.

A witness Britton, who was confined in jail at the same •time with McGuire, testified to an account given by the latter of the robbery, and on cross-examination gave the names of several persons who were in prison at the time, and among •others a man with red whiskers, who is claimed to have been one James Carson. Several questions put to Carson concerning conversations with McGuire in Britton’s presence were rejected as not referring to this particular conversation. We have some doubt whether some of these rulings may not have gone too far. But finally he was allowed to answer that he heard a statement made by McGuire in Britton’s presence, and respondent’s counsel, without any ruling against it, dropped the inquiry without pursuing it further. We are satisfied that no one understood there . was any objection to testimony which would contradict Britton, or explain what he referred to, and that respondents’ counsel, when the door was fairly opened to the inquiry, chose to leave it as it was. There was therefore no error by reason of the previous rulings, which we think were not meant to shut out proper 'questions. We see no pertinence in the inquiry concerning the previous reading of newspapers referring to the robbery.

We think the court charged as fully and carefully on the weight to be given to the child’s testimony and the caution to fbe used in acting upon it as was necessary, and that nothing important was omitted that did not come within the general instructions. What was said about the prisoner’s statement left its whole effect to the jury. We are not informed what •it was, and cannot assume it required different treatment, We *290are unable to say that the jury would have been made any wiser by any other instruction concerning reasonable doubt.* If they understood English they could get little aid from any closer definition.

We discover no error, and the court below should be advised to proceed to sentence on the verdict.

The other Justices concurred.

The court charged with regard to “ reasonable doubt as follows : “The expression itself seems to comprehend the whole subject matter. Seasonable doubt, of course — that is, not a far fetched one; it is not a speculative one; it is not an arbitrary one; but it is just what it assumes to be, a reasonable doubt. If you, after looking over the testimony, and considering all the facts proven to your satisfaction in the case, and the natural circumstances that surround those facts — if you are still unable to say drat Ihe prisoner is guilty, it is your duty to acquit. And that, we apprehend, is what is understood by a reasonable doubt in the law.”

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