Munshower v. State

55 Md. 11 | Md. | 1880

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant was indicted and tried for the murder of James L. Wetsell, and the jury, by their verdict, found him guilty of murder in the first degree. At the trial, his counsel took three exceptions to the rulings of the Court upon questions of evidence, which this appeal brings up for review, and we shall dispose of them in their order.

First Exception. The State proved that early on Tuesday morning, the 5th of August, 1819, Wetsell left the house of Knode, where he was making his home, and proceeded up the public road towards Emmittshurg. On the Sunday following, Wetsell not having made his appearance, Knode went to the house of one Rentzell, where the prisoner was staying, and inquired of him whether he had seen anything of Wetsell, and the prisoner said he saw him on Tuesday, talked with him on the hill, when he left, saying he was going to Tom Shorb’s, and from there to town, and that he, the prisoner, then went to Motter’s Station. On Tuesday, the 12th of August, Wetzell’s body was found buried in Myers’ woods, with a wound in the hack of the neck — two holes close together as though both barrels of a gun had been fired at once into the neck— and the face was torn away. About sixteen feet from the grave there was a small ravine which presented marks and the appearance of having been first used for the burial of the body; there were leaves in the place, and some leaves had been raked out. The State then proved by Thomas Shorh, that on the afternoon of the 4th of August, he saw the prisoner in Knode’s woods sitting near the road, and he went to him and talked with him; he asked witness if he had seen anything of Wetsell, and witness answered no, and said, why don’t you go-to the house? to which the prisoner replied, I am not going there, Sarah (meaning Knode’s wife and Wetsell’s sister) makes such a fuss, she knows my business better than I do; that a short time afterwards prisoner met witness near the barn *19on Kane’s place and asked him if lie was going to Zacharia’s, and they went together as far as Tom’s Creek; on the way they had some talk about the gun the prisoner was carrying; he shot a squirrel with the left hand barrel, reloaded it, and remarked that he kept the right hand barrel for long range, it shot better. Upon cross-examination this witness was asked whether on Monday the eleventh, before the body of Wetsell was found, he had, in a conversation with Otho Grimes, in the public road, near the house of John McCarthy, told Grimes that James Wetsell had been murdered and buried under leaves in Myers’ woods, and that his head had been mashed in? The Court, upon objection made by the State, refused to ■allow the question to he answered, and to this ruling the prisoner excepted.

Counsel for the appellant contend that an answer to this question was admissible for the purpose of discrediting the witness; that if he had answered the question in the negative he would have been contradicted and discredited by the impeaching witness, and if he had answered in the affirmative it would have evidenced the possession of knowledge that the guilty party alone would he likely to have, and this would have discredited him. They admit that on a trial for murder the admissions or declarations of third persons that they killed the deceased are not evidence, hut they insist that if such third persons, on being examined as witnesses, implicate the prisoner by their testimony, evidence of their declarations that they were guilty of the offence is admissible to discredit the witnesses. This proposition is broadly stated in 1 Whart. Cr. Law, sec. 662, and runs through all the editions of that valuable hook. The only authority, however, cited in its support is the case of Smith vs. The State, 9 Ala., 990. An examination of that case has convinced us that the learned author has fallen into error in stating the proposition thus broadly, or has misapprehended the deci-

*20sion actually made by tbe Court. In that case, Smith, a slave, was on trial for the murder of Edmund, another slave, and the witness, Sam, had been tried and acquitted the day before of the same murder. On the trial of Smith, Sam was examined as a witness by the State and denied any knowledge of the murder of Edmund, or of the participation of Smith in it, but stated some circumstances tending to implicate Smith. The prisoner’s counsel then offered to prove, that while the trial of Sam was in progress, he, being at the time in jail, became alarmed and desired Neal, a white man then present, to request the jailor to send for his master, and then stated in Neal’s presence that he, Sam, had wrongfully accused the boy Smith of the murder of Edmund, and he wished so to tell his master, that he did not wish to die with a lie in his mouth, and cause the innocent to suffer, and the question was, whether this was admissible in evidence on the trial of Smith for any purpose. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Ormond, J., and he says — “ In my opinion it was mere hearsay. It appears that Sam had previously stated,'that Smith, a few days after the death of Edmund, had told him that he killed Edmund with a gun-barrel, and it appears to me very clear that the only rational meaning that can be put upon the declarations of Sam, in jail, is, that he had accused Smith falsely to his master-. His own trial was then in progress, he apprehended it would terminate fatally, and was thxxs impelled to make the confession. It cannot, in my opinion, by any just rule of interpretation, be construed into an admission that he was himself guilty of the murder of Edmund. This being the true meaning of the declaration, if Sam, when Smith was on trial, had repeated the false charge against him, the admission made in jail would certainly have been competent testimony to discredit him.” This is' all the Court decides in reference to the admissibility of these declarations, for the purpose of discrediting the *21witness, and it simply amounts to this, that where a witness has testified to any matter of fact, material to the issue, about which he has made a different statement to others, such statement, if denied by him, may be given in evidence to discredit or impeach him. This proposition is so plain and well settled as not to need this authority to support it, and that this was all the Court intended to decide, is perfectly obvious from what follows, for the learned Judge proceeds to say, that as Sam, in his testimony did not repeat the charge, but denied any knowledge of the participation of Smith in the murder, he was of opinion the admission made in jail was not testimony for any purpose,” and he then adds: — “It appears that Sam, in his testimony, had detailed some facts calculated to connect Smith with the murder, or as stated in the bill of exceptions, ‘ tending to implicate Smith,’ but his testimony as to these independent facts could not be impeached by proving that he had previously made a false declaration about Smith which he afterwards recanted, such declarations having no connection with the facts deposed to. It is an established rule of the law of evidence, that collateral matters cannot he thus introduced for the purpose of impeaching a witness.” But the decision goes still further, and the Judge says: — “Conceding, however, the true meaning of these declarations of Sam in jail to be an admission of his own guilt, and that he had killed Edmund himself, it does not, as I think, vary the case in the slightest degree. The question to- be ascertained was, whether Smith was guilty of the murder, and any fact or circumstance tending to prove that another was the guilty actor would be clearly competent, as its tendency would be to disprove the guilt of the accused. But I think it is perfectly clear that these declarations were not facts but mere hearsay; not made under the sanction of an oath; not obligatory on the person making them; and certainly could not he testimony either for or against any one else.” *22In his dissenting opinion, Goldthwaite, J., thought the evidence offered was admissible, but he does not place his decision upon the ground that it was admissible for the purpose of discrediting the witness. He says: — “The effort of the prisoner was to show such a condition of facts and circumstances as to create the impression on the minds of the jury that Sam, in point of fact, was the murderer, the evidence against himself being, as stated, entirely circumstantial. I apprehend, although it may be true, that the confession of a third person of his guilt is not evidence in favor of another when standing alone, and unaided by other facts or circumstances, yet that it is so, whenever the party confessing is connected with the crime by strong presumptive circumstances.” In the present case there is nothing to bring the supposed declaration of Shorb to Grimes within the doctrine even of this dissenting opinion. The declaration, if ever made, stands alone, for the record discloses no facts or circumstances whatever, tending to connect Shorb with the crime. The Alabama case sustains in fact the very opposite position from that for which the appellant’s counsel have contended, and we know of no authority nor any rule of evidence that would permit this question to be answered. The witness, in his examination in chief, had made no statement inconsistent with the declaration which the question- implied he had made in reference to the manner of Wetsell’s death and the place where the body was buried and concealed. If he had answered in the negative, he could not have been contradicted, for it is well settled that no question respecting any matter irrelevant to the issue can be put to a witness on cross-examination, for the mere purpose of impeaching his credit by contradicting him, and if any such question be inadvertently put and answered, the answer of the witness is conclusive. 2 Taylor’s Ev., sec. 1292. He was not bound to answer in the affirmative if the declaration would tend to inculpate himself, and if he *23chose so to answer voluntarily, then to allow the answer would be to permit his own antecedent declarations when proved by himself as a witness, to go to the jury as evidence to exculpate the prisoner, when it is clear the same declarations could not, for that or any other purpose, he proved by any other witness. To allow the introduction of such testimony would effect a dangerous innovation upon the law of evidence in criminal cases, and open the door to the most fraudulent contrivances to procure the acquittal of parties accused of crime. We therefore entertain no doubt as to the correctness of the ruling in this exception.

Second Exception. It was conceded that it became material and competent for the State to prove at what hour the moon rose on the night of Saturday, the 9th of August, 1819, and for the purpose of proving this, the State offered in evidence Gfruber’s Almanac for the year 1819. The prisoner objected to its admissibility, but the Court overruled the objection and allowed the almanac to be offered for the purpose stated. To this ruling the prisoner excepted.

This is all the exception states in regard to the almanac offered, and we must assume that it contained tables giving the periods of the rising and setting of the sun and moon on each day of the year, such as are usually found in such works. The prisoner did not propose to offer proof assailing or impeaching the accuracy of the astronomical calculations upon which the tables in the particular almanac in question were made, but his counsel contend that the almanac was not the best evidence, nor indeed any evidence as to when the moon rose on that night. The argument is, that it was a mere calculation made by some one long anterior to the happening of the event, that the event would occur at a certain hour and minute; it was not evidence that the moon had risen at a certain hour, but the statement of a conjecture that it would do so. *24On the 2nd of January, 1880, when this case was on trial, there were certainly better and surer means of proving when the moon did actually rise on the 9th of August, 1819, than hy relying on the computation of an almanac maker that it would or ought to rise at a given time that night: how is the fact that it did rise at a particular hour proved hy tendering as evidence the conjecture of calculation of some one that it would do so ? — If Gruber’s Almanac is evidence for this purpose, so then are all the other various ones published, because there is nothing in this one to make it more authentic than the others, and thus a fact susceptible of exact proof like any other event that has happened, may he established hy the unsworn conjecture of almanac compilers. We do not propose to elaborate the question, nor to rely upon the fact that the Statute of 24 Geo. 2, ch. 28, is in force in this State. As has been well argued hy the Attorney-General in his brief, the precise periods at which the sun and moon will rise or set at any particular period of twenty-four hours in the future is as absolutely certain and just as capable of exact mathematical ascertainment, as the occurrence of the day in which such setting or rising will take place. Courts have received as evidence weather reports, reports of the state of the markets, price currents, and insurance tables tending to show the probable duration of human life, though these are records which are not capable of mathematical demonstration, which cannot be tested hy any certain law, and which may or may not omit the record of changes which have actually taken place. But an almanac forecasts with exact certainty planetary movements. We govern our daily life hy reference to the computations which they contain. No oral evidence or proof which we could gather as to the hours of the rising or setting of the sun or moon could he as certain or accurate as that which we may obtain from such a source. Why then should not these computations, which are, after all, but parts of *25the ordinary computations of the calendar, be admitted as evidence? As was said by Judge Cooley in considering an analogous question, (Sisson vs. Railroad Co., 14 Mich., 497,) “ Courts would justly be the subject of ridicule if they should deliberately shut their eyes to the sources of information which the rest of the world relies upon, and demand evidence of a less certain and satisfactory character.” There is clearly no error in the ruling in this exception. ✓

Third Exception. From this exception it appears the State proved by Fisher, that he was a witness at the coroner’s inquest on the 13th of August, 1879, that after all the witnesses had testified the prisoner was brought in and told that if he desired it, he could have the witnesses recalled, that the testimony of those who had been sworn was read over to him, and when that of Fisher was read to the effect that he had seen the prisoner at Motter’s Station on the 5th of August between 10.30 and 11 A. M., the prisoner turned to Fisher and said I think you are mistaken about that, I was at the station about 9 o’clock that morning, and if you consult Mr. Naill you will find I am right, and I can prove that by Harry Rayman and Singleton Dorsey. 'The State also proved by other witnesses, declarations of the prisoner, that he had arrived at Motter’s Station at 9 A. M. on the 5th of August. The prisoner’s counsel then called Harry Rayman and asked him whether he had been a witness on the inquest, to which he replied, yes, and then further asked him whether he had not testified on that occasion that he saw the prisoner at Motter’s Station on the morning of the 5th of August about 9 o’clock. Offering to show that this witness had previously to the statements and declarations by the prisoner, told a brother-in-law of the prisoner that he had seen the prisoner at the station at that hour, which was mentioned to the prisoner by tbe brother-in-law. Counsel then stated that this offer was made to show that the statement made *26by tbe prisoner to Fisher was based upon the statement of Rayman, and that Rayman was in point of fact mistaken about the time, the object being to rebut the charge that the prisoner had attempted to set up an alibi, and to show that his mistake was the result of the error of Rayman. The Court sustained the State’s objection, refused to allow the question to be asked and answered, and the evidence to be offered, and to this ruling the prisoner excepted.

It is not plainly stated in this exception that the brother-in-law communicated Rayman’s statement to the prisoner before his declarations at the inquest were made, a fact which, in any aspect of the case, was essential to the admission of this evidence. But apart from this we are clearly of opinion the ruling was correct. The statement which the prisoner made at the inquest was the assertion of a fact about which he himself had positive knowledge. There is nothing to show he was ignorant of the time he arrived at the station, or that he was not just as capable of judging of it, or ascertaining it, as any one else, and he could hardly have made a mistake of nearly two hours. He positively asserted he was there about nine o’clock, and averred he could prove it as a fact by two or three witnesses. We do not think it was competent for him to escape the damaging effect of a false statement of his whereabouts on that morning, by proving that Rayman had told his brother-in-law he had seen him there at that time, and that the brother-in-law had told him that Ray-man had so stated. In our judgment such evidence does not prove or tend to prove that his positive assertions at the inquest were the result of an honest mistake, brought about by the fact that the mistaken declaration of Rayman had first been communicated to him.

Finding no error in the rulings to which the appellant has excepted, it becomes unnecessary to notice the exception taken by the State. These rulings are the only *27matters brought up for review by this appeal. The result is, they must be affirmed, and the cause remanded.

(Decided 9th December, 1880.)

Rulings affirmed and cause remanded.