The relator was convicted upon his own confession of manufacturing and printing obscene and indecent photographs, and of having in his possession negative plates for printing and making such obscene pictures, and of having large quantities of such pictures in
The punishment of the offense has been seriously augmented where it may be committed by a person of twenty-one years of age or upwards, and it may well be doubted whether the convict could be properly required to expose himself to it by any information supplied by his own oath. That would be making him a witness against himself, which the Constitution of the State has prohibited in criminal cases. Under this restraint the court must act on the best information that can be obtained, and not unfrequently that will be supplied by the prisoner’s own appearance. That was the course adopted in this case, and by no assertion of the prisoner has it been maintained that the conclusion arrived at was an erroneous one. What is claimed in his behalf is that evidence should have been taken upon the subject by the examination of witnesses. That was not required by the statute nor the nature of the fact to be ascertained. The justices could, as they did, consult their own senses, and act upon the conclusion which they certainly suggested. There can be no more objection to that course in a case like the present one, than in cases where they are required to act upon the fact that the person before them is a child, a boy or a girl, white or black, a male or a female, and as they are not affirmed to have erred in their conclusion, no harm can be done in this case by holding the sentence imposed to have been a proper one. The conviction should be affirmed.
Conviction affirmed.
