109 N.Y. 408 | NY | 1888
The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree. He alleges error on the part of the trial judge; first, in rejecting evidence to show that he was insane when the act was committed; second, in charging the jury, and, these failing, asks for a new trial upon the ground that the verdict is so against the weight of evidence and against law that justice requires it.
The homicide was committed on the 1st of October, 1887, at the town of Islip. The trial came off on the fifth of December following, and one Dr. Gray, being examined as a witness for the defense, stated that about two weeks before that time he had visited the defendant, conversed with him and received a history of his case, together with his symptoms. He was *410 then asked by defendant's counsel: "Q. Was there anything that attracted your attention to him in September last? A. Yes, sir. Q. What? A. His description of it to me." District attorney: "I do not think it is proper to base a question upon his description of how he was. The court: The prisoner is a competent witness for himself on that subject." Counsel for defendant: "If the defendant was giving his symptoms to the doctor historically, and without any suggestion on the part of the doctor, it seems to me that that would be more important and it would be more likely to be truthful and sincere than any evidence we might bring here now for him. At least it is not subject to the criticism that it has been suggested to him. The court: I think it is the prisoner's statement unsworn — that is, he told the doctor so. But the symptoms, as he detailed them, get to the jury without the obligation of an oath. You may prove the symptoms by him, and then put them all in the form of a question to the doctor. I sustain the objection."
The same point is raised by a similar exception at a later stage of the trial. The ruling of the trial judge is well supported by the reason given by him. The prisoner's declaration in November as to his condition in September was not competent as evidence of his actual condition at that time, nor could it be the basis of a scientific opinion as to whether he was sane or insane at that period. Had the question related to his condition at the time of the interview, the result might be quite different. Everything said or done at a given period serves to disclose the mental state of the actor, but his narration as to what he said or did, or of his feelings or bodily ailments upon a former occasion, furnishes no foundation for an opinion as to his actual state or condition at that time. It is of no higher grade than the declarations of third persons as to a past transaction, and in like manner is inadmissible. The witness was admitted to testify as an expert concerning the mental condition of the person in question, and his opinion would be of value only when founded on facts observed by himself, or proved by other witnesses under the obligation of an oath, *411 or upon hypothetical statements. To a certain extent an expert exercises the functions of a juror; his opinion is his verdict upon the point submitted to him and must be based on competent evidence. The representation of a sick person of the nature, symptoms and effects of any malady under which he is laboring at the time of making those representations are sometimes received as original evidence, but I find no case which allows those representations to be received as evidence of his condition at any other period.
The defendant excepted "to that part" of the charge in which the word "deliberation" and the word "premeditation" were defined. In general but explicit words the learned judge first called the attention of the jury to the distinction between the crime of murder and the crime of manslaughter. Restating the conceded fact that "the defendant fired a shot at his mother," he said: "If he intended to kill her he committed murder. But if under any state of mind he fired a shot without that intent to kill, then he committed manslaughter;" and adds, "if he committed manslaughter he committed, as counsel for defense conceded, manslaughter in the first degree." The learned judge next explained the degrees of murder, that the first was "the taking of human life with deliberation and premeditation;" and referring to the temper and disposition of men, as exhibited in different individuals, he recognized in some the considerate faculty and the easy submission of others to the impulse of anger, malice or other violent passions, suggesting that the mind of one man is quick and active, enabling him to reach a conclusion as if by instinct, while that of another is sluggish, carrying him along slowly, "and, therefore," he said, "it is left to the jury always to determine whether there was in the particular act sufficient dehberation in the mind of the particular individual who is on trial to warrant a conviction of murder in the first degree. When you come to define the word, all that the law requires is this: That there should be some reflection and some thought that precedes the blow. If there is thought, if there is reflection on the act, and if there is a choice and a *412
determination as the result of those mental actions, then there is sufficient deliberation within the law." The trial judge then read from the case of the People v. Conroy (
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *413