40 Mich. 710 | Mich. | 1879
This case comes up on exceptions before judgment.
The defendant was convicted in the Recorder’s court of the city of Detroit, on a charge of stealing sixty-four dollars from the store of Oren T. and Alvin N. Sabin in the day time. The money was kept in a cigar box in a vault in the office.
This statement sufficiently unfolds the transaction for the present purpose.
It has not been claimed that defendant took the money in person, but the theory of the prosecution at the trial was, and is now, that the young man referred to was the actual perpetrator of the theft, and that- the defendant was present as an active accomplice, co-operating in the offense, and the case was conducted throughout in the court below according to this view.
There is another consideration not to be overlooked. The defendant was entitled to satisfy the jury, if he could, that the witness and not himself was in league with the active thief, and was the true accomplice, and in that view the evidence called for by the question had some pertinence.
It may be said that any defense of that kind was too improbable to be countenanced. A court cannot deny opportunity to raise such a defense upon any. personal assumption in regard to the character of the person who may be incriminated, and the accused, we think, had the undoubted right to be heard upon the theory mentioned.
The defendant made his statement to the jury, and among other things, to explain how it happened that he was in Detroit and went to inquire about flour at Sabin’s,
Defendant neither procured the attendance of his cousin from Cleveland or of Foster from Buffalo as witnesses in his behalf, nor made any attempt, so far as appears, to obtain their depositions.
When the prosecuting attorney came to argue the ease to the jury, he contended that the fact that the defendant had not produced his cousin and Foster as witnesses, nor any other business men to show his business to have been as he had stated, proved that his statement in regard to such matters “was a lie.”
The defendant thereupon requested an instruction, among others, that no inference against the defendant could be drawn from his not having brought witnesses from other States; that his not obtaining such witnesses might be owing to many causes beyond his control, and that no unfavorable presumption could be indulged as a consequence of his not getting them. The instruction was refused, and after referring to the rule that the' failure to produce evidence in the power of a party is a circumstance to be considered by the jury, and after noticing the provision allowing the defendant in a criminal case to obtain the testimony of foreign witnesses by commission, the judge after some further
In view of the course of argument adopted by the prosecuting attorney, and the request by defendant’s counsel, and the actual instructions, there is ground for thinking the jury were misled. It was natural for them to construe the charge as amounting to an opinion of the judge that the statement might be set aside, not because it was in itself improbable or overborne by evidence of superior value, but solely because the defendant had not adduced cumulative evidence, or additional or other testimony to the same points.
Now the statement of a defendant on his trial on a charge of crime is in the nature of evidence, and is required to be submitted to the jury as of that character, and there is no authority for saying a jury may not receive it and act upon it even in case the facts related or some portion of them are not supported by the testimony of witnesses. The law allows such weight to be given to the statement as the jury consider may be due to it, and it cannot be assumed by the judge, on submitting it, that it is not to be believed; and hence it is not competent to lead the jury to suppose they may reject the facts given in the statement simply because .they are not proved by others.
The conviction must be reversed, and a new trial ordered.