1 Denio 83 | Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors | 1845
The defendant, Costello, was indicted jointly with two others, (Loreau and Guetal,) for an attempt to procure the miscarriage of Zulma Marache, a pregnant woman. The indictment contains four counts; the first two charging the attempt to have been made by administering drugs, and the others by the use of an instrument. (2 R. S. 694, § 21.) The defendants severally pleaded not guilty, and were all tried at the same time. Loreau and Guetal were found guilty on all the counts, and no question is now made on their behalf. Costello was convicted on the third and fourth counts only, and the case is here on various exceptions taken by her counsel in the edurse of the trial.
1. The woman, Marache, was offered as a witness for the prosecution, but objected to as an accomplice in the crime, and therefore incompetent. This objection was overruled, and in the charge the jury were instructed that they “ could lawfully convict the' prisoners on the testimony of Zulma Marache alone, and uncorroborated.” To this decision and instruction the counsel for the defendant duly excepted. Conceding Marache to have been an accomplice, in- the strict sense of that term, she was still a competent witness for the prosecution. Of this there can be no doubt. And although it has often been said by judges and elementary writers, that no person should be convicted on the testimony of an accomplice unless corroborated by other evidence, still there is no such inflexible rule of law. It is a question for the jury, who are to
The views of the court upon this point were therefore correct. There was no error in admitting Marache as a witness, nor in advising the jury that they could legally convict on her testimony alone.
2. In the course of her direct examination the witness, Marache, stated that two or three letters had been received, about the time'of the abortion, by her mother, and by Madame Pousot, which she, the witness, had seen; and on her cross-examination by the defendant’s counsel, these letters were again mentioned by the witness. The district attorney subsequently offered the letters in evidence, but they were objected to by the defendant’s counsel. The offer was then limited to the letter addressed to Madame Pousot, which the district attorney insisted was admissible because the witness had been examined in relation to the contents, and the court decided that this letter “ Avas admissible for the reason that it had been inquired about on the cross-examination.” The letter Avas thereupon read in evidence, and the decision duly excepted to by the counsel for the defendant.
Although this letter had been mentioned by the Avitness, both on the direct and cross-examination, its contents had not been stated, nor had any allusion been made to them. The district attorney was mistaken in the reason he gave for offering the letter in evidence; that is, because the Avitness had been examined in relation to its contents; but it Avas not received by the court on that ground. According to 'the bill of exceptions the letter Avas admitted by the court, not because its contents had been inquired about, but because the letter had been inquired about on the cross-examination. This Avas true in fact, but, in my opinion, very far from being a correct ground for receiving
The letter may have been material to fortify the testimony of the witness, Marache, and was probably offered for that purpose ; but there is no principle on which it could have been received as evidence against this defendant. She was an entire stranger to it; as to her it was the written statement of some third person, and mere hearsay evidence. If this letter was legal evidence, it must follow that every writing which a witness may mention in the course of giving testimony in a cause, is thereby made competent evidence in the cause. But such is not the rule. That the statements received as evidence in this instance, were in writing, makes no difference; they were still but hearsay, and should have been excluded as such. {Greenleafs Ev. 115, 116, 152, 153; 1 Phil. Ev. 229, 230.)
3. When the district attorney rested the prosecution, evidence had been given which tended to establish the offence charged in the last two counts, against all the defendants, and also to prove that Loreau and Guetal were guilty of the crime alleged in the first two counts; but no evidence whatever had been given which at all implicated the defendant, Costello, with the latter offence.
At this stage of the trial the defendant’s counsel moved the court to compel the public- prosecutor to elect for which offence he would ask the jury to find a verdict. This the court refused to do, and an exception was taken. -
Distinct offences were charged in the different counts of this indictment, and the evidence went to show that two crimes had been committed : 1. That an instrument had been used at one time for the purpose charged ; 2. That on other occasions and at other times, drugs had been resorted to for the same purpose.
But this was not merely a joinder of distinct misdemeanors in which the three were jointly implicated, and a trial for these offences at the same time. It was much more than this. It was a trial of the three for one offence, which may have been, as was found by the jury, committed by all ; and a trial of two of them for another offence, in which the third defendant was not proved to have been at all concerned. I refer to the defendant Costello, for there was not a scintilla of evidence to connect her with the offence charged in the first two counts, that of administering drugs. ■
In a recent case precisely similar in principle to the present, Coleridge, J. put the prosecutor to his election. (Regina v. Murphy, 8 Car. & Payne, 297; Roscoe’s Cr. Ev. 216.) I am clearly of the opinion that the same course should have been taken in this case, although I am not prepared to say the error was one to be corrected ■ by a bill of exceptions. Applications of this description are said to be addressed to the discretion of the court, and perhaps cannot be reviewed on a writ of error. (1 Chit. Cr. Law, 270, 253; Roscoe’s Cr. Ev. 215; Commonwealth v. Gillespie, 7 Serg. & Rawle, 469; Young v. The King, 3 Durnf. & East, 105,106; The King v. Kingston, 8 East, 41; Rex v. Philips, 2 Stra. 921.) But although such a decision maybe incapable of review in this form, a point not necessary here to determine, it is not less objectionable in its character. Persons on trial, however infamous the impúted crime may be, have their rights, and each is entitled, by our law, to have his own case examined and passed upon by a jury,
Various other exceptions were taken, but none which need be particularly noticed. There must be a new” trial on the ground already stated. Very few of the remaining exceptions, if any, can arise on the new trial, as that will he confined to the defendant Costello, alone, and none of them call for any particular observation.
New trial ordered.