1 Park. Cr. 396 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1853
Upon this application, the counsel for the prisoner have directed me to seven distinct exceptions taken during the progress of the trial, each one of which they deem of sufficient importance to merit an examination and review by the supreme court. On the contrary, the attorney general contends that there is but one of the exceptions at all worthy of consideration. The exception which relates to the admission of proof of the statements made by the prisoner under oath at the coroner’s inquest, he concedes, at least, by an elaborate argument of the point, is not to be regarded as frivolous. In determining whether the prisoner shall have an opportunity for review by the supreme court of the exceptions taken, I am not necessarily called upon to arrive at the positive conclusion that the court erred as to the law. It is enough that there is any one exception in the case which I deem not to be frivolous; and which involves a gravely important question, respecting which there may be even a conflict of authority, but which remains unsettled by the courts of this state.
On the trial, the prosecution proved that an inquest was held by the coroner of the county of Albany, on Monday evening, the 7th March, (the death having occurred on the evening previous,) on the body of the deceased. The prisoner was called
Neither my own necessarily limited examination, or the researches of counsel, have enabled me to find a reported case in the courts of this country, on the question whether, on a trial for murder, the deposition or statement on oath of the prisoner, taken before the coroner on the inquest held on the body of the deceased, is, or is not, receivable in evidence, or upon what precise principle, or under Avhat circumstances, a prior deposition, or statement on oath, of the prisoner should be rejected on his trial for a criminal offence. The case of The State v. Broughton (7 Iredell R. 96), is the only reported American case that I have been able to discover, bearing upon the ques
In a case tried at Worcester, reported in a note to the case of Rex v. Haworth (19 Eng. Com. Law R. 370), where it appeared that a coroner’s inquest had been held on the body of A, and it not being suspected that B was at all concerned in the murder of A, the coroner had examined B upon oath as a witness; Park, J., would not allow the deposition of B, so taken on oath on the coroner’s inquest, to be read in evidence on the trial of an indictment afterwards found against B for the same murder. In Reg. v. Wheeley (8 Carrington & Payne R. 250), the prisoner was charged with the murder of Mary his wife, by administering poison to her. It was opened by Hume for the prosecution; that the deceased had- died from poison, but that there was no evidence to aifect the prisoner, except a statement made by him before the coroner at the inquest. This statement purported oh the face of it to have been taken on oath, but the coroner would state, if parol evidence was admissible, that in fact no oath was administered to the prisoner; Mderson, B., said: “As the statement purports to be a statement on oath, I cannot receive it as evidence against the prisoner; and I think, as it so purports, I can not allow parol evidence to be given to show that the statement was not made upon oath.” In Regina v. Owen et al., at the Stafford assizes, in 1840 (9 Car. & Payne R. 238), Owen, and two others, were charged with the murder of Christina Collins, by drowning her. The prosecution proposed to give in evidence the depositions of the prisoners taken on oath, on the coroner’s inquest held on the body of the deceased; Gurney, B., rejected the evidence. At a former
These are the only cases to which I have been referred, where the question has been distinctly raised as to the admissibility, on the trial of a person for murder, of the deposition or statement made under oath by such person on a coroner’s inquest, held on the body of the deceased. The case reported in the note to the case of Rex v. Howarth; also, the case of Reg. v. Wheeley, and that of Regina v. Owen et al., distinctly hold the inadmissibility of such statement or deposition. In Regina v. Owen, Baron Gurney rejected them when the prisoners were on trial for murder; while Mr. Justice Williams received them on the trial for rape, reserving the point for the judges.
In Rex v. Lewis, (25 Eng. Com. Law R. 333,) the prisoner was indicted for administering poison to Elizabeth Davis. On the day on which the prisoner was committed, she and several others were summoned before the Rev. Charles Bird, and examined on oath touching the poisoning, there being no specific charge against any person; but on the conclusion of the examination, the prisoner was committed for trial on the charge. The prisoner was examined on oath, and her examination taken down. On the trial, the prosecution proposed to put the examination in evidence. Baron Gurney would not receive it, saying, “ That, this being a deposition made by the prisoner at
The counsel for the prisoner contends that the principles to be deduced from these and other authorities, are, that to render the statement or deposition of the prisoner admissible against him, it must have been made under circumstances showing it to have been perfectly voluntary; that a statement made on oath before a coroner on an inquisitorial examination as to the cause
There are one or two other exceptions growijig out of the admission of evidence on the trial, that I deem not unworthy of further consideration; especially that, when under the pretext of showing the state of feeling existing between the prisoner and his wife, and furnishing evidence from which the jury might infer a motive for the prisoner’s committing the crime of which he was charged, the court permitted evidence
I shall allow a writ of error in this case^, with a stay of proceedings; oni the judgment. One or two of the questions raised by the bill of exceptions are exceedingly important; and whe ther it shall be hereafter determined that the court of Oyer and Terminer erred or not upon these questions, there is at least, in my view, probable grounds to justify me in giving the prisoner an opportunity for a review of the questions by the Supreme Court.