issue
The issue presented by defendant’s request to charge is whether the court must instruct the jury that defendant’s guilt must be proven "to a moral certainty”, as part of the definition of "reasonable doubt”.
AUTHORITY FOR CHARGE
Certainly there is much authority which, on first glance, might appear to support defendant’s request. The term appears in the standard references on jury charges, such as Dowsey, Charges to the Jury in a Criminal Case in New York (Form No. 18), and the Handbook of Jury Trial Procedure and Charges issued for the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Criminal Branch, First Judicial District ([Dec., 1973], p 44).
More significantly, the test of proof "to a moral certainty” appears in numerous Court of Appeals and other appellate court decisions. (See, e.g., People v Montanez,
DEFINITION OF MORAL CERTAINTY
The question posed to this court, however, is what does the term "moral certainty” mean. Does the interpretation of the term depend on the individual juror’s religious belief, values or philosophy? If so, it might run the gamut of a standard of absolute certainty for some individuals and mean little more than firm belief to others, depending upon their own subjective evaluations. The typical definitions for "moral” judgments are synonymous with "ethical”, "good” and "righteous” decisions as opposed to intellectual, factual conclusions. (See, e.g.,
HISTORY OF TERM
In attempting to determine an adequate definition for this term, I have examined its history and development.
The test apparently originated in Commonwealth v Webster (59 Mass 295, 320). The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts stated in its charge that the "evidence must establish the truth of the fact to a reasonable and moral certainty; a certainty that convinces and directs the understanding, and satisfies the reason and judgment of those who are bound to act conscientiously upon it.” Early commentators also propounded the standard. (See, e.g., Wills, Principles of Circumstantial Evidence 8, 320 et seq. [7th ed, 1936]; Starkie, Law of Evidence [10th ed, 1876], p 861.) But, while the same test was suggested by Starkie as the burden of proof for criminal cases generally, at least one commentator states that it was never adopted in this State. (See Fisch, New York Evidence, § 1091.)
MORAL CERTAINTY V REASONABLE DOUBT
While this might provides some clarification, it fails to distinguish the test of proof to a "moral certainty” from the prosecution’s burden of "proof beyond a reasonable doubt”.
In People v Forest (
CONCLUSION
The mere fact that the term "proof to a moral certainty” appears in treatises or appellate decisions does not necessarily mean that it is appropriate for instructing the laymen who sit on our juries. As stated by Mr. Justice Page, in Matter of Eno (
In this regard even our Court of Appeals has concluded that the "test [proof to a moral certainty] at times, tends to be a confusing form of words (see Richardson, Evidence [9th ed.], § 152) and should not be a substitute for reasoned thought” (People v Borrero,
In State v Koski (100 W Va 98), the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia refused to instruct the jury that it had to be convinced of the defendant’s guilt "beyond a reasonable doubt” and "to a moral certainty” on the ground that used together they were likely to mislead the jury as to the degree of proof necessary to convict, even though it acknowledged that they were synonymous.
Finally, in Hopt v Utah (supra, p 440), Justice Field concluded: "The difficulty with this instruction is, that the words 'to a reasonable and moral certainty’ add nothing to the words 'beyond a reasonable doubt;’ one may require explanation as much as the other.”
"A court’s charge is not like a corporate indenture, able to
I find that the requested charge would not assist the jury in its deliberations, but rather, would only tend to confuse them by adding a further improper element.
For the above reasons I refuse to charge that there must be proof of guilt to a moral certainty.
