1 Park. Cr. 302 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1851
By the Court,
John Koch'J was called as a juror and was, by the prisoner, challenged to the favor. Triors were appointed and Koch was examined as a witness in
In Lohman v. The People (1 Com. R. 384), Judge Gardiner, in delivering the opinion of the court of appeals, says, “ Upon an issue of this kind from the nature of the facts to be established, the opinion of the juror derived from his own consciousness, was relevant, competent and primary evidence.” He says, in that case, the effect of the evidence was, “ to elicit an
There is also another answer to these exceptions. After the triors had found the juror indifferent, the prisoner challenged him peremptorily. He did not sit as one of the jurors upon the trial of the main issue. The prisoner had not exhausted his peremptory challenges when the panel was completed. He can not now avail himself of the exceptions taken to decisions upon the trial of the collateral issue raised upon the challenge. (Freeman v. The People, 4 Denio, 31; People v. Bodine, 1 Denio, 300.)
The people proved that Harkner died, on the 23d day of January about 8 o’clock in the morning, and they gave evidence tending to show that he died from the effect of a pistol shot; and that the prisoner and one Hall were together at the place where Harkner received the wound on the evening of Tuesday, the 21st January, and that the prisoner then had on a light colored coat and Hall a dark one; and that the prisoner had, on the same evening, stolen a watch from Harkner; also that the man with the dark coat, had a pistol in his hand and put it in his pocket immediately after the report of the pistol by the discharge of which Harkner was wounded. Harkner was taken home covered with blood and apparently dead. On being placed upon a bed, he made signs and talked in a whisper. He said, one arm and one leg were much like death, and he would rather die than remain in pain. His wife told him she hoped he would not leave her, and he told her she had
The people offered in evidence the declarations of Harkner made the evening before his death, as to the person who killed him. The prisoner’s counsel objected, the objection was overruled and an exception taken. The witness testified that he said to Harkner the evening before his death, “ I guess you will get over it again;” Harkner replied, “ I never can get over it, I can’t live.” On being asked who shot him, who hurt him, he said the man who stole his watch; that the man with the white coat on shot him, and the man with the dark coat on stabbed him. About 12 o’clock the same night, in answer to a question, put by his wife, he spoke about dying. The objection to the declarations of deceased, was, that it did not appear, his statements were made under the belief or impression of immediate dissolution, or under the belief that he would die.
After a careful examination of this case as disclosed in the bill of exceptions, I am of the opinion that the evidence as to the dying declaration of Harkner was properly admitted. The principle upon which this evidence is received in trials for homicide, as stated by Eyre, C. B., is, that the declarations were made in extremity, when the party is at the point of death and -when every hope of this world is gone, when every motive of falsehood is silenced, and the mind is induced, by the most powerful considerations, to speak the truth. A situation so solemn and so awful is considered, by the law, as creating an obligation equal to that which is imposed by an oath administered in court. (Roscoes’s Cr. Ev. 7.)
The rule has been applied in a great variety of cases, presenting different circumstances. When the preliminary evi
If we consider Harkner’s real, condition, we find nothing in it upon which to build a hope; his conduct and declarations furnish no evidence that he entertained any hope of recovery; on the contrary, they furnish very strong evidence that he did not believe or-entertain any hope that his recovery was possible. He appears to have been fully conscious of the extremity to which he was brought, and that he must die and could not recover. (2 Russ, on Crimes, 682 to 687, and cases cited.) The evidence shows, I think, that all hope of this world was gone He rejected consolation, and consoled his wife.
It was said upon the argument, that the rule admitting dying declarations, is founded in necessity, and that when other evidence of the facts to which the declarations state, can be, or is given, the necessity does not exist, and that therefore the declarations should not be received.
It appears, in the present case, that it was proved on the part of the people, that the man with the dark coat had a pistol in his hand and put it in his pocket immediately after the report of the pistol wounding Harkner. This is the entire statement of this evidence in the bill of exceptions. The declarations of
Evidence of dying declarations has been considered, by some, to be admissible, from necessity, since it often happens that there is no third person present to be an eye witness to the fact and the usual witness in other felonies, viz., the party injured, is got rid of. The rule, in its origin, may have been adopted from necessity, but it is now well established and rests upon principle, which do not exclude the declarations, although the fact declared may be susceptible of proof from other evidence.”
The dying declarations are received as evidence in the cause, and if there are living witnesses who can give evidence touching the same facts, they may be called and examined, and the whole evidence may be submitted to the jury. We have not been referred to any case where this question has been raised. In this case the facts, as stated by Harkner, had not been proved. His statement was that the man in the light coat shot him, and the man in the dark coat stabbed him. The witness, who had been examined, stated that the man in the dark coat had a pistol immediately after the report. It does not appear from the evidence, whether the prisoner had a pistol or not, or which of the two persons shot. The evidence proved a circumstance from which an inference might he drawn, that the man in the dark coat discharged the pistol. Harkner said it was the man in the light coat that shot him, and all this evidence was proper for the jury.
The objection to the evidence of the dying declarations was not put, at the trial, upon the ground that living witnesses had spoken or could speak to the facts, to which the’ declarations related, but upon the ground that it did not appear that the statements were made under the belief or impression of immediate dissolution, or under the belief that the declarant would die.
New trial denied.