202 Mich. 1 | Mich. | 1918
(dissenting). On Commonwealth avenue, in Detroit, about half-past seven o’clock in
Respondent contends in this court that the judgment should be reversed:
“First. Because the people failed to prove the corpus delicti.
“Second. Because the court erred in admitting the evidence of Edward Ross as to the speed of the car when he was not in a position to competently judge that speed.
“Third. Because the court erred in not directing a verdict of acquittal at the conclusion of the people’s case.
“Fourth. Because the court erred in not charging the jury fully and completely as to what constitutes involuntary manslaughter.
“Fifth. Because the court erred in charging the jury as to the provisions of the ordinances of the city of Detroit controlling the operation of motor vehicles within the city and basing respondent’s unlawful act upon the violation of such ordinance.
*4 “Sixth. That the court erred in referring only to the evidence of the people’s witnesses and not referring in any manner to the theory of the defense.
“Seventh. That the court erred in charging the jury upon the theory of contributory negligence of deceased when as a matter of fact the proofs show that the accident was unavoidable upon the part of respondent.”
The record discloses that a boy, called in the information William H. Kerbyson, and by witnesses and counsel Corbson, was injured by an automobile on September 12, 1917, after his injury was lying in the street and was carried to the curb, where some one held him until a doctor came. Whether he was then alive or dead, the nature and extent of his injuries, does not appear, nor what was afterwards done with him. It appears further that on September 13, 1917, Dr. Kenneth Dick, one of the county physicians, per
This record, the fact that this case is here upon such a point, illustrates the value of the rule of practice in the trial of criminal causes involving homicide which requires proof, first of all, of the corpus delicti; that a certain named person is dead, and somebody’s criminality as the cause of the death. It is apparent that the prosecuting attorney at the trial principally •directed effort to prove the identity of the driver of the car, careless or forgetful of the fact that it devolved upon the people to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that a homicide had been committed, and of the further fact that the respondent waived proof of nothing essential to his conviction.
Counsel for the people call attention to decisions of this court, among them Foley v. People, 22 Mich. 227, to the effect that, unless some question is made upon it in the trial court, a point may not be relied upon on writ of error. None of the cases cited is controlling here. It has been the rule in this State, at least since People v. Lane, 49 Mich. 340, was decided,
In deciding this case, it is assumed that upon objection or suggestion the people could have produced testimony directly tending to prove the death of the boy as the'result of being struck by, or of running into, the automobile. But it must be held that what was offered was insufficient to sustain the burden resting upon the people.
The judgment should be reversed, the prisoner remanded to the custody of the sheriff of Wayne county, to be dealt with according to law, and a new trial had.
When the people proved in this case that the defendant, driving at the rate of 30 to 35 miles an hour, ran over the boy William H. Corbson (or Kerbyson), and that the “body” of the boy was picked up from the street and carried to the grass plot, when Dr. Dick was asked the question, “I ask you whether or not you performed a post mortem examination on the body of William H. Corbson?” and unequivocally answered, “I did,” and further testified that upon such post mortem examination he found a fractured skull, which he said was the cause of death, and he was not cross-examined, at all, or his unequivocal testimony of identity any way shaken or questioned, the corpus delicti was, in my judgment, prima facie established. This seems to have been the view of defendant’s counsel upon the trial, as he made no suggestion that the corpus delicti had not been proved, but centered his efforts to the question of whether the identity of the defendant had been established. Indeed, he affirmatively conceded that the death of the boy was established. During the discussion of his motion for a directed verdict the following occurred:
“The Court: Well, now_, let us see what the people have here, as a prima facie case: Here is a car — this is upon the people’s theory of this matter, and this is what the testimony tends to show, if the jury believe it, upon which they would be warranted in drawing a verdict from it — -the testimony tends to show that this boy was killed.
“Mr. Ellsworth (defendant’s attorney): Oh, yes.”
Whether the corpus delicti was proved or not depended upon what occurred upon the trial, not upon what was made to appear by a post trial ex parte affidavit. If defendant’s counsel had not admitted that the death of the boy was established and had upon the trial cross-examined Dr. Dick and brought out from him the facts disclosed by his affidavit, an