104 S.W. 855 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1907
Appellant was indicted for a murder alleged to have been committed in the Southern district of the Indian Territory September 25, 1902. He was tried, found guilty without capital punishment, and on September 22, 1904, was sentenced to serve in the United States penitentiary at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan., for the term of his natural life. From that judgment he prosecutes his appeal, and as ground therefor assigns four manifest errors alleged to have been committed by the court below. Upon argument, his attorneys withdraw all errors but two, being the second and fourth. The second error charged is the court permitting the government to call, and use in its behalf, as rebutting testimony, that of a witness named Alice Harjo, over the objection of appellant after her examination as to her competency; the ground of objection being that the testimony was improper because not rebuttal, and further because the voir dire examination disclosed that she was the wife of appellant, and was at the time of the occurrences sought to be proved by her. The court overruled the objection and permitted her examination on behalf of the United States. The only other ground of error was that there ■was not sufficient proof of venue to justify a judgment on the verdict.
“Alice Harjo, called and sworn on behalf of the government on rebuttal, testified as follows: Direct Examination by Mr. James E. Humphrey; Mr. John Davis called as Interpreter: 'Q. What is your name? A. Alice Harjo. Q. What relation are you and Aunt Lucy Harjo? A. She is my mother. Q. Do you know Harrison Porter, the defendant? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you and Harrison Porter marry? A. No, sir. Q. State whether or not you lived together? A. Yes, sir; we lived toget-her. Q. How long? A. About three months. Q. Was that about the time of this killing? A. Yes, sir.’ By Mr. Cruce: ‘I would like to ask the witness a few questions as to her competency.’ By the Court: 'You may do so. Questions by Mr. A. C. Cruce: ‘Q. Was you and Harrison Porter living together as husband and wife? A. Yes, sir; we was living as man and wife. Q. Did you and Harrison, at the time you began to live together as husband and wife, agree that you were husband and wife, and that you would live together as husband and wife? A. It wasn’t agreed. Q. How did you and Harrison Porter happen to commence to live together as husband and wife?’ (To which counsel for the government objects). By the Court: T think that examination has gone far enough.’ By Mr. A. C. Cruce: “We object to this*619 woman testifying, because, as I understand it in this jurisdiction, there can be either statutory or common-law marriages. If the-relation of husband and wife existed at that time, she is not a competent witness, even though it was a common-law marriage.’ By the Court': ‘If you desire, you may inquire further,, if you think that light has not been thrdwn upon it.’ ‘Q.- Did you and Harrison Porter regard each other as husband and wife at the time you were living together?’ By the Court: ‘I think that question is very leading.’ Mr. Cruce: ‘I think, you may change the form of it.’ ‘Q. Who, if any one, was regarded as your husband at the time of this killing? A. Harrison Porter; I regarded him as my man.’ By the Court: ‘You may inquire of this witness her knowledge of the marriage-ceremony. What constitutes the marriage relation. ‘Q. What does a woman have to do, as you understand it, under the Indian law, to make a man her husband? A. I think they would have to be married? Q. How would they have to be married? A. I don’t know.’ By the Court:. ‘Do you understand what the word “marriage” means? What it is to get married? What form would you go through, if you know, in order to become husband and wife? A. I don’t know.’ By the Court: ‘In order to be-married, don’t you know you would have to have a preacher or officer marry you? A. 1 don’t know.’ By the Court: ‘Well, after you were married, after you lived together as-husband and wife, how could you get separated? How could you quit being husband and wife, in your opinion? A. Why, we just quit.’ By Mr. Cruce: ‘I would like to have Mr. Davis sworn and ask him a few questions as to the Indian custom of marriage before this witness testifies.’
“Mr. John Davis, called and sworn, testified as follows: Direct Examination by Mr. A. C. Cruce: ‘Q. Are you an Indian? A. Yes, sir. Q. Can you state to the court whether or not it is the custom among the Chickasaws, among the full-*620 bloods, for a man and woman to become husband and wife by living together and without any marriage ceremony? A. 1 think they did quite a while back. But the Chickasaws passed - a law making all of those that have been living that way man and wife. Here the last few years they had to be married.’ By the Court: 'How many years? A. Ever since 1898.’ By the Court: T think, gentlemen, I will admit this testimony..
“Alice Iiarjo recalled. Direct Examination by Mr. James -E. Humphrey: 'Q. Did you see this shooting? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you see Dillard Wright when he got shot? A. 1 saiv it.’ (Counsel for the defendant objects to this testimony because it is testimony in chief, and the government has rested its case). By Mr. Humphrey: ‘It is probably in rebuttal of the defendant’s testimony, but perhaps really it should have been introduced as original testimony. I ask the indulgence of the court. It is on the question as to who did the shooting. It is on an important matter, and I ask the indulgence of the court.’ By the Court: ‘I very much regret that this witness wasn’t p,ut on in the first place. I think it would be too bad for an important witness like this to go unheard. I will permit the testimony. ’t (To which ruling of the court the defendant excepts). Q. Who shot Dillard Wright? A. Harrison Porter.’ Cross-Examination by Mr. A. C. Cruce: ‘Q. Where were you? A. At my mother’s house. Q. Was you inside the house? A. I was on the outside. Q. Where was I\eno Iiarjo? A. He was standing-right close to us.’ ”
We think it clear from this testimony that Alice Harjo and this appellant, since June, 1902, have been husband and wife. The testimony of the witness Davis was incompetent, as it was not shown that he was learned in the law of the Chickasaw Nation as to marriages of Indians in that nation, and his statement as to what laws were passed by the Chickasaws was incompetent as not the best evidence. The laws duly
We believe the following extract from the printed argument of counsel for the government is applicable: “In case of Casat vs State, 40 Ark. 517, where a witness swore he was present at the killing of Barnes, and that as Casat walked past him, after the deed was done, he remarked: ‘There was one more man to die yet.' The objection to the testimony of this witness was it was allowed in rebuttal, where it should have been offered in chief. The Supreme Court said: ‘In the order of the production of evidence, the courts are invested with a large discretion. We shall not find fault with them in this respect, so long as they admit none but legal evidence and exclude only that which is incompetent.’ ” It is to be noted that the government had but one eyewitness to the shooting who positively swore that the appellant shot deceased, and this witness was leaving the scene of the tragedy, bent over upo'n his horse going as fast' as it could go, while the defense produced the testimony of two credible witnesses who were standing and looking on, and who as positively swore that appellant did not fire the shots that killed Dillard Wright. Why Alice Harjo was not offered in chief is not explained. If she was competent, her testimony was of the utmost importance to the government, for without it the jury could have, and probably would have, acquitted appellant of- the crime of murder. It therefore behooves the court to carefully consider
The remaining error, that the venue of the crime was not proven, disappears, when an examination sufficiently shows proof of venue.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for retrial.