68 Wis. 530 | Wis. | 1887
The plaintiff in error was tried and convicted, in the circuit court of Dodge county, for the crime of murder in the first degree for the killing of William Martin, in said ^county, on the 10th day of July, 1885, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison during his natural life. We refrain from any further reference to the evidence in the case than to say- that it appears to have
The language of the learned judge in his instructions to the jury and in these last remarks is here quoted to his credit, as well illustrating his characteristic candor, frankness, fairness, and sense of justice. And it was thought proper that it should be.reproduced, to accompany and explain his first ruling upon the remarks of the district attorney in opening the case to the jury. The facts stated by the district attorney would not have been competent or proper evidence if placed before the jury under the sanctions of an oath, and they were much more improper when pressed upon the attention of the jury by the authority of the prosecuting officer of the state, and produced a greater and more lasting effect. These remarks of the district attorney, so grossly improper, unprofessional, and unjust, and so repeated and asseverated to the jury, when their minds were entirely free from bias, prejudice, or partiality, when they had no knowledge or opinion of the defendant or of the merits or demerits of his prosecution, and before they had heard any evidence, and when they were bound to presume him innocent, must have produced an ineffaceable and permanent impression. After hearing the recital of these crimes charged to have been committed by him, and that he was yet a fugitive from justice, their suspicions were aroused, and in their minds the probability of his guilt in the present case was already established, and they were, ready and in fit mood to construe every fact and circumstance in the evidence that was afterwards produced, and resolve all doubts, against the prisoner at the bar. Then, after all the evidence is given and their opinions were
After the opening of the case, and when the first witness -was called for the state and did not respond, the district attorney said, in the presence of the jury, “ Perhaps somebody has got hold of him; ” intimating that some one on behalf of the defendant had tampered( with the witness or spirited ■ him away. The court so understood the remark, and reproved the district attorney for making it, saying “ that it did not follow that there is any tampering with the witness because he was absent.” The district attorney thereupon said, “ I will prove it before I get through.” He did not thereafter even offer to prove this charge. He evidently made this unfounded charge to prejudice the defendant’s case in the minds of the jury. This may not of itself be such an error as to warrant a reversal of the judgment, but it was grossly improper, and very unfair towards the prisoner, and was wickedly consistent with his preceding un
The judgment must be reversed for the above error, and it may be unnecessary to consider other errors alleged in the record or to determine whether they are such. Yet, as the case must again be tried de novo, it would be well to avoid at least the error assigned in relation to the view of the premises or locality where the murder was supposed to have ‘been committed, the manner in which it was taken by the jury, and the legal purpose and effect thereof as stated in the instructions.
The counsel for the state and for the prisoner were both allowed to be present with the jury upon this view, while the prisoner was not. The respective counsel in their affidavits recriminate upon each other as to their conduct in attempting to direct the observation and influence the judgment of the jury in respect to the particulars of the place and the local scenes of the various and successive acts of the drama while they were making their view. The court, in allowing them to accompany the jury, cautioned them, very properly, not to discuss in their presence the localities, but told them, and we think improperly, that they might call their attention to the «facts, as “Here is where they found him;” “Here is a barrel;” “Here is where Gusta was.” The great temptation to improper communication with the jury in such an outdoor and informal view, and unrestrained discussion with them of the relative bearings of objects and places upon the facts in issue, has caused us to question the propriety of leading the respective counsel into it. There appears to be no grave necessity that they should attend the jury upon such an excursion, and it would seem that the jury ought to depend upon their own knowledge of the case, derived from the evidence, and upon their own undirected and uninfluenced observation. There is, on such a view, at least a tendency for them to disband and wander
The jury were instructed upon the uses of their view as follows: “What they saw legally' becomes a part of the evidence, in the case. That was the purpose for which the jury were, sent to view the premises.” This would appear to be in conflict with the decision of this court in" the recent-case of Seefeld v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 67 Wis. 96. It is said in the opinion in that particular case that “ the knowledge acquired by the view was' to be used only in determining the weight of conflicting testimony of value.” The object and office of the view are thus stated in Washburn v. Mil. & L. W. R. Co. 59 Wis. 364: “To enable the jurors better to understand the evidence on the trial.” This was the purpose at common law. Jac. Law Diet. tit. “ Yiew.” It is not to obtain original testimony in addition to or contradiction of the evidence given in court, or independent of it, but to obtain a more perfect knowledge of the evidence, and to enable the jury to better understand it, and to consider it in the' light and by the aid of the sensible objects and localities disclosed by the view. It is said in Munkwitz v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 64 Wis. 403: “ The view’of the premises by the jury is for the purpose of assisting them in weighing and applying the evidence.” That case was peculiarly apt as furnishing the foundation of the correct rule. There are other cases in this court and in other courts, and some of them are cited by counsel in his brief, which lay down this as the correct rule. It will be perceived that the court in this case extended the rule so far . ás to make the knowledge of the jury derived from the view independent evidence of facts material to the issue, without any reference to that which was given iu court. We may say further, in respect to the view in this
We regret that the error of allowing the district attorney to make such an opening statement to the jury is so marked, important, and material that the judgment has to be reversed and a new trial ordered; but, as it is, it cannot be avoided.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit courtis reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial. The warden of the state prison will surrender the plaintiff in error to the sheriff of Dodge county, who will hold him in custody until he shall be discharged or his custody changed by due course of law.