48 Kan. 421 | Kan. | 1892
Opinion by
November 16, 1888, the grand jury of Brown county returned an indictment charging Fran
Counsel for the defendant alleges the following errors on the part of the trial court:
“1. The court erred in requiring the defendant to be arraigned, no copy of the indictment ever having been served on him.
“2. In limiting the defendant to eight peremptory challenges in selecting the jury.
“ 3. In overruling the defendant’s application for a continuance.
“4. In receiving incompetent testimony.
“5. In giving and refusing instructions.”
The circumstances of the case are briefly as follows: In the afternoon of November 4,1888, the defendant, Elbert Lawson and Chafles D. Short drove from Baker to Horton, arriving there about five o’clock, and remaining until toward six o’clock, when they drove across the line into Atchison county, to a place called the “Log Cabin,” a place where liquor was sold. After taking several drinks of beer, they drove back to South Horton, to a house of ill-fame, known as “No. 99.” There were but two persons at this place when they arrived — Kittie Stewart and Hattie Case, inmates of the place. A few minutes after the arrival of the defendant and his companions, ThQtnas Moore and William Dougherty drove up, hitched their team, and entered the place. Both parties were in the house some minutes, when Short was taken sick and went out on the porch. Bartley went out off of the porch, and out in the
“ If thereupon the adverse party will consent that on the trial the facts alleged in the affidavit shall be read and treated as the deposition of the absent witness, . ' . . . no continuance shall be granted on the ground of the absence of such evidence.” (Civil Code, §317.)
Here is a positive statutory declaration that, if the opposite party will consent that the facts alleged in the affidavit shall be read in evidence, no continuance shall be granted. This court has passed upon this question in the following cases, and held that under the statute, when the facts alleged in the affidavit for continuance are admitted as the deposition of the
The next assignment relates to the admission of evidence of the statements of Charles D. Short, made before the grand jury, to impeach the testimony of said Short in his deposition read in evidence in behalf of the defendant. This is the most serious question raised in the record of the case. While, perhaps, this exact question has never been passed upon by this court, the court has passed upon questions so nearly analogous to this one as to render them controlling in this case. To defeat the application for a continuance, the statute not only provides that the state must consent that the facts alleged in the affidavit in support of the application for a continuance shall be read in evidence, but that they shall be read as the deposition of the absent witness, or witnesses. It is apparent that the law-making power intended that the facts so admitted in evidence as the evidence of the absent witness should have all thé force and effect of a deposition of such witness regularly taken. That being our view of the statute, the question arises, would the statements of Charles D. Short before the grand jury have been admissible to impeach the evidence of said Short in behalf of the defendant, if such evidence consisted of his deposition, regularly taken, and in the absence of any cross-examination of said Short in relation to his said statements before the grand jury? We think not. This question was settled by this court in the case of Greer v. Higgins, 20 Kas. 420. In that case the court says:
“ Where the deposition of a witness has been read in evidence, and the opposing party produces another and conflicting deposition by the same witness in another action between the same parties, of a prior date, and offers to introduce the same to impeach the witness, and the court of its own motion excludes the testimony, held, not error, as the witness sought*426 to be impeached, and the party to be affected thereby, are entitled, of right, to any explanation which the witness can give of the statements imputed to him. The attention of the witness must be first called, on cross-examination, to such prior contradictory statements.”
The questions decided in the following eases are so closely analogous to the one in this case as to be practically controlling here. In Machine Co. v. Clark, 15 Kas. 495, the court says:
“That it is error for the court to allow one party to attempt to impeach the testimony of the witness of the other party by reading to the jury a portion of a deposition formerly taken of the witness, without first having called the attention of the witness to any portion of the deposition, and without giving the witness any opportunity to explain.”
In The State v. Cleary, 40 Kas. 288, the court held, that—
“Before a witness can be impeached by contradictory statements made in his evidence on a former trial, such contradictions must be called to his attention; and it is error to introduce them without having laid any foundation.” (See also The State v. Small, 26 Kas. 209.)
The state insists that it was not error to introduce the statements of Short made before the grand jury without having cross-examined him and laid the foundation therefor, because, as the evidence of Short, introduced in behalf of the defendant, consisted of facts stated in defendant’s application for a continuance which were admitted as the depositions of the witnesses therein named, and the state, therefore, had no opportunity to cross-examine Short and lay a foundation for the admission of his statements made before said grand jury, the rule in relation to laying a foundation for the admission of such evidence should not prevail. It must not be forgotten, however, that the state has admitted the facts stated in the affidavit for continuance as the deposition of Short, and by so doing has, under our statute, forced the defendant to trial without the personal presence of Short as a witness in his behalf, and that, having done so, it would be unjust to the de
It is recommended that the judgment of the district court be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.
By the Court: It is so ordered.