20 Kan. 599 | Kan. | 1878
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was a criminal prosecution under section 233 of the crimes-and-punishments act; (Gen. Stat. 369.) The defendant was charged with defiling one Emily Barney, a female person under eighteen years of age, by carnally knowing her while she was confided to his care and protection by her parents. The girl Emily was a sister of the defendant’s wife, and their father, Joseph M. Barney, was the prosecuting witness in the case. On the trial, the prosecution introduced in evidence a letter from the defendant to his wife. This was done under the permission of the court, but over the objections of the defendant. The defendant claimed that this letter was a confidential communication from himself to his wife, and therefore that it was not competent evidence against him. The admission of this letter in evidence is the first ruling of the court below of which the defendant now complains. For the purposes of this case, we shall assume that said letter was a confidential communication from the defendant to his wife; that it is what would ordinarily be called a privileged communication, and that it could not have been introduced in evidence in this case or in any other case, by either the husband or the wife, or against either of them, except with the consent of both, so long as the letter remained in the hands or under' the control of either of them, or in the hands or under the control of any
There is no statute in this state rendering said letter incompetent evidence in a case of this kind. , The only statutes supposed to even look in that direction are the following:
Criminal Code, Section 309: “The provisions'of the law in civil cases, relative to compelling the attendance and testimony of witnesses, their examination, the administration of oaths and affirmations, and proceedings for contempt to enforce the remedies and protect the rights of parties, shall extend to criminal cases, so far as they are in their nature applicable thereto, subject to the provisions contained in any statute.” (Gen. Stat. 853.)
Civil Code, Section 333: “ * * * In no case shall either (the husband or wife) be permitted to testify concerning any communication made by one to the other during the marriage, whether called while that relation subsisted, or afterward.”' (Laws of 1872, page 335.)
It will be seen that these statutes do not go to the extent of excluding said letter as evidence. While the civil code provides that neither the husband nor wife shall, as a witness, furnish evidence concerning confidential communications, yet it does not provide that others who may happen to be possessed of such communications shall not do so; and while the criminal code provides that the provisions of law
All the instructions given by the court below to the jury were in writing, but inadvertently the court failed for fifteen days to sign some of them, or to file them among the papers of the case. These instructions were given on April 12th, and immediately thereafter were placed by the j udge in a private drawer of his in a table behind which he sat while the court was in session. These instructions remained in such drawer until April 27th, (which was the last day of the term of the court,) when they were taken out and copied into a
“The judge must charge the jury in writing, and the charge shall be filed among the papers of the cause.” (Gen. Stat. 858, §236.)
It is probably unnecessary for us to say anything further in this case; for, taking the record brought to this court, it really does not in any intelligent manner present any of the other questions desired to be presented by counsel for the defendant. The evidence probably proved that the defendant was guilty beyond all possible doubt; but still, as the evidence has not all been brought to this court, we cannot tell this to a certainty. The evidence however brought to this court comes near enough to proving this fact to require a strong case of mere technical error to authorize a reversal of the judgment of the court below. But no strong case, if any case, of technical error has been made out, further than we have already considered.
The record is defective in not showing many things con
We think it is clearly shown that the defendant fled from the country, and such fact probably was shown beyond all possible doubt.
It would probably have been out of place under the circumstances of this case for the court to have instructed the jury with reference to attempts to commit offenses similar to the one charged in this case. It would not have been proper under the evidence; and besides, the defendant did not ask that any such instruction should be given.
The court gave proper and sufficient instructions with reference to the place where the offense'must be proved to have been committed. Besides, there was no question but that the offense was proved to'have been committed in Neosho county, Kansas, just where it was charged t.o have been committed.
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.