15 Me. 104 | Me. | 1838
This is an indictment against the defendants, for a conspiracy to charge one Julia W. Riñes, the wife of Stover Riñes, one of the defendants, with the crime of adultery. At the Court of Common Pleas, January term, 1837, Charles Burling-ham, John T. Moward, Stover Riñes, William Turns and Mary Ann Riñes were found guilty by the jury, and Sarah Lane not guilty. A bill of exceptions has been allowed, by which we learn that on the trial before the jury, the attorney for the government offered Julia W. Riñes, the wife of one of the defendants, as a witness, to whose introduction the defendants’ counsel objected, but she was sworn, and testified to certain conversations with her husband in August and subsequently, and his own conduct towards her, and certain acts of the other defendants towards her. The presiding Judge ruled, that this testimony must be voluntary on her part, which it was, and confined to such facts as could not be proved by other witnesses.
It is very probable, that such an allegation as is made in this indictment would be likely to enlist the sympathies of most people in favor of the person, who was said to be the object of such a conspiracy. It is remarked by a recent elementary writer, Walker, in his introduction to American Law, pages 221, 222, 223, that the law of husband and wife is common law. That the whole theory is a slavish one compared even with the civil law. The merging of her name in that of her husband is emblematic of the fate of all her legal rights. The torch of hymen serves but to light the pile on which those rights are offered up. The legal theory is, that marriage makes the husband and wife one person, and that person is the husband, that there may be an indissoluble union of interest between the parties. On this ground, and to prevent connubial harmony and confidence from being disturbed, it is a general rule of law, that neither the husband nor wife can in any case, civil or criminal, be a witness for or against each other, with two exceptions growing out of the necessity of the case. This rule sometimes produces hardship, but on the whole is supposed to be salutary. One of the exceptions is, where the wife has acted as the agent of her husband in matters of business. The other, where she has received personal violence from him. Bul. N. P. 286 ; 1
It is said, that though this rule exist, it ought very readily to be made to yield to those cases which are exceptions to its application. Fenner v. Lewis, 10 Johns. R. 38.
But we apprehend that the rule has not in this Stale been made of a shifting character. It is true, that in 1805, in a hearing on a libel for divorce for impotence, the affidavit of the husband was received, at Castine, in the case of Rufus Moulton v. Polly Moulton, his wife. Yet it is believed, that in criminal prosecutions, the admissibility of the husband or wife must bo confined to cases seeking security of the peace, and cases of personal violence. Where several wore indicted for a conspiracy, Ld. Ellenhorough refused to allow the wife of one of them to give evidence in favor of some of the others. And the reason was, that if all the others were acquitted, the husband would necessarily have been acquitted also; for the crime could not be committed by one alone. Rex v. Locker & al. 5 Esp. R. 107.
And by the same reason, in conspiracy, the wife of one of the defendants ought not to be allowed to give evidence against any of the others, as to any act done by him, in furtherance of the com-inera design, more particularly, after evidence given connecting the husband with that defendant in the general conspiracy. And in this case, by reason of the admission of the said Julia W. Riñes, as a witness on the trial, the verdict must he set aside and a new trial granted.
As to the motion to go into the enquiry respecting the manner of finding the indictment, we think the motion came too late, after the defendants had pleaded not guilty. The proceedings exhibited to os show, that on the ninth day the defendants, except Sarah Lane, who was acquitted, and does not now appear, pleaded not guilty.
With the full recollection of the case, United States v. Coolidge, 2 Gall. 367, in Low’s case, 4 Greenl. 439, great care was taken before any plea was interposed, to proceed by way of motion in writing, under oath of the defendant, to the Court, alleging he ought not to be held to answer to the indictment, because if, was not found by any twelve of die grand jury, but simply by a majority of tlie grand jury panel, and returned by the foreman under
We gather from the opinions of the members of the Court, that “ when an indictment is once, verified by the attestation of the foreman of tire grand jury, that it is a true bill, and as such has been presented to the court, and ordered to be put on file, it then becomes matter of record. There is, and always has been, and from the necessity of the case must be, a power in the court to vacate, or cause to be amended, a record which has been erroneously or falsely made, by inadvertence or otherwise, by any of its officers. It could only be in a very clear case ; where it could be made to appear manifestly and beyond every reasonable doubt, that an indictment, apparently legal and formal, had not in fact the sanctions which the law and the constitution require, that the court would sustain a motion to quash or dismiss it, upon a suggestion of this kind. That it is clear as well on principle as on authority, that the objection cannot be taken by way of formal plea. The very nature of the objection is prior in order to that of a plea, for it is an objection to being held to answer or plead in any form. The defendant prayed the court to enquire into the fact, at the first moment he had an opportunity to be heard in court. No laches were therefore imputable to him. He lost no right by neglecting to avail himself of it in due season.”
This view of the importance of regularity of proceedings in criminal trials, we are disposed to maintain. The defendants were aware, that it is the duty of the foreman of the grand jury to leave with the clerk of the court a list of all witnesses sworn before them. Any one can discover what witnesses have heen heard before that tribunal, which has very important rights, independent of the court,
In questions relating to bail, if a man be found guilty of murder by a grand jury, the court cannot take notice of their evidence, which they by their oath are bound to conceal. Ld. Mohun's case, 1 Salk. 104.