59 N.H. 65 | N.H. | 1879
I. The evidence tending to show that the defendant was present at the murder, aiding and abetting C., was offered and received, not for the purpose of showing that the defendant was present as a principal, nor for the purpose of inferring from his presence that he had been an accessory, but as a part of C.'s *67 testimony, tending to prove the allegation of the indictment that C. murdered H. It was as necessary for the state to prove that C. committed the murder, as to prove that the defendant had previously incited him to commit it; and there was no error of law in the admission of the whole of the narrative of the transaction given by C. It was for the jury to say what part of his testimony, if any, was true, and what part, if any, was false. While they might well believe that C. committed the murder, and that the defendant had previously hired him to commit it, they might well doubt, upon all the evidence, whether the defendant was present when C. fired the gun. The evidence to which the defendant objected was competent for the special purpose for which it was offered. Its competency for that purpose, and its incompetency for any other purpose, were distinctly declared by the court when it was received. No other use was made of it than as it bore upon the question of C.'s guilt. The law being once declared by the court, the defendant had no more right to require it to be repeated once, than to require it to be repeated twice, or ten times. Whether the statement of law, once distinctly made, and acted upon by counsel throughout the trial, should have been repeated, and how many times, is not a question of law. If the statement was correct, it might be repeated; but the judgment cannot be reversed because it was not repeated, — especially when no other use was made of the evidence than the legal one announced by the state's counsel and by the court. The refusal to repeat the law once laid down was not error in law.
Whether evidence that the defendant was present, aiding and abetting C. in the murder, might tend to prove that at a previous time and in another place he instigated C. to commit the crime, is a question there is now no occasion to consider. It might be improbable that the instigation began at the time and place of the murder, and that they met there accidentally, or on other business.
II. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and not his former acquittal of being a principal, because the latter plea would have been bad on demurrer. State v. Buzzell,
If one who is a principal cannot be convicted as accessory before the fact in the same felony, the reason must be that the crime of being accessory merges in the crime of being principal, and the two crimes become one, as C.'s crime of assault with intent to kill merged in his crime of murder, for the purpose of preventing the punishment of both. Had the defendant been convicted as a principal on the former indictment, the judgment would have been conclusive evidence, for the state, and against him, in any other case between the same parties, that he was a principal. Com. v. M'Pike, 3 Cush. 181; Com. v. Austin,
If the acquittal does not render a merger impossible, and if the crimes of principal and accessory so merge that a conviction of either is a bar to an indictment for the other (a point on which we express no opinion), such a merger is no defence in this case. One may be convicted of either of two felonies which have so merged that if the proper plea were interposed he could not be convicted of both. If the defendant was, in fact, both a principal and an accessory, and if, in law, on the plea of former conviction, he could not be convicted of either crime after he had been convicted of the other, he could, on the plea of not guilty, be convicted of either when he had been previously convicted of neither. State v. Archer,
If he were accused of committing the crimes of arson and murder by the single act of firing a house, there would be a question on a plea of former conviction whether he could be tried for either crime after he had been convicted of the other. State v. Cooper, 1 Green (N. J.) 361. If he were acquitted of either on the ground that he did not set the fire and was not present when it was set, and then, being indicted for the other, pleaded the judgment of acquittal, and proved his necessary averment of the identity of the alleged act (1 Gr. Ev., s. 532; 3 Gr. Ev., s. 36; Morgan v. Burr,
III. Whether a verdict of guilty of murder, not in terms finding the degree, is insufficient when the record shows the degree found by the jury, is a question not raised in this case. Section 2 of c. 264 of the General Statutes is applicable only to a case in which the defendant is found guilty of murder. But if the record did not show that the jury found C. guilty of murder in the first degree, it might be argued that the judgment against the accessory could not be capital. It appears by the bill of exceptions, which is a part of the record (Gen. St., c. 189, s. 9), that the charge was that C.'s *70 crime was murder in the first degree; that the evidence was of that degree and no other; and that no question was raised as to the degree. It appears, therefore, with certainty, by the record, that the verdict of the defendant's guilt included the finding of C.'s guilt of the first degree.
IV. The defendant's non-acceptance of the invitation to accompany the jury a portion of the time on the view is no ground for reversing the judgment.
Exceptions overruled.
FOSTER, STANLEY, and CLARK, JJ., did not sit: the others concurred.