53 Vt. 37 | Vt. | 1880
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Whether the statement of the respondent, which the government was permitted to prove by the witness Slayton, was made under and by reason of promise of favor that induced the respondent to make it, was a question addressed to the court; and the evidence bearing on that question was addressed to the court. The finding of the court against the prisoner upon the evidence, and the admission of the testimony showing the statement, was not error in law, unless such finding was unwarranted by the evidence bearing on the alleged promise and inducement, as the result of which, it is claimed that the statement, or confession, as it is called, was made.
The only evidence bearing on that subject, was the testimony given by the witness on his direct examination by the prisoner’s counsel, and by the presiding judge. Did the evidence thus given show, that said statement was caused to be made by such promise of favor, or such representation of benefit to the respondent as would render it inadmissible ?
That testimony of Slayton does not show, that the respondent was asked or advised about telling anything in relation to himself, as connected with the murder, or with the murdered man, or his wife; but only in relation to Chester.
It does show that what Slayton was seeking to elicit, was in relation to Chester ; and it was as to that, that he was saying to the prisoner, it would be better for him to tell; and it was as to
What he said to Slayton, showed to Slayton, that he was casting the blame on Chester ; not confessing, or designing to confess, or to say anything that would connect himself with the act, or crime of killing. So the case falls outside of the propositions of the law, and of the cases which exclude confessions or admissions, induced by promise and hope of favor and benefit. Inasmuch as any promise of favor, was on the score of his telling what he knew about Chester’s connection with the matter, and not of his own, the idea of a confession or admission in the sense of the law, was not involved. Confession or admission, in that sense, means something, to the effect, that the party himself had some criminal, or questionable relation to the alleged crime. This is shown by all the books and cases in which it is treated.'
We are not disposed to disturb, or question what was held in The State v. Walker, cited in the argument. This case, in what occurred between the witness and the prisoner, is at contrast, rather than in analogy with that.
The cross-examination that ensued, after the witness had testified to the prisoner’s statement, did not bear on the legal propriety of thus admitting him to testify. That cross-examination bore only upon the credit and weight to be given by the jury, to his testimony, as to that statement. Without criticism of the manner of the examination and cross-examination of the witness in the prisoner’s behalf, it occurs to remark, especially in view of the examination by the presiding judge, that courts are interested to know what witnesses wish, and mean to be understood by what they testify, and when that is discovered, application and effect are given to their testimony, according to their meaning, however much they may have become involved and obscure, in the course of the examination.
Did this tend to show, or to countenance the .conjecture, that the intention to kill, “was formed only a moment before ” the act of killing ? If not, then it was the duty of the court, not to charge as requested. And we think it did not within any legitimate limits, to.be assigned to the period of time indicated by the word, “ moment,” as used in the request. Of course, unless that expression indicated a period of time, that, of itself, would distinguish between murder in the first and second degrees, the request could not be complied with in the terms, in which it was made ; and the court would have either to flatly disregard it, on the one hand, or explain to the jury, on the other, the relation of the state of mind to the fatal act, that would make the act of the one degree, or of the other. That expression, .“ formed only a moment before,” would not mark and express the distinction in question. So the court proceeded to state, and explain to the jury the law, as applicable to the case in hand, as represented by the evidence, constituting the matter to be considered and decided by the jury.
In State v. Tatro, 50 Vt. 483, the subject of the statute, as to murder in the different degrees, was examined and considered; and as a result, it was announced, that “ the statute has in no degree altered the common law definition of murder. The killing a human being by poison, or lying in wait, or purposely using a deadly weapon to that end, is murder in the first degree ; and the purpose and intent must be determined by the circumstances that
The statute names several modes of killing, that would make the killing murder in the first degree ; and then says, “or by any other kind of wilful, deliberate or premeditated killing,” etc., not defining any mode or means of doing it. Therefore, where the murder is done, not by the specified mode and means that make it murder in the first degree, it is to be determined, whether the killing was wilful, deliberate or premeditated, by whatever mode or means it was done. If it was premeditated, it would be murder in the first degree. That is to say, if the killing was murder, then if it was done with premeditation, it would be in the first degree. That term, “ premeditated,” was not meant to require any particular length of time, that such premeditation
We think the subject was properly presented by the charge ; and that the full benefit of the statute in its true intent and meaning was accorded to the respondent. The present occasion does not require further pursuit of the subject. The result is, the respondent takes nothing by his exceptions. They are overruled, and judgment and sentence is to be rendered upon the verdict.