22 Wash. 601 | Wash. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The appellant was tried in the superior court of Pierce county and convicted of the crime of burglary, and on Kovember 7, 1899, was sentenced by the court to imprisonment in the penitentiary for the term of five years. Before such sentence, motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled. Appellant prosecutes this appeal from the judgment and sentence of the lower court.
On the night of March 19, 1899, the safe in the office of the Tacoma theater was broken open and in the neighborhood of five hundred dollars taken. The prosecution relied almost entirely upon the testimony of one Roy Kauffman to secure a conviction. This witness admitted on
One of the court’s instructions to the jury was as follows :
“ In regard to the testimony of the witness, Roy Kauffman, the court instructs yon that, while it is a rule of law that a person may be convicted upon the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice, still a jury should always act upon such testimony with great care and caution, and subject it to careful examination in the light of all other evidence in the case, and the jury ought not to convict upon such testimony alone, unless after a careful examination of such testimony you are satisfied beyond all reasonable doubt of its truth, and that you can safely rely upon it.”
The appellant complains of this instruction, and says:
In effect, the court told the jury by this instruction that it could convict the appellant upon the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice, at the same time giving the ordinary precautionary charge as to how the jury should act on such testimony. In the case of Edwards v. State, 2 Wash. 291 (26 Pac. 258), the court says:
“ . . . there may occur other cases where, from all the circumstances, the honest judgment will be as thoroughly satisfied from the evidence of the accomplice of the guilt of the defendant as it is possible it could be satisfied from human testimony; and in such cases justice demands that the evidence be accepted, so far as the court is concerned.”
This being the case, it was not necessary to tell the jury that the evidence of the' accomplice should be corroborated. In this instruction the court told the jury to act upon the testimony of the accomplice with great care and caution, and subject it to a careful examination in the light of all the evidence in the case; to be satisfied of its truth beyond a reasonable doubt, and to be so satisfied that they could rely upon it. This was most favorable to the appellant. To single out the testimony of this witness, even though he was an accomplice, and to caution the jury as to how his testimony should be received, was all the court was required to do; and under our law it may be questioned whether the court was required to go to this extent, for we have a constitutional provision which forbids the court to comment upon the facts. The jury was told to view the testimony of Kauffman in the light of all the other evidence, and we will point out further on in
The appellant, as a second assignment of error, complains that the court erred in refusing to permit appellant’s counsel, on cross-examination of witness Kauffman, to trace the money, the proceeds of the burglary, and to lay thereby the foundation to impeach the witness as to how he disposed of the money. As a rule,
“A trial court should permit the defense in the cross-examination of an accomplice to go into every species of questioning that can affect or impair his credit as a witness. The extent of cross-examination under such circumstances and for such a purpose, is largely within the discretion of the trial court; and unless the evidence shows that discretion to have been grossly abused, the appellate court will not reverse.” 3 Rice, Evidence, § 325, p. 517.
However, an examination of the statement of facts shows that, after the ruling of the court complained of under this assignment, the appellant was allowed to go fully into the question as to the disposition of the money, thereby obviating the objection; and, from an examination of the statement in this respect, we find no abuse of discretion by the trial court.
The appellant, as a third assignment of error, complains that he was not allowed, upon cross-examination of Kauffman, to show the large number of burglaries which he (Kauffman) had committed. What we have said under the second assignment of error as to the latitude to be allowed in the cross-examination of an accomplice applies to this assignment. It is true that, on the cross-examination of Kauffman, he was asked how long he had been engaged in the business of burglarizing houses, and if he had not admitted to the detectives, Kevins and'Ashby, that he had committed a number of burglaries in the city of Tacoma, to which he answered, “Ho,” and the answer was
The fourth error assigned is that the court limited the cross-examination of a witness named Bradley, and would not allow him to detail, over objections by the state, a certain conversation between Mr. Smalley, attorney for the appellant, — and who was also attorney for Bradley, — and Bradley, which occurred while Bradley was counseling with Mr. Smalley relative to another and distinct crime with which -Bradley was charged, and in which conversation something was said about the appellant’s admissions to Bradley about being connected with Kauffman in the
“An accomplice who consents to become a witness for the people, on the trial of his associates, for the offense charged, must disclose all that he and his associates may have said or done in relation to such offense, and cannot be excused from testifying to statements made by him to his attorney on the ground of their being privileged communications.”
However, no exception was taken to the ruling of the court, and for that reason it is unnecessary to consider this alleged error further.
In the fifth assignment of error it is claimed that the court commented upon certain testimony. A witness by the name of Silbón, who appears to have been a professional receiver of stolen goods, was called by the state. His testimony takes up eight pages of the type-written record. Most of it was irrelevant and was brought out by both the state and appellant, but no exceptions were saved in this respect. About the only portion of his testimony that was relevant was, that he had a conversation with the appellant, when the appellant said: “ ‘I am raising money to help my friend. Can’t you go to work and contribute some money and help?’ And I [Silbón] said, ‘Who is that fellow?’ And he [appellant] said, ‘That fellow named Kauffman, that was arrested for going into the theater.’ And I [Silbón] said, ‘Excuse me! When I am in nobody help me, and I don’t see why I should help him.’ ” On cross-examination the following took place:
Answer. Ho, I don’t know; I think it was Kauffman. I don’t take much stock in the business. He said, ‘A friend of mine has been arrested and in jail;’ and I said, ‘Who ?’ And he said, ‘That fellow in the theater,’ and I don’t know as he mentioned any name or not. And I said, ‘My dear man, I am in trouble myself, and no one help me; you do the best you can, you and your partner;’ and that is the last of it.
Q. You are not sure, then, whether it was Kauffman or King?
A. I think he mentioned the man that was arrested for the theater. It must be about the 25th of March, or something similar to that. 1 couldn’t say for sure, but I think it was Kauffman.”
There was more testimony to the same effect as the above on re-direct and re-cross-examination. The appellant’s counsel then made a motion, without asking the court to send out the jury, to strike out all the testimony of the witness. The record then shows:
“ The Court: I think we will strike it out.
Mr. McMurray (Deputy Pros. Atty.) : Do you strike out all the testimony ?
(And after argument [the record fails to show what this argument was]') :
The Court: I think that part of it is material in which the witness offered testimony tending to show that the defendant here was interested in seeing that his friend Kauffman got counsel, and so forth, for an offense committed in the theater on or about this time.
Mr. Smalley: There isn’t any such testimony in the record.
The Court: It is a question for the jury.
Mr. Joab: Can the stenographer read it ?
Mr. Smalley: Now, if the court please, with all due respect to the court, we desire to take an exception to the statement of the court wherein he attempts to quote the testimony.
The Court: I am not quoting the testimony.
Mr. Smalley: You did not in the last statement, but the statement just before that.
The Court: No.
Mr. Smalley: You recollect^ the testimony that I said was not in the evidence %
The Court: No; I am not quoting any testimony, gentlemen of the jury. It is entirely your province; I am not indicating what the testimony is at all; it is for you. The ■court has no opinion upon the evidence and does not desire to quote any evidence. You heard it. I am simply pointing out to you that part of the evidence, tending to show, if in your opinion there had been any testimony offered of that character.”
In view of what occurred before the court, we cannot ■see that this colloquy falls within the rule laid down by this court in State v. Crotts, ante, p. 245 (60 Pac. 403). In that case the court says:
“ There are different ways by which a judge may comment upon the testimony, within the meaning of the constitution referred to above. The object of the constitutional provision, doubtless, is to prevent the jury from being influenced by knowledge conveyed to it by the court of what the court’s opinion is on the testimony submitted.”
Here the court expressly tells the jury he has no opinion on the subject, — that it is for them entirely. Under the •circumstances here developed, to hold that the court was
In Blue v. McCabe, 5 Wash. 125 (31 Pac. 431), in passing upon a motion for a non-suit, the court remarked, in the presence of the jury, “that the testimony showed that the transfer of the note sued on was made by the officers-of the Kettle Falls Improvement Company.” It was complained that that was commenting on the facts in the case. The court said:
“We cannot assent to the proposition. When counsel make a motion for a non-suit they know that it is a challenge to the court to determine the sufficiency of the facts adduced by the plaintiff, and that, in deciding the motion, the judge may find it necessary to allude to the evidence. It would be going entirely too far to hold that the denial of the motion must be limited to the formal words, since it is in the highest degree proper that the judge should give his reasons for his action.”
So, too, in this case, the motion went to the exclusion of all the testimony of the witness. It was certainly proper for the court, in passing on such a motion, in a general way to indicate the testimony retained for the jury’s consideration.
In Patchen v. Parke & Lacy Machinery Co., 6 Wash. 486 (33 Pac. 916), it is said:
“An incidental allusion to the facts called to the court’s; attention in determining a motion for a non-suit is not error.”
As we have said, there is no. difference between a motion for a non-suit and a motion of the kind under consideration. Here the motion was to strike all the testimony of the witness. He had testified on many subjects, and at great length, without exceptions being taken by the appellant; but a small part of the testimony was relevant, and
The sixth error complained of is that the court erred in restricting the cross-examination of the witness Turner. The direct examination of the witness was entirely in regard to a conversation with the defendant in front of the Owl theater, on Pacific avenue, and he was not interrogated concerning anything else. The cross-examination of this witness, which the appellant claims was restricted, was neither relevant, material, nor proper cross-examination, but was all in regard to whether or not witness had ever met Roy Kauffman, and when he had met him, etc. Witness was allowed to answer everything asked concerning the conversation or relation he had with defendant, brought out on direct examination. The state objected, and the court sustained the objection to witness going into or testifying regarding any talk or relations he had with Kauffman not brought out on direct examination. This was proper and the court did not err in so doing. The extent and character of cross-examination rests largely in the discretion of the court. It was not error to allow this testimony to remain in the record, because it was testimony of an admission of the defendant tending to connect him with the commission of the crime. Kauffman had testified that he had made a confession of his share in this crime, to the reporter of the “Hews,” on April 25th. How, this witness says that it was at the time Kauffman made his confession in the “Hews” that he had a conversation with defendant. He testifies that the defendant showed him the clipping from the “Hews,” concerning this robbery, and that defendant said that he could prove that he was not in it, but that he got $125 of the money. This
The seventh assignment of error is that the court erred in not permitting witness Read to answer the following question:
“You may state the character of the defendant’s work during the time that he worked for the force; whether it was satisfactory.”
This question was objected to by the prosecuting attorney as being incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and the objection was sustained and exception noted. We cannot see the materiality or relevancy of this question. This witness was the chief of police of Tacoma, and had testified that the defendant had been working for the police department for'nearly two months. He also testified as to conversations he had with defendant in regard to the Roy Kauffman ease; also, as to how he came to be employed by the police department, etc. Witness was allowed to testify fully as to his employment by the detectives and police force, the nature and extent of his employment, etc. This testimony might be relevant and material as tending to show that, if defendant was connected with the burglary in question, it was only as a detective, in order to detect the real criminal; but whether his work was satisfactory or not could be of no materiality whatever, nor have any bearing on the question of his guilt or innocence. If the question was asked for the purpose of showing the good character of the defendant, it was improper, for the rule is that in direct examination the evidence must be confined to general reputation; and that no evidence is allowed of particular acts of good or bad conduct, either to sustain or impeach-character. 3 Rice, Evidence, §§ 376, 377, and cases there cited.
The evidence of character of a defendant in a criminal case, which is admissible, must be the evidence of his general reputation among the people with whom he lived. Neither evidence of particular acts which would tend to show his character, nor evidence of his real character, is admissible, but evidence of what his neighbors thought of his character. 3 Greenleaf, Evidence (15th ed.), p. 34, note (a).
We fail to see any merit whatever in the eighth assignment of error. It is claimed as error that the court did not allow the appellant, when on the witness stand, to testify as to the statements made by witness Kauffman to him in direct contradiction of the statements previously made by Kauffman when on the witness stand, concerning the holding up of a man named Wurtele. By reference to the statement of facts, it appears that the defendant was allowed to relate the substance of what Kauffman told him concerning this Wurtele “hold up.” The only restriction whatever the court made as to this testimony was to witness going into details of the hold up, or “stick up,” as the witness called it, but the court did allow him to testify generally as to what Kauffman told him in that connection.
The ninth error complained of by appellant is predicated on the refusal of the court to allow witness Read to answer whether he would believe the witness Kauffman under oath. The defense had called Mr. Read to impeach the witness Roy Kauffman, one of the state’s witnesses, as to his truth and veracity; and after the witness had testified that he knew the reputation of Kauffman for truth
“State whether or not you would believe him under oath ?”
This was objected to by the state as immaterial, irrelevant, and incompetent; the objection was sustained and defendant excepted to this ruling. The ruling of the court was correct, and the objection was properly sustained. State v. Miles, 15 Wash. 534 (46 Pac. 1047).
The tenth error complained of is that the court erred in admitting the testimony of the witness Hobart. This witness was called in rebuttal by the state at the close of the appellant’s testimony. A witness named Ashby, a police officer and detective, had testified on behalf of the appellant to the effect that Kauffman, on the evening of the 30th of March, 1899, in the presence of Kevins, a police officer and detective, and a police officer named Thompson, and while he was confined in the jail, the night after his arrest, after being told by the police officer that he would be prosecuted on only one charge, and while there were spread before him articles, the fruits of other burglaries in which he was supposed to have been implicated, — in short, after he had been put through what is known in police parlance as “the sweating process,” — made a confession in which he said he (Kauffman) was the only one engaged in the burglary, and he in no way at that time implicated the appellant. Thompson, Kevins, and the two other officers testified to the same effect. The police officer, Mr. Thompson, describes the “sweating process” through which Kauffman was put in order to obtain a confession, as follows:
“ Q. He was arrested, then, something like sixteen or eighteen hours ?
A. Well, yes; something like that.
A. Well, I don’t know. We came in from this Kauffman’s place and set it up there on the desk. I had a bottle or two and Ashby and Mr. Kevins — I think there were four bottles altogether. [The officers had been out and searched Kauffman’s residence, and the bottles spoken of had been taken from the Yellowstone saloon, which had been previously burglarized.]
Q. You expected that, confronting him with that testimony, in the presence of three or four of you, that he would break down and confess ?
A. We wanted to get the truth out of him.
Q. That is what you were after; you wanted to get him to talk?
A. Yes, sir; we wanted to get a confession from him.
Q. You couldn’t get him to talk before that ?
A. Not in regard to those safe burglaries; no, sir.
Q. Now, you and Captain Nevins and George Ashby were present ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And confronted him with all this testimony, and this bolt and that burlap — did you have the hammer ?
A. I don’t remember that.
Q. But you confronted him with the bolt and burlap ? [The bolt was the instrument with which the safe was opened and it had been wrapped in the burlap.]
A. Yes, I went and got them out of the desk, and asked him if he recognized them.
Q. And put him through a proper sweat for about an hour ?
A. Yes; we asked him questions for about án hour.”
A confession obtained under such circumstances is of very little weight. There is an old saying of “Honor among thieves,” and such a confession, under the rule laid down in State v. McCullum, 18 Wash. 394 (51 Pac. 1044), would hardly be admissible against Kauffman if he was on trial for the crime confessed. Why, then, should he be
“Where the credit of a witness is attacked upon the ground that he had made statements inconsistent with the statements he had made in court, testimony may be heard to show that at other times and on other occasions the witness had made statements consistent with his testimony given in court.” Dossett v. Miller, 3 Sneed, 71; 3 Rice, Criminal Evidence, 364.
The rule as above stated has been denied in the case of Commonwealth v. Jenkins, 10 Gray, 485, where the accomplice on the preliminary examination had given a different account of the transaction from that he had given on the trial. That court, in ruling on the question, however, says:
The rule laid down by the supreme court of Massachusetts is perhaps the correct rule, and under it the testimony of Hobart is proper; for it is evident that, when the witness made his statements to the police officers while undergoing “the sweating process,” he was not free from great influence and pressure, and his statements were not freely given. State v. Manville, 8 Wash. 523 (36 Pac. 470). Hence, we conclude that there was no error committed in receiving the testimony of Hobart.
There was corroborating testimony in this case. A witness named Bradley testified that the appellant confessed to him that he was with Kauffman in the burglary. It is true that this witness was a “jail bird,” as he is called in the brief of appellant’s counsel, but he was thoroughly cross-examined, and the jury passed upon his testimony, with the other evidence. A witness by the name of Turner also testified that appellant admitted to him that he got one hundred and twenty-five dollars of the money taken, at the time of the burglary. Appellant did not at the time deny that he committed the burglary. He did, however, say he could prove he was not in it. He might have had in mind the alibi which he had prepared in case he should be arrested for the crime, as his words would indicate that he
On the question as to whether there is sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict, the rule is that, although the evidence in a criminal case may not have been of the most satisfactory and convincing kind, the verdict of the jury should not be disturbed on appeal, where there was evidence tending to show every material fact necessary to show the guilt of the defendant, and particularly so when the court who tried the case has refused to interfere with the verdict. State v. Manville, supra; State v. Murphy, 15 Wash. 98 (45 Pac. 729); State v. Kroenert, 13 Wash. 644 (43 Pac. 876); State v. Elswood, 15 Wash. 453 (46 Pac. 727).
This court, in a recent decision, State v. Maldonado, 21 Wash. 653 (59 Pac. 489), used the following language:
“An examination of the evidence in the case impresses us with the fact that it was not very strong, and that the jury might reasonably, in the opinion of this court, have found the defendant not guilty; but there was sufficient evidence, if uncontradicted, to warrant the jury in bringing in a verdict of guilty, and, the jury being the tribunal upon which, by our laws and constitution, is especially imposed the duty of weighing the testimony, and having so weighed the testimony, and found against the defendant, it is not the province of this court to disturb its verdict.”
We think the court below properly overruled the motion • for a new trial.
Por the reasons given, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Duetbae, O. J., and Aetdebs, Peavis and Pulieeton, JJ., concur.