25 Wash. 327 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Defendant was convicted of the crime of grand larceny. The information charged him with
1. A number of errors have been assigned by counsel for defendant, but they are not of sufficient moment to require attention in detail. The trial was a tedious one, some irritation of temper was exhibited by counsel, and perhaps the court was not unruffled during its course. We are not sure but remarks complained of by counsel on the part of the court were justified by the over-zeal shown by
2. The seventh instruction given was in the following language:
“In regard to the testimony of the witness Jos. Dunlap, who the court instructs you is an accomplice, the court instructs you that, while it is a rule of law that a person may he convicted upon the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice or accomplices, 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.”
“As to the other point, it is true that we have no statute requiring the corroboration of an accomplice, such as is found in a few of the states. It is also true that at common law conviction .upon the unsupported testimony of an accomplice was upheld to the extent, at least, that, although the higher courts and law writers laid it down that a trial court ought to advise the jury not to convict on such testimony, it was not reversible, even if they did not so advise. Yet the books are full of cases from courts not bound by any statute, both in England and America, ■ where corroboration has been held necessary. 1 Amer. & Eng. Enc. Law, tit. ‘Accessory.’ § 18, p. 74. Oases are ■ rare, indeed, where, if the prosecutor has the assistance of a willing aecomplicej no corroborative testimony can be produced. In practice it is almost invariably attempted,' and juries are told, as in this case, that unless there i's corroboration they should acquit. Perhaps the true view of .the matter is that in many, if not in most cases, the evidence of an' accomplice, uncorroborated in material matters, will not satisfy the honest judgment beyond a reasonable doubt, and that it is clearly insufficient to authorize a verdict of- guilty. But .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-*335 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. Collins v. People, 98 Ill. 584. The testimony of George Hose was not of the latter class, and the court below did right to charge the jury not to convict without corroboration.”
A close scrutiny of all the evidence introduced by the state does not show substantial corroboration of the accomplice Dunlap’s testimony in any material fact connecting the defendant directly with the crime committed by Dunlap. The statements of some apparently pertinent facts are frequently from utterly discredited sources. Something of a light backward is thrown upon the credibility of the accomplice by his statements, subsequent to the trial, to the sheriff and other persons, which cannot be ignored when viewed in connection with the other circumstances surrounding his credibility, under the principle stated in Edwards v. State, supra; that is, it is not one of those eases where, from all the circumstances, the honest judgment will be thoroughly satisfied by the evidence of the accomplice of the guilt of the defendant. The habitual use of opium, as shown, by Dunlap, is known to utterly deprave the victim of its use and render him unworthy of belief. This, it is true, is primarily a question of his credibility which the jury may determine, but it is within the discretion of the superior court, when the appearance and action of the witness may show him to be under the influence to such a degree as to be incapable of honest and intelligent conception of what he is testifying to, to exclude him from testifying while in such condition. Apparently the trial court did not consider that the witness had' reached this stage of untrustworthiness, and a court of review has not equal opportunity tó see the witness, and will rarely interfere with such..discretion exercised at the trial. Much that has been said of the. credibility of the
But, in the weight given to the corroborating testimony of the accomplice, we conclude that this case should fall under the rule stated in Edwards v. State, supra, and the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Dunbar, Fullerton and Anders, JJ., concur.
White, J., concurs in the result.