190 P. 117 | Mont. | 1920
Opinion
By an information filed in the district court of Lewis and Clark county on May 31, 1918, the defendant was charged with the crime of sedition. Upon his first trial the jury failed to agree upon a verdict. The second trial resulted in a verdict of guilty, with a recommendation to the mercy of the court. The defendant was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of not less than ten years nor more than twenty years, and has appealed from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial. There are forty-seven assignments of error, but the contentions made upon some of them have been determined adversely to defendant in sedition eases recently decided. The other assignments may be considered in groups.
1. Henry Latch, a juryman, was examined on his voir dire by
The statute prescribes the method of selecting a jury,
We approve the holding of this court in Territory v. Roberts, 9 Mont. 12, 22 Pac. 132; but the facts upon which that ease was decided differ materially from the facts of the instant ease. In that case the juror excused was not a citizen of the United States, and upon his voir dire examination testified that he had formed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the accused. He was challenged by the prosecution and the challenge allowed. The court did not go further than to hold that “the appellant was not injured by the exclusion of the juror.”
2. The county attorney .first called as witnesses John Berkin
Section 8026, Revised Codes, prohibits the introduction of supporting evidence of the good character of a witness until his character has been first impeached, unless his character is in issue; but assuming that an objection to the order of proof was waived—and it was waived as to one of the witnesses at least—or that error may not be predicated upon the court’s rulings admitting this character evidence before Yon Waldru had testified, the only evidence admissible under any conceiv
That it was error to admit this evidence is not open to controversy, and the only question for determination is: Was the error a material one under the circumstances? The rule is
There was no one present when the alleged seditious remarks were made, but Von Waldru and the defendant, and therefore the state was compelled to rely upon Von Waldru’s testimony alone to. establish the fact that the words were spoken. Von Waldru admitted that he was an alien enemy, a former officer in the German army, a former convict, who had completed his term in the penitentiary at Deer Lodge about the middle of November, 1917. The necessity of bolstering up Von Waldru’s testimony was apparent, and appreciated fully by the county attorney; but neither Berkin nor Topping had known him for a period as long as six months, one-half of which time Von Waldru had spent in Butte, a portion of the remainder in Helena, and the other portion not accounted for. Just how either Berkin or Topping could gain a knowledge of -the general reputation of Von Waldru during so short a period, or how Von Waldru could Establish a general reputation among the people of a community by such a peripatetic residence, are questions which we need not stop to consider at length. In
Assuming that Berkin and Topping each was competent to answer the question propounded to him, and that his brief acquaintanceship affected only the weight to be given to his opinion (Territory v. Paul, 2 Mont. 314), it must be manifest that under these circumstances the jury could not have given much weight to the expressed opinion that Von Waldru’s reputation for truth, honesty and integrity was good. The defendant denied categorically that he ever made any of the statements attributed to him by Von Waldru and produced several witnesses, each of whom testified to his good reputation; but notwithstanding these facts, and the fact that Von Waldru was a self-confessed forger and an ex-convict, out of the penitentiary only eight months before he gave his testimony upon the trial of this case, the jury, were led to say by their verdict that beyond a reasonable doubt the defendant had used the words as Von Waldru had testified that he did. There- must have been some consideration which led the jury to this conclusion, other than Von Waldru’s testimony standing alone. It could not have been the sustaining testimony of Berkin and Topping, for the opinion of neither could have had much weight, under the meager showing of the facts upon which it was based. But it is easily conceivable that a jury of laymen would be impressed profoundly by the favorable findings of the Department of Justice at Washington and the attorney general, after an investigation into Von Waldru’s history, and we think that it is fairly inferable from this record that the verdict rests largely, if not altogether, upon the support which Von Waldru’s reputation received from this hearsay testimony; at any rate, it cannot be said that the error in admitting it was without prejudice.
The test to be applied in this instance to determine whether
4. It appeared from the testimony of Von Waldru that he
5. Errors are predicated upon rulings of the court restricting
6. Finally, and aside from every other consideration, the
The information in this instance charges that the language used by the defendant was calculated to bring the form of government, the Constitution, the soldiers and sailors, the flag and the uniform into contempt, scorn, contumely and disrepute. This was a necessary allegation under the subdivision of the statute here involved. The defendant’s plea of not guilty put that allegation in issue, and devolved upon the prosecution the burden of proving it by competent evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt. Whether the language, if used, was calculated to have the effect imputed to it in the information, was a question of fact to be determined by the jury. (State v. Kahn, 56 Mont. 108, 182 Pac. 107.) The court did not give any instruction defining the particular issues involved in this case. Nowhere were the jury told that it was necessary to a conviction that the state prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had used the language set forth in the information, nor were the jury instructed that they must further find that the language so set forth, if used by the defendant, was calculated to bring the form of government of the United States, the Constitution, the soldiers or sailors, the flag or uniform into contempt, scorn, contumely or disrepute; but, on the contrary, the court gave instruction No. 4, under which the jury were authorized to find the defendant guilty if the evidence established beyond a reasonable doubt that he had at any time between February 22, 1918, and May 31, 1918, the date of filing the information, done any of the acts or things condemned by the statute defining sedition, without reference to the particular charge contained in the information. This question also was considered in the case of State v. Smith, above, and need not be elaborated any further.
Reversed and remanded.