65 So. 634 | La. | 1914
Defendant was prosecuted for murder, found guilty, without capital punishment, and duly sentenced, and she presents her case to this court upon a bill of exception to the overruling of a motion for new trial; the grounds here urged in support of the motion and bill being that one of the jurors was prompted in the finding of the verdict by the consideration of matters not developed by the evidence, and was prejudiced against defendant to such an extent as to prevent his giving her a fair trial, and that, since the trial, defendant has discovered new evidence, material to the case, which had not previously come to her knowledge, and which she was unable to obtain.
“These women may be right in thinking that, because other women here were acquitted for similar crimes, Augusta Edwards should have had her freedom, but they have no right to abuse an honest jury because it did.its duty. Viewing the mass of evidence, look what the defendant was threatened with! This cold-blooded murdering of men must be stopped. Why make a*534 mockery of the law? We, as jurors, had sworn to do our duty. Suppose Augusta Edwards had been turned loose, who would have been the next victim? Who would have been the next man to be shot down in the street by some woman? I maintain that, Katie Eretsch and Mamie McLaughlin should never have been given their freedom. If they had been convicted, it is probable that Augusta Edwards would never have been in a courtroom. If they start a campaign to contest the jury’s verdict and free Augusta Edwards, I will never serve on another jury in a capital case during the rest of my life.”
It is well settled that a statement such as the foregoing could not be received from the juror himself in support of an attack upon the verdict in which he participated, and, a fortiori, that it is inadmissible .as coming from a third person. As was said, by this court, in State v. Barrett, 117 La. 1086, 42 South. 513:
“If jurors could vitiate their verdict by simply going about and making statements _ about their mental condition while sitting' as jurors, or, worse still, if verdicts could be vitiated by simply offering testimony as to what one or more jurors had said after the verdict had been rendered, there would be little stability in verdicts.”
See, also, State v. Bird, 38 La. Ann. 497; State v. Richmond, 42 La. Ann. 299, 7 South. 459; State v. Corcoran, 50 La. Ann. 453, 23 South. 511; State v. Cunningham, 123 La. 870, 49 South. 601; State v. Cloud, 130 La. 955, 58 South. 827, Ann. Cas. 1913D, 1192; 12 Cyc. 749.
Even if there were no such rule, however, we find nothing in the statement quoted which would authorize the assumption that the juror to whom it is attributed was influenced in the finding of the verdict in this case by any other considerations than those arising from the facts disclosed by the evidence that was adduced on the trial, and by the obligation to apply thereto the law as declared by the trial judge. “These women,” to whom the juror referred, we take to have been certain members of the community who had hastened to criticize the verdict, and the remarks of the juror to the reporter were evidently made in answer to that criticism, not as indicating that he had participated in a conviction which was not justified by the law and the evidence, but as indicating that, in the face of evidence calling for a conviction, a jury should not be influenced by any other consideration. The reference to the cases of Katie Eretsch and Mamie McLaughlin was probably suggested by testimony which the juror had heard on the trial, from a witness who said that hé had interviewed defendant immediately after she had committed the homicide for which she was being tried, and whose testimony ran, in part, as follows:
“I asked Miss Edwards whether it was a fact that she had written the suicide note, and she said ‘Yes.’ In fact the nature of my interview was leading, all my questions were leading, and her answers to me were ‘Yes.’ I asked her, after speaking about the suicide note, I said, ‘Well,, after you killed the man you changed your mind;’ she said, ‘Yes.’ And I said, ’Why; because you didn’t want to suffer too?’ She said, ‘Yes.’ I then said, ‘Do you mean by that that you think that you will not suffer for this, either physical pain or any other kind of pain?’ —I didn’t use those words, but asked her if she thought she wouldn’t suffer; she said, ‘Yes.’ And I said, ‘You mean — in other words, you don’t think you will have to pay 'any legal penalty for this?’ she said, ‘Yes.’ I said, ‘Why, because other women have committed such offenses as you have, and not paid the penalty?’ she said, ‘Yes.’ I said, ‘Do you refer to Mamie McLaughlin and Katie Eretsch?’ she said, ‘Yes.’ Then I said, ‘You mean, you think no jury would convict you for such a crime as this?’ she said, ‘Yes.’ ”
It may be stated, by way of explanation, that defendant had written a note, which was found in her possession, after the homicide, and in which she declared that she “premeditated murder and suicide,” and made a request with regard to the disposition of her body; that she testified, on the triai, that Riehl (the man whom she killed) had seduced her. And it is a fact (not testified to) that Mamie McLaughlin and Katie Fretsch had, not long before, been acquitted of charges of murder in similar cases.
The purport of the testimony expected to be elicited from Messrs. Castaing and Chabaud, as indicated by their affidavits, is that they occupy intercommunicating offices in a building in this city; that prior to the homicide the decedent, Riehl, being out of employment, frequented the office of Chabaud, and received his mail there; that for the better part of two days within the week preceding the homicide, the defendant appeared, and, inquiring for Riehl, was permitted to occupy a chair in the office of Castaing; that she remained perfectly quiet, save that now and then she would leave her chair to go into the office of Chabaud; that she would answer, briefly, questions that were propounded, but otherwise seemed indisposed to conversation; that she declined offers of refreshment, in the way of coffee or sandwiches, at the luncheon hours; that when she spoke of her mission (i. e., that she was waiting for Riehl) she exhibited excitement, in that her color rose and the veins in her face became conspicuous; that when Castaing warned her that he would not like any trouble between her and Riehl to occur in his office she assured him that there would be none, that she would meet Riehl when he came in, and that they would leave the office quietly together. Castaing further states that, a day or two after the two thus referred to, he observed defendant seated at the foot of the elevator shaft, and that as he passed in and out she remained either seated or standing, at or near the same spot; “that, in his opinion, she was ‘bughouse,’ meaning out of her mind and not in her right sense.” He also states that he was standing one day, about that time, at the corner of St. Charles, or Carondelet, and Common streets, when she ran excitedly across the street towards him, passing in front of a rapidly moving ear, and said, in an excited manner, gesticulating wildly, “Have you seen George Riehl?” that he answered in the negative, and that she then shouted, “I’ll find him; his time is short.” His affidavit also contains a recital of some parts of a conversation that he had had with Riehl, concerning his relations with the defendant. Chabaud concludes his affidavit by saying that, in his opinion, defendant’s actions, as he observed them in his office, “were very, very strange, and he has never seen any other person act in that manner.”
In ruling upon the question presented to him, the trial judge no doubt took into consideration the facts; that a period of six months had elapsed between the date of the indictment of the defendant and that of her trial, that her trial and her defense of insanity attracted great public attention, and that a great deal of testimony of the same character as that which was expected to be elicited from Castaing and Chabaud had actually been heard by the jury. It is true that the facts within the knowledge of those two men do not appear to have been brought to “the attention of defendant’s counsel until after her conviction, but they were at all times within the knowledge of the defendant, and not even the experts, whose affidavits and certificates are attached to the motion for new trial, intimate that she has been otherwise than perfectly sane at any time since the moment of the homicide. The relatives and friends of the defendant and those by whom she had been employed, or with whom
One of the witnesses, who had known her for some 15 years, testifies that at about 5 o’clock, he stopped and had quite a long conversation with her, that she told him that she was waiting for a friend, that she was entirely rational in her manner, and that he spoke to her again an hour or more later, and found her in the same condition. There are quite a number of witnesses who testify to the actual killing of Riehl, to the surrender by defendant of the pistol that she had used; to her arrest, and to remarks made by and interviews had with her then and thereafter; and, one and all, they agree that she appeared to be cool and self-possessed.
Defendant, having taken the stand as a witness in her own behalf, testified to certain of the facts which led to the tragedy out of which this prosecution has arisen, but as under our practice the cross-examination in a criminal case is limited to matters which are testified to in chief, her story is incomplete. The substance of the testimony, as given by her, is about as follows:
In 1908, she was employed by an oculist in this city, and had occasion now and then in his service to visit a shop or store with which he had dealings, and there made the acquaintance of Riehl, who was the book
Applying the law to the situation as thus presented, we are of opinion that the question to be decided is governed by certain well-established rules, to wit:
That the judge of the district court is vested with a wide discretion in the matter of granting or refusing new trials in criminal cases, upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, and that this court will not reverse'his ruling unless it is made clear that such discretion has been abused, or that error has been committed. State v. Ferguson, 114 La. 70, 38 South. 23; State v. Lee, 127 La. 266, 53 South. 559; State v. Thomas, 127 La. 274, 53 South. 562.
What has thus been said with regard to the testimony of the two lay witnesses applies with even greater force to the expert
For the reasons thus given, we are of opinion that the new trial was properly refused. The judgment appealed from is therefore affirmed.