45 Iowa 486 | Iowa | 1877
The court does not discharge this duty by simply hearing the evidence produced upon the part of the State. Evidence, if offered, should be received irpon the part of the defendant, and it should be weighed upon the determination of the question of“admissibility. The declarations of a dying man are admitted on a supposition that in his awful situation, on the confines of a future world, he had no motive to misrepresent, but, on the contrary, the strongest motives -to speak without disguise and without malice. Roscoe’s Criminal Evidence, p. 35. Before the judge decides the question of admissibility he hears all the deceased said respecting the danger in which he considered himself, and he should be satisfied that the declaration was made under an impression of almost immediate dissolution. It is not enough that/the deceased thinks he shall ultimately never recover. Phillips on Evidence, Cowen & .Hill’s notes, part 1, page 252. In the same volume it is said, page 253: “ We see that competency is a question of fact for the court, as in other cases^' They are to find upon it as the jury do upon the main case, taking into view all the circumstances calculated to prove and disprove that despair.of life which shall be equivalent to a sworn obligation.” And upon page 254, it is said: “Upon this question of fact no rule can be adopted which will reach every variety of detail. The court try the competency of the deceased as the jury do his credibility; and the decision in either case on a conflict of testimony must be final.” We are satisfied that the court ought to have inquired into all the circumstances attending the declarations, and to have heard the testimony offered by the defendant, before determining that the declarations were competent, and permitting them to go to the jury.
But dying declarations are open to direct contradiction in the same manner as any other part of the case for the prosecution, and the prisoner is at liberty to prove that the deceased was not of such a character as was likely to be impressed with a religious sense of his approaching dissolution, and that no reliance is to be placed on his dying declarations. Eoscoe’s Criminal Evidence, p. 35.
YI. The court rejected proof offered by defendant tending to show that Bold had poisoned defendant’s flour, attempting thereby to poison defendant and his family. We think there was no error in rejecting this testimony.
YII. The court refused to permit defendant to prove acts and conduct of defendant showing that he was very much afraid of Bold, and sought to get away from and avoid him. There was no error in this ruling.
The only exception to the rule seems to be that, where evidence had been given making it a question whether the defendant had perpetrated the act in defense of his person against an attempt to murder him, or inflict some great bodily harm upon him, violent threats made by deceased against the defendant a short time before the occurrence may be proved, though not communicated. Stokes v. The People, 53 N. Y., 164. The threats offered to be proved in this case do not fall within this principle. We think, they were properly rejected.
Eor the errors discussed the judgment is
Beversed.