Lead Opinion
By the WHOLE COURT.
The grand jury, in and for the parish of La Salle, on November 13,1920, returned a true bill against defendant, charging him with shooting one C. F. Wray with
“Mr. Miles, in this case, there are a number of verdicts which may be rendered, some of which carry with them a penitentiary sentence. The nature of the offense would determine the verdict that you should render. The law makes you the sole judge of the law and the evidence, and in the event of any reasonable doubt on either the law or evidence it is your duty to give the accused the benefit of the doubt. Would you do that?”
This question was objected to by the state for the reason that it was improper, confusing, and not a correct exposition of the law. The objection was maintained.
The question was properly excluded. Its purpose was to ascertain whether the juror would give the accused the benefit of a reasonable doubt as to his guilt. The question-is preceded by much information which is irrelevant to it, and which, when considered in connection with it, would likely have confused the juror, had it been permitted. Beyond the confusing tendency of the question, because of the irrelevant matter it contains, the question itself was not permissible. The
“The law requires the trial judge, at the end of the trial, to charge the jury that if a reasonable doubt find lodgment in their minds as to the guilt of the accused, they must give the latter the benefit of the same and acquit, and it is not to be supposed, in advance, that the jury will decline to heed the charge so to be given, or that a juror will refuse to be instructed by the court.”
In the absence of evidence tending to show bias on the part of a juror, there is no reason to believe that he will refuse to follow the instructions of the court in such a matter, and therefore the question is unnecessary, and serves no other purpose than to consume time.’ It is true that it is proper to ask a juror whether he will convict on circumstantial evidence, or whether he has conscientious scruples against inflicting the death penalty, but this is because of a known antipathy by many to do either, and therefore these questions are proper. Moreover, the question was not correctly put, because the juror was asked whether he would give the accused the benefit of a reasonable doubt in respect to either the law or the evidence, whereas the question should have been, had it been proper to ask it, whether the juror would give the accused the benefit of a reasonable doubt arising from the evidence, or from the lack of evidence. It is the duty of the juror to accept the law, as given him by the court, and of the court to charge it with clearness and certainty, and the juror should not be impressed with the idea that he has the right to entertain a reasonable doubt concerning the law as thus given.
Granting for the purposes of this decision that the court erred in excluding the conversation, when the husband was asked to state it, still the error proved harmless, for the only- purpose for which the evidence was offered, and the only purpose for which it could have been admitted legally, if admissible at
“Mrs. Poster, what, if anything, did you tell your husband on Monday morning immediately preceding the difficulty at the icehouse?”
In answer to this question the witness detailed the statement made to her husband on the morning of the shooting, which consisted of the entire conversation between her and Wray. The witness was then consigned for cross-examination, when she was asked the following question by the state:
“Mrs. Poster, is the statement you made to your husband on this Monday morning a correct statement of what took place at the ice-house on the day before, on Sunday morning?”
To this question the defendant urged the following objection:
“That it was not in rebuttal of anything brought out on direct examination, as the question propounded by counsel for defendant was limited strictly to the conversation that took place between defendant and his wife, and not as to the facts of what occurred at the icehouse on Sunday preceding the difficulty.”
The court properly overruled the objection. The sole purpose of the question was to elicit whether the witness had made to her husband a truthful statement of what had taken place between herself and Wray. The defendant was relying on showing his belief in that statement to prove that the insult to his wife, then communicated to him, had thrown him into a sudden heat of passion, which caused him to shoot the man who had offered her the insult. The truthfulness of that statement was proper evidence for the jury to consider in determining defendant’s belief in it, and therefore was directly connected with the examination in chief. Moreover, the question was admissible to test the credibility of the witness. Had she answered No, the answer would have affected her credibility, and probably would have cast a doubt upon whether she made the statement to her husband at all.
The defendant not only complains of the admission of this evidence, in rebuttal, for the above reasons, but also because no foundation had been laid to impeach Mrs. Foster.
In answer to the last objection, it may be said that the state was not seeking to impeach Mrs. Foster by showing that she had made statements conflicting with her evidence on the stand, but it was seeking to rebut her evidence as to what she testified had occurred at the icehouse by showing what it considered had really occurred there. Therefore there was no occasion to lay a foundation, as is required to be laid when an attempt is made to impeach a witness, when it is asserted that the witness has made statements conflicting with his or her evidence on the stand. Without laying such foundation, the state may proceed to show its version of what occurred.
As to whether or not the evidence offered in rebuttal was admissible as such, it is unnecessary to determine. Its sole legal effect was to show that the shooting was done with malice aforethought, and not in a sudden heat of passion caused by an adequate provocation. Its only purpose was to show that the insult was not offered defendant’s wife. It is manifest that it failed of that purpose, for the jury found the defendant guilty of shooting with intent to kill, and not with intent to murder. Therefore, assuming that the ruling was erroneous, defendant was not injured by it.
For the same reasons, assuming that there was error in the next bill reserved, which shows the refusal of the trial judge to permit the defendant to put witnesses on the stand, in surrebuttal, to rebut the above evidence, still defendant was not. injured, as is obvious from the verdict rendered.
“The charge of shooting with intent to murder includes the minor offenses of shooting with intent to kill, assault with a dangerous weapon, assault and battery, and simple assault.”
The court properly refused to give the special charge. The charge given by the court was correct. A verdict of guilty of assault with a dangerous weapon, or one of guilty of ' assault and battery, or one ,of guilty of an assault, would not have been responsive to the charge of shooting with intent to murder. State v. Benjamin (La.) 14 South. 71, not officially reported; State v. Robertson, 48 La. Ann. 1067, 20 South. 296; State v. Bellard, 50 La. Ann. 596, 23 South. 504, 69 Am. St. Rep. 461; State v. Washington, 107 La. 302, 31 South. 638. The case of State v. Foster, 149 La. 521, 89 South. 680, relied upon by defendant, has no application to this case. There, the indictment was framed under section 793 of the Revised Statutes, and under Act 17 of 18S8, and charged the defendant with- having made an assault upon another with a dangerous weapon, and with having, then and there, inflicted a wound upon him less than mayhem. The court simply held that it was proper to charge the offense of assault with a dangerous weapon denounced by section 793 of the Revised Statutes, and wounding one, with a dangerous weapon, less than mayhem, denounced by Act 17 of 1888, in the same count; and as these statutes denounce an assault and an assault with a dangerous weapon, and as these offenses are included necessarily in the greater one of inflicting with a dangerous weapon, a wound less than mayhem, and as the wounding implies the commission of a battery, which is also included in the greater offense, and as the indictment charged all of these elements, therefore, in addition to the verdicts of guilty as charged and not guilty, verdicts of guilty of an assault, guilty of an assault with a dangerous weapon, and guilty of assault and battery would be responsive to the charge. Whereas, in the case at bar, while the charge of shooting with intent to murder includes an assault and an assault with a dangerous weapon, yet the statute does not expressly denounce an assault, and consequently the indictment does not expressly charge one; and hence, it would be going too far, as pointed out in the case of the State v. Washington and in that of the State v. Robertson, cited supra, to sanction such verdicts. If the statute read, “Whoever shall assault another with a dangerous weapon and shoot him with intent to murder,” thus expressly denouncing the assault, .and the indictment so charged, we doubtless would feel justified in taking a different view, but not otherwise.
Granting, for the moment, that the juror Whatley was disqualified because of residence, still it does not appear that the defendant questioned him concerning his residence, when he was consigned to him for examination on his voir dire, or that defendant made any other effort to ascertain that fact before accepting him. To take advantage of such a point, after verdict, it must be made to appear that the disqualification of the jur- or was not known to defendant, when the juror was accepted by him, and could not then have been ascertained by due diligence; and it must be made to appear that such diligence was exercised by an examination of the juror, on his voir dire, touching his qualifications, and that he answered falsely. State v. Harper, 51 La. Ann. 163, 24 South. 796; State v. Button, 50 La. Ann. 1072, 23 South. 868, 69 Am. St. Rep. 470; State v. Bower, 26 La. Ann. 383; State v. Sopher, 35 La. Ann. 975; State v. Nash, 45 La. Ann. 974, 13 South. 265.
Bor the reasons assigned, it is ordered that the verdict and the sentence appealed from be, and the same are hereby, affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the decree, and also in the opinion, except in so far as it approves of the ruling of the trial judge, permitting the defendant’s wife to be questioned as to what actually occurred at the icehouse, since that matter was wholly irrelevant, and the sole purpose of the state was evidently to impeach the witness by subsequently contradicting her, as it attempted to do by the testimony of Brodie.
A witness cannot be ashed irrelevant questions for the purpose of afterwands impeaching him..
But I agree that this ruling did not injure the defendant, since the jury evidently believed her version of what she told her husband, as shown by the verdict which they found.