42 Iowa 264 | Iowa | 1875
It is urged that after counsel for the State had admitted that the Avitnesses named in the application for continuance Avould if present in court testify as, stated therein, he Avas estopped from objecting to the reading of the statements in evidence. The admission made by the plaintiff is not required by the statute to be of the competency or relevancy of the statements, but only that if the Avitness Avas present he Avould so testify, and does not preclude any legal objection which might be made if the Avitness himself Avere present. See Code, section 2751. The parts excluded are'matters of opinion and other matters which the witnesses would not be competent to testify to if present. The other matters of fact which were relevant to the issue were allowed to be read. For example, in the testimony of John E. Detton it is stated that “at and for a short time previous to the occurrence with Mary Fry,” the defendant (was insane) and became very much excited and entirely uncontrollable whenever said Mary Fry or any of her family was spoken of in his hearing, or if any of them were in his presence.” The words, “was insaue,” were stricken out and the other part of the statement Avas read to the jury as the testimony of the Avitness. The Avitness Avas not competent to testify that Geddis “was insane;” that was a question for the jury to determine from the evidence before them. The State v. Felter, 25 Iowa, 67. This is the character of the ruling of the court in rejecting parts of the statements of each Avitness named in the application for continuance. There was no error therein.
III. The defendant, S. G. Geddis, was called as a witness in his own behalf and testified to the actions and conduct of C. S. Geddis from the lltli of July, 1871, to the 9th of August of the same year, this being the interval between the execution of the bond and the shooting of Miss Fry by C. S. Geddis, and the witness said: “I could always control him up to the time that bond was given.” He was then asked by his counsel to state how it was after the bond was given. This was objected to by the State and the objection sustained. Of this ruling complaint is made. There was no prejudicial error in this ruling, lor notwithstanding the court sustained the objection the witness proceeded to state further and fully and all about the conduct, actions, and the appearance of his son after the execution of the bond, together wdtli his own opinion and the opinion of his wife tlieréon. In addition to this the State called out on cross-examination every fact within the knowledge of the witness upon this subject, more fully, if possible, than had been done on the examination-in-chief. If there was error in the ruling most clearly no prejudice resulted therefrom. The same is true, also, in reference to the question overruled when this witness was recalled.
VI. The court submitted to the jury the following interrogatories:
b. practice • rogatories:fiil struction , “1. Was O. S. Geddis insane at the time of his alleged failure to keep the peace, set out in plaintiff’s petition, and was such failure to keep the peace the result of such insanity ?
“ 2. Was O. S. Geddis insane at the time of the alleged failure to appear before the District Court, and was such failure to appear the result of such insanity?”
The court instructed the jury in respect to these interrogatories, that if Geddis was not insane at the time of the admitted breaches of the bond, both questions should be answered “no,” that if he was insane but such breaches were not the result of his insanity they should answer both questions “no.” And if the assault was the result of his insanity, and his failure to appear at court was not the result of insanity, then they
It is objected that this instruction assumes that there was evidence of a change in the mental condition of O. S. Geddis, between the time of the shooting of Miss Fry, and the time when he was required to appear at-court. We are unable to discover any error in this instruction. It merely gives the jury proper directions as to the manner of answering the interrogatories submitted, and to which there was no objection. If it was proper to submit these separate interrogatories, it was propei- for the court to instruct the jury as to the mode or manner of answering each one according as they find the facts to exist.
YII. The third instruction is in the language of this court in the case of The State v. Felter (first trial), 25 Iowa, 67, as follows:
6.-: insanity: civil action. “ If the act of Geddis in assaulting the party, which is admitted to constitute a breach of the bond, was caused by mental disease or unsoundness which dethroned . , , . his reason and judgment with respect to that act, which destroyed his power rationally to conrprehend the nature and consequence of that act, and which overpowering his will irresistibly forced him to its commission, then he is not legally answerable therefor. But if you believe from all the evidence and circumstances that he was in possession of a rational intellect and sound mind, and allowed his passions to escape control, then though passion may for the time being have driven reason from her seat and. usurped it, and have urged him with a force at the moment irresistible to desperate acts, he cannot claim for such acts the protection of insanity'.”
Appellant does not question the legal soundness of this instruction, but insists that this being a civil action it is not applicable as in a criminal case in which the language was used by this court. It must be remembered, however, that the fact of insanity is the same in a civil action as in a criminal prosecution, and that it is relied on in each case as a complete defense. The question in either case being whether the defendant was sane or insane when he did, or omitted, the act
Till. Appellant complains of the last clause of the fourth paragraph of the charge. The whole paragraph is as follows:
7. iNBTRuo.ty. ' " “You are to look at the evidence in this case in a common sense light, and to judge it by that experience and observation of human affairs of which you are possessed as individual members of society, and will endeavor to arrive at the truth as the evidence shows it to be. If the claim made by either party is unusual and unnatural, out of the ordinary course of affairs, you are not required to take the same for granted upon slight evidence; nor should you so find except upon proof of a reliable character and which satisfies the mind.”
It is urged that the court erred in assuming that the defense of insanity was unusual and unnatural, out of the ordinary course of affairs. We think the evident meaning of the court by this language, and the way it was most likely to strike the minds of the jury, was that where the fact set up as a defense is “ unusual and unnatural and out of the ordinary course of affairs,” it was not to be granted upon slight evidence, and we are quite clear that this is right in its application to this case. The condition of sanity is usual and natural, and insanity is unusual and unnatural. Sanity is according to the ordinary course of affairs, insanity is out of this course. Sanity is the normal condition of mankind, insanity is abnormal and exceptional.
“If insanity has once been established by the evidence, then the presumption is that it has continued, and you will be justified in so finding, unless the State has proved to the contrary. And if the evidence 'shows that C. S. Geddis was insane at and about the time of the difficulty with the Frys, in which Mary Fry was injured, it will be presumed to still continue unless rebutted by proof.”
Which the court gave with the following modification:
(By the court.) “ This is so, unless the insanity was temporary, or only partial, or in relation to some particular matter, in which cases it might not. To have this effect the insanity must be general and permanent in its character, and if but partial or in relation to a particular matter, and there were lucid intervals, then it will be presumed to continue only in relation to such matters and not as to other or different matters or to affect acts having no connection with such partial or particular insanity.”
We are of opinion that there was no error in this modification, but whether there was or not is entirely immaterial, for the jury by their negative answers to the special interroga-: tories submitted to them found that the defendant, O. S. Geddis, was not “insane at and about the time of the difficulty with the Frys, in which Mary Fry was injured.” These findings show that the fact of insanity did not exist at the time mentioned in the instruction asked, and therefore, no presumption of continued insanity would follow. The instruction without the modification could have done the appellant no more good, than with it. He was not prejudiced by the modification.
XI. Several instructions were asked by the defendant and refused by the court, and their refusal is assigned as error. All of the instructions refused were substantially given in the charge of the court, except the fifth, which is as follows: “It only requires a preponderance of the evidence on the question of mental unsoundness of C. S. Geddis, at the time of the A’iolation of the bond complained of, to find for defendant.
They could not find for defendant unless the evidence also showed that the acts constituting the alleged breaches of the bond were caused by the mental unsoundness of said Geddis. An unsoundness of mind may be partial only and not on the subject or subjects that would lead to or result in the breaches of the bond alleged. The instruction, therefore, was incomplete and misleading.
XII. Lastly, it is urged that the verdict is not supported by the evidence. We are well satisfied with the verdict as being supported by the weight of the evidence.
The judgment will stand
Affirmed.