10 N.J.L. 192 | N.J. | 1828
The jury having been sworn and affirmed, the prosecutor introduced his evidence, by which it appeared :
That Catharine Beakes, on the 24th day of September, 1827, resided in the township of Hopewell, in the county of Hunterdon, in a small house situate on the side of a public road. She was upwards of sixty years of age, and in good health; her family consisted of herself, her son, (Jonathan Vankirk,) and a grandson, a little more than ten years of age. At noon her son went to work for a Mr. Titus, in the neighborhood, and her grandson went to school, and she was left alone in the house.
The prisoner was a colored boy, born on the eleventh day of April, 1815, the servant of one Joshua Bunn, who was the nearest neighbor to the deceased, his house being situate one or two hundred yards distant, towards Pennington, and on the opposite side of the road. There was a cornfield immediately across the road opposite the house of the deceased, in which the prisoner was that afternoon engaged, alone, in cutting up corn.
About half-past two o’clock, Charles F. M’Coy, with his team and boy, was passing that way, and before he got to the house, saw the prisoner about twenty yards from the road, .under an apple tree in the same field where he had been at work. He hallooed to witness, or his boy, and appeared in a good humor. He was hacking the tree with a corn knife. Having some~errand at the house, witness stopped his team opposite, went to the door, and knocked;
Doctor Springer testified, that he was passing by about dark, went in and found her lying on the floor; her hair clotted; her breast covered with blood, which was still flowing ; her head dreadfully mangled; the scalp loose and cut through; a large bruise on the right side of the head; the under jaw broken. The wounds were sufficient to produce death; and so great was the quantity of blood she lost, witness had no doubt her death was' produced by the wounds he examined. He should not have known her she was so disfigured. A blow with the yoke by a boy might produce death. The wounds could have been produced by that stick. Witness is a physician, &c.
Daniel Cook, Esq., testified that “the next day, about one o’clock, I met some persons, who told me they had got the murderer; that lie had made confession. I found him at Mrs. Beakes. I had him put into my wagon. I did not hold out any promise or threat; nor did any other person to my knowledge. It was about half a mile to Davis’ tavern. On the way, I asked him, Jim, did you kill the old lady? yes, said he, I did. Why did you not tell me this last night ? He said, I was afraid. I got to Davis’, and sat down. I then told him I wanted him to tell me what he had done; to tell the truth and the whole truth. I took his examination in writing.” Here the examination was offered, when Mr. Scott, a counsel for the prisoner, rose and stated that there had been previous threats or promises to the prisoner, and to establish that fact, called
Joseph Davis, sworn: “ On the morning of the 25th of September, Joshua Bunnell requested me to go down to the house of Mrs. Beakes. Wo went down and found several people there. The boy was describing some person that came out of the Stony Brook road. They went in pursuit of the person. I remained and took my seat on the piazza in front. I observed the boy opposite cutting up corn. Hearing that suspicion had risen against him, I watched his. motions. His manner of working excited suspicion in me. I had my eye on him. He did not seem to mind his business. Frequently looked towards the house. Some person requested mo to go home. The people brought back a man of the name of Peter Tucker. Afterwards I went back to the house. I saw a man talking with James (the prisoner) in sight of the house, in Mr. Bunn’s cornfield. I think it was Andrew Titus, I went to them. I told the prisoner
Cross-examined: “ I expressly told him that if he was not guilty he should not confess it. They found some blood on his 'clothes, and asked him where that came from. Pie said he must have got it from killing a sheep.”
The counsel for the prisoner asked the witness “ whether it was not his opinion that the prisoner’s confession arose from the hopes or fears excited in his mind by the conversations and other circumstances of that occasion?” Objected to, and overruled by .the court.
D. Cook, Esq. The night before, and next day particularly, I told him to tell nothing but the truth. Before
Joseph Davis. “ He is reputed a cunning smart boy.” Jonathan Vankirk. “ He is accounted smarter than common black boys of his age; full of mischief; think him a cunning boy; ingenious to get out of a scrape.”
The court excluded the written examination; and overruled the preceding confessions.
The court adjourned until Saturday morning, 9 o’clock; at which time the court was opened.
' Mr. Halsted offered to prove confessions made by the prisoner to various persons, five months after the first; after counsel had been assigned him; and after he had been cautioned not to expect favor, &c.; and proved by Esquire Cook, that on Saturday morning of the October term, he told Jim (the defendant) that he must expect death and prepare to meet it; his countenance changed, but he made no answer.
Esquire Thompson. “ And by the next day after he came to gaol, he confessed the facts, and that witness told him he must abide the consequence, and could not expect'to escape.” The confessions were objected to, being the same in substance with the first. The objection was overruled, and the confessions permitted to be given in evidence.
Eli Herbert sworn. “ In February term I had some conversation with him. Took in several people. He said he went there (house of deceased,) to borrow a gun, and tie old bitch would not lend it to him. He said as he was going out of the door, he saw the yoke by the door. He picked it up and went back. He did not know whether she saw him or not. He struck her. She did not fall. He struck her again, and she fe.ll. He then went toward the
Similar confessions were proved by Henry Gulick, Ralph Stevenson, Ralph Knowles, S. G. Opdyko, Esq., Charles Bonnell, Esq., Thomas J. Stout, and others; made at various times, as late as the month of February, and with more or less particularity. To Henry Gulick he said that “she made him mad; accused him of things not true. She accused him of killing fowls or chickens, and letting out pigeons.” To S. G. Opdyke, Esq., he said, “he did not intend to kill her in the first place. The first blow did not knock her exactly down. He thought he would give her another. He then said he gave her the third blow with the intent to kill her. The deceased was sitting by the fire blowing the fire. Struck her back of the head. Come up behind her.” To Ralph Knowles he said, “he had killed the woman and was sorry for it. He went there to get a gun belonging to Jonathan Vankirk, and Mrs. Beakes refused to let him have it. She asked him why she should let him have the gun, as he had let out her pig and pigeons. He said, she was saucy. She was starching a cap, and stooping down on the hearth. He struck her. The second blow she fell. He then desisted; but ho thought if she told of him he should get a terrible flogging, and then he concluded he would kill her, and she would not tell of it. He struck her a third, and, I believe, a fourth time.”
Charles Bonnel, Esq., sworn. “ I had been in the habit of going to the prison very often, and when I went the boys would be running in and asking him questions. In September last, I had cautioned James not to be making these acknowledgments to the boys as they were talking to him. He was told by the boys he would be hung, and all that. He said he did not care a damn, he would swear at the boys. In February last he said he had killed her. Said he
Cross-examined. “ He appeared to have considerable wit, but wanted discretion and good sense. Seemed to be irritated by others, and that was the cause of much of his bad conversation. I thought there was too much talking to him. Kept growing worse. Had devil enough in him when he came there.”
Thomas J. Stout, sworn. “ The week before February court, he was talking about it, in a loose manner, as he generally did. When asked if he thought the case would terminate against him in court, he said he did not care a damn. Would often rip out something against the boys passing. lie appeared acute in many things, but did not appear to realize his situation. Never appeared cast down; always- cheery. Appeared a little more deliberate when telling’ the circumstances of the old lady’s death than on other occasions.”
Cross-examined. “ He did not appear to realize his case as a discreet or rational person would.”
J. J. Young, Esq., sworn. “At the time of the burning of the court house, I had considerable conversation with the boy. I thought him full as acute as boys in common. Plis memory seemed to be correct.”
Jonathan Vankirb, called again. “ I had borrowed a gun and had it in the house some time. The boy knew I had it. I had a pigeon in the crib. We had a shoat that got hurt, and the deceased thought that the defendant run over it with a horse, as I heard her say. When I went out of the house the yoke was by the side of the door.”
Witnesses for defendant:—
Stephen Albro, sworn. I came to the gaol about the middle of November. The boy was a prisoner there. I heard his conversation, and observed his manners until he was removed to Somerville. Heard him express himself in
Cross-examined. “ He has capacity enough to distinguish between right and wrong; but I do not think he considers or reflects as much as some. I think there are usually too many visitors to such prisoners. I heard some person ask how he came to kill that woman ? He said because she made him mad. I think his bad actions proceed more from passion than from malice.”
Joshua Bunn, sworn. “A day or two before the murder was committed, James assisted in killing a sheep. I have endeavored to give him good instruction, and in some respects he knows the difference between good and evil. He has some idea of the consequences of evil as respects another world; attended family prayers; often had religious worship at my house ; once a month. Should have sent him to Sunday school, but was afraid it would do more hurt than good, he was so inconsiderate and mischievous. He is passionate, mischievous, insolent, but does not bear malice.”
The cause was summed up by Mr. Saxton and Mr. Clark on the part of the prisoner, and by Mr. Halsted in behalf of the state.
Charge. Gentlemen of the Jury.
James Guild is indicted for the murder of Catharine Beakes, at the township of Hopewell, on the 24th day of September, 1827.
The next and great question which arises is, who is the murderer ? or rather, is the pxnsoner at the bar the individual who has committed this heinous offence-against the laws of God and man ?
The evidence, to fix it upon this defendant, is, in the first place—
The circumstances attending this transaction; These, as affecting the prisoner, are none of them very important. The principal are :
1. He was near the scene working in a field.
2. He was unwilling to go in and see her when told it might prove his guilt.
3. He had some spots of blood on his jacket.
With respect to the last of these, you will recollect the cause to which he ascribed it, and in which he is coixfirmed by the testimony of his master, Joshxxa Bunn ; and as to his unwillingness to touch the corpse, a child of his years might naturally have felt all the aversion to it which he manifested, placed in the same circumstaxxces, without any consciousness of guilt.
There are, besides these, some coincidences betweexi the facts detailed in his confessions, and the real state of things as
2. The confessions of the prisoner himself:
Voluntary confessions, made understandingly, may prove crime. But confessions made under the influence of fear or hope, produced by threats or promises, are not ever admissible in evidence.
The first confessions offered in evidence were considered by the court to be liable to objection on these grounds, and were, therefore, overruled ; and having been overruled, it is your duty to dismiss from your minds any knowledge you may have obtained of them, at least so far as they can operate against the prisoner.
Again. It is said that all subsequent admissions of the same or of like facts, should be overruled, because they may have proceeded from the same influence.
Confessions have been admitted before you by the court of the same, or of like facts, made afterwards (some months afterwards), and which, by the application of the above principle in its full extent, would have been rejected. These latter confessions were received, because the court deemed that although an original confession may have been obtained by improper means, subsequent confessions of the same or of like facts may be admitted, if the court believe, from the length of time intervening, from proper warning of the consequences of confession, or from' other circumstances, that the delusive hopes or fears, under the influence of which the original confession was obtained, were entirely dispelled. Under this impression of the law, the court, with some hesitation, admitted the confessions; and having been
It will be necessary then to go back to the circumstances preceding the original confession. I shall briefly notice them. The prisoner was accused of the murder; he was told there was proof of it; that he was seen about the house; he was advised to run away; he was afterwards seized by two persons, and taken near to the house where the murder was committed; he was then told to take off his coat; blood- was found on him, and considered by the bystanders as proof of his guilt; he was asked to go in and touch the body, under the superstitious idea suggested by the witnesses; “he was told he had better confess,” that “if guilty he had better confess;” he was much pressed to confess, but at the same time told not to confess unless he was guilty; and a witness is pretty well satisfied that one of the bystanders told him “ if he would confess he would probably get clear.” Under all the agitation, fears and possible, if not probable, hopes, produced by these circumstances, he made his first confession, and, immediately after, the one before the magistrate. The court thought these first confessions, thus obtained, should be overruled.
You will next call to mind the circumstances calculated to remove this influence, if it existed, and make the subsequent confessions lawful'. These latter confessions were made in February, 1828, some months after the first. But you will recollect that they were not made after an interval of silence, and under new circumstances, and in a new situation ; but the boy was taken to gaol, and there was a con-
With respect to the instructions of grave persons and magistrates; they were general; warning of his danger, to be sure, but not particularly calculated or directed to dispel his false hopes, if such existed, or to open to his mind, and impress upon it forcibly, all the consequences of his conduct. .But the fact is with you. And if you are fully satisfied that these confessions were made freely and understandingly, and uninfluenced by the causes of the first confessions, you will then examine the confessions themselves.
They were made to several persons, and are so fully testified to, that there can be no doubt they were made.
But the defendant is an infant; at the time of the act, and confession, between twelve and thirteen years of age-This fact should make you more cautious in admitting the confessions, and induce you to resolve your doubts in his favor.
With respect to the ability of persons of his age, to commit crimes of this nature, the law is, that under the age of seven, they are deemed incapable of it. Between seven and fourteen, if there be no proof of capacity, arising out of the case, or by the testimony of witnesses, the presumption is in their favor; a presumption however growing weaker and more easily overcome, the nearer they approach to fourteen. And at the age of this defendant, sufficient capacity is generally possessed in our state of society, by children of ordinary understanding, and having the usual advantages of moral and religious instruction. You will call to mind the evidence on this subject; and if you are satisfied that ho was able, in a good degree, to distinguish between right and wrong; to know the nature of the crime with which he is charged; and that it was deserving of severe punishment, his infancy will furnish no obstacle, on the score of incapacity, to his conviction.
Murder is defined by Lord Coke to be, “ where a person of sound memory and discretion unlawfully killeth any reasonable creature in being, with malice aforethought, either express or implied.” And it is defined by Chief Justice Kirkpatrick to be “ the killing of a reasonable creature with malice aforethought.”
And the law presumes all homicide to be committed with malice aforethought until the contrary appears from circumstances of alleviation, excuse, or justification. And it is incumbent on the prisoner to establish such circumstances unless they appear in the evidence produced against him. 2 Halsted 243. Manslaughter is the unlawful and felonious killing of another without any malice express or implied.”
“ If a man kill another suddenly, without any, or without considerable provocation, the law implies malice, and the homicide is murder.”
“ If it be perpetrated with a- deadly weapon, the provocation must be great indeed, to extenuate the offence to manslaughter.”
It is even laid down, “ That no words or questions are sufficiently provoking to soften the crime to manslaughter, if it be perpetrated with a deadly weapon.”
You will apply these principles to the case before you. You will recollect the slight nature of the provocation. And notwithstanding the eloquent appeal which has been made on this subject to the compassion of the court, I feel it my duty to-say to you, that-there is nothing in the provocation sufficient to soften the crime into that of manslaughter; but that, if guilty at all, the prisoner is guilty of the crime of murder.
Of this case, you are the constituted judges. I trust you will discharge your duty with caution, with humanity, and at the same time with firmness; with due attention to the
The jury after being out between two and three hours, returned a verdict of guilty-. G. K. Drake.
After the verdict was rendered, Mr. Seott, on behalf of the prisoner, moved the court, that the judgment be deferred until the next term oí the Oyer and Terminer, that an opportunity might be afforded in the meantime, to take the advisory opinion of the Supreme Court, upon several questions of law which had been discussed by the counsel, and decided by the court in the progress of the trial. This motion was acceded to by the court, and the foregoing state of the case was drawn up by Justice Drake, and submitted to the Supreme Court. At the September term, the case was argued by Clark and Saxton for the prisoner, and W. Hoisted for the state.
The counsel for the prisoner contended :
I. That the confession made by the prisoner, to D. Cook, Esq., and the written examination taken before him were inadmissible, having been made so recently after the mind of the prisoner had been operated upon, by the inducements of hope and fear.
II. That the confessions made by the prisoner after he had been confined in gaol, and five months after the offence committed, ought also to be rejected, because it was to be presumed, that the same inducements which operated upon the mind of the prisoner to make the first confession, continued to influence his mind at the time of the subsequent confessions, and cited the case of King v. White, 2 Starkie Evi. 49, and State v. Aaron, 1 South. 240.
On the part of the state it was contended :
I. The confession made by defendant, to D. Cook, Esq., was admissible.
No threat was held out to him or promise of favor, but he was cautioned to tell the truth.
The fact of a person (having no authority) holding out an inducement, such as this case presents, is not sufficient to exclude the evidence. Rex v. Gibbons, 1 Carr, and Payne, 97; 11 Eng. C. L. Rep. 327; Wil. 343, Rex v. Tyler, 1 Carr & Payne, 129; Carr. Cr. Law 65; Rev v. Rowe, Russel Ryland, C. C. R. 153; and 4 Pall. Rep. 116; Commonwealth v. Dillon, 2 Stark. Evi. 50, note q.
The observations of promises, if any, were all conditional. “If you are guilty you had better confess,” &c., &c., differ from Warickshall & Thompson’s case, Leach. 263-291.
II. If even that evidence was inadmissible, on account of its being made so soon after the inducement to confess was held out to him, yet that the circumstances and lapse of time which intervened were sufficient to efface any impression of hope of favor which might have been fixed upon his mind.
The case of King v. White, is cited to shew that all subsequent confessions ought to be rejected. This is a mere note of a manuscript case, and it is impossible to tell what were the circumstances of it; and it has been overruled by later cases.
Whether the impressions on his mind were removed by the lapse of time, or the declarations of judges, Cook and Thompson, were properly left to the jury.
The competency of the last declarations, must rest upon the same footing as the first; that is, whether they were induced by the expectation of favor, or fear of punishment.
III. If these confessions were competent, were they sufficient to convict ?
It' is said they are not.
1. Because they are not corroborated by circumstances. They are mere naked confessions.
2. Because made by an infant.
1. These were not what are understood to be, more naked confessions uncorroborated.
What is meant by a mere naked confession, such as has been said would not be sufficient to convict, is-where even the corpus delicti is not proved, as the ease referred to in note to 2 Starkie, Evi. 48 note, where the person supposed to be murdered was still living.
And this must be the case to which Judge Mossell refers, when he says no person can be convicted on his own confession, without a single fact to corroborate.
And if he means to apply his remark to cases, whore the corpus delicti is proved by other testimony, the remark is not law. For it is well settled, at this day, that if a confession be voluntarily made, it is sufficient, if the jury believe it to be true, to convict the prisoner, without any corroborating circumstances to support it. Wheeling’s case, Leach Ca. 311 note; 2 Hawk. 595; Tit. Evi. Book 2, Ch. 46, Sec. 37; Carr. Crim. I Law 64; Russ. & Ry. C. C. R. 440; Phi. Evi. 80. But in this case there were corroborating circumstances, viz.
The circumstance of his relating where the yoko was, viz. behind the door, which he could not have known if he had not been there. That he went to get a gun belonging to Jonathan Vankirk, who it is proved had a gun, &c.
The following opinion of the Supreme Court, drawn up by the Chief Justice, was communicated to the ensuing Court of Oyer and Terminer, in October, 1828 :
The prisoner, James Guild, was, at the Oyer and Terminer for Hunterdon county, in May last, found guilty of the murder of Catharine Beakes. The court, at the instance of his counsel, humanely suspended the sentence of tfye law, in order that the opinion of the Supreme Court might be obtained, on some .legal points which arose in the progress of the trial. These points were submitted to the court in the term of September, by the prisoner’s counsel, with distinguished ability, and with -the most laudable zeal, research and industry; and they have received from the court, the careful, anxious and mature examination, which their interest and importance, the situation of the prisoner, and the due administration of public justice, required.
The first question to be considered respects the admissibility of certain confessions of the prisoner which were received in evidence.
The deceased came to her death in the afternoon of the 24th day of September, 1827. An inquest over the body was held by the coroner, at her place^of abode, in the evening of that day. The prisoner, who was known to have been at work alone in the same afternoon in a corn field on the opposite side of the road, was brought up by a constable, and, on being twice asked, denied that he knew any'thing of the manner of her death. About ten o’clock on the next day, he made a verbal confession that he had killed the deceased, to Charles M’Coy and others, and shortly after, a similar confession to one of the justices of the peace of the county, by whom it was reduced into the form of a written
Confessions were afterwards made by the prisoner, in February succeeding, nearly five months after the perpetration of the offence. These confessions were admitted in evidence. The counsel of tho prisoner insist that the admission was illegal, because confessions of a like nature had been previously made under the influence of hope; and because these confessions per se and independent of the others were themselves made under the same delusive influence, and with an expectation that by perseverance in their narration, he should escape from punishment, and also, under the excitement of anger from reiterated taunts and accusations thrown out to him when in gaol.
The first of these grounds, the counsel of the prisoner sought to sustain by a reference to the recent and valuable treatise on evidence by Starkie, who says in part 4, page 49, title admissions, “ whore a confession has once been induced by such means [threats or promises], all subsequent admissions of the same or of the like facts must be rejected, for they may have resulted from the same influence.” In examining the soundness of this doctrine, a shade of doubt
From a careful examination of principles, then, we are prepared to yield a full acquiescence to the doctrine laid down by Justice Drake, on this occasion, in his charge to the jury in these words : “ Although an original confession may have been obtained by improper means, subsequent confessions of the same or of like facts may be admitted, if the court believes from the length of time intervening, from proper warning of the consequences of confession, or from other circumstances, that the delusive hopes or fears under the influence of which the original confession v/as obtained, were entirely dispelled.”
The rule of evidence seems to have been thus understood, and has certainly been so practiced in the criminal courts of this country. In Williams case, 1 City Hall Recorder 149, the mayor (Radcliff) of New York, submitted to the jury to decide whether an examination in writing, taken in the police office had or had not been made under the influence of the threats which had preceded and induced a previous con
The true rule of evidence being thus shewn, we proceed to the second ground of objection raised by the prisoner’s counsel, and enquire whether the court had reason to believe that the delusive hopes under which the original confession may have been obtained, were entirely dispelled ? "Whether, when the confessions given in evidence were made the mind of the prisoner was laboring under or was freed from undue influence ? These questions present pure inquiries of fact?. What in point of fact was the actual state of mind of the prisoner ? We have seen that the Court of Oyer and Terminer acted under a correct view of the law, that they prosecuted their search into the facts on sound legal principles, and that they compared the facts before them with a correct legal standard. Now the duty of this court when a reference like the present, is made to us by that tribunal, is chiefly to examine and revise matters of
A period of between four and five months elapsed'between the first confession and those which were afterwards made by the prisoner and received in evidence against him. J11 point of time, then the court may well have supposed there was sufficient room for the first impressions to have subsided, and for the gleams of hope by which at the outset he in ay have been cheered, to have been dispelled. Soon after the prisoner was brought to gaol, John Thompson, Esq., one of the magistracy of the county, had an interview with him, and told him he must abide the consequences of the act which he had confessed, and that he could not hopo to escape. It is very probable the prisoner was not awáre that he who addressed him was a justice of the peace, yet he could not fail to observe his ago and his grave and venerable appearance so likely to excite attention to his remarks. On Saturday morning succeeding the arraignment of the prisoner, he was visited by Daniel Cook, Esq. With his person and official character, ho was doubtless acquainted, for he was the same person before whom the examination in writing of the prisoner had been taken.. He told the prisoner that he must expect death, and prepare to meet it; and he mentions a striking fact serving to shew the effect produced by the admonition. Ilis countenance changed. Iiis
The counsel .of the prisoner further insisted, that the taunts and reproaches to which he was repeatedly exposed from idle boys, who came to the door or passed by the window of his gaol, tended to keep up in his mind, an excite-
Upon a careful view then, of the circumstances of the case, we find no reason to disapprove of the conclusion in point of fact, which was drawn by the court, or to doubt of the propriety of tlxoir determination, to submit these confessions to the consideration of the jury; and, the more especially, as the court gave to the prisoner the advantage of a review of these facts, by the jury, and expressly charged them, that " it was their business to consider the confessions with reference to the manner in which the first confession was obtained, and if they were not satisfied, that the latter confessions were made freely and undcrstaudingly, and wholly free from any expectation of benefit, raised by the hopes and promises preceding the first confession, or from his continuing to toll an uniform story, it was their duty to reject them from their minds, and not to make them the foundation of their verdict.
We are now to examine, under the request of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, whether the evidence in the case was sufficient, in legal contemplation, to warrant the conviction of the prisoner.
In the first place, it is insisted by his counsel, that a verdict ought never to be founded on naked and uncorroborated confessions; and to support this position, they have in a great measure relied on the opinion expressed by Justice Rossell in Aaron's case, 1 South. 242, “ that no person indicted for a capital offence shall bo convicted on his own confession, without a single circumstance to corroborate it.” If the learned judge is to be understood to mean, when the corpus delicti is not otherwise proved, as when in larceny no proof is given of the taking of the goods, or in murder, the fact of the death is in no wise shewn, and when the whole case depends on the mere confession of the accused, a number of cases will be found to support the doctrine. But if he is to be understood, that even when the corpus delicti is otherwise established, the confession of the prisoner alone is not sufficient, if the jury believe it to be true, to produce a conviction, the opinion stands opposed to very high authority. The only case referred to by the judge, is from Leach’s croton law 320, Alexander Fisher’s case. This citation was evidently made from the first edition of Leach, and Justice Ueath, on a trial at the assizes, is there reported to have laid down the rule in substance as above stated. But Fisher’s case was mis-reported by Leach in that edition, and is one of the many errors, which he says in the preface of his subsequent editions, that he has corrected. In the 4th edition published in 1815, vol. 1, page 311, the same case is to bo found, and the point decided, as there reported, is wholly different. “ There was no other evidence,” says
Hawkins, book 2, ch. 46, s. 36, says, “ If a confession be-voluntarily, made, and regularly proved on the trial, it is sufficient if the jury believe it to be true, to convict the-prisoner, without any corroborating evidence to support it.”" Phillips in his treatise on evidence, says, “ a free and voluntary confession, made by a prisoner to any person at anytime or place, is strong evidence against him, and, if satisfactorily proved, sufficient to convict, without any corroborating circumstance.” 1 Phil. Ev. 81. And afterwards he-says, “ It appears now to be an established rule, that a full and voluntary confession by the. prisoner of the overt acts,, charged against him on indictment for treason, is of itself sufficient evidence to warrant a conviction.” Ibid. 851 Starkie says, a “ prisoner may be convicted on his own confession without other evidence.” Starkie Evid. part 4, page 53. An opinion on this point need not however, be here expressed, nor need the enquiry be further prosecuted, for it will, I think, be demonstrated, in the sequel, that the confessions are “ strong and pregnant,” “ disclosing and bringing forth facts and circumstances,’’ and that there are circumstances corroborating these confessions of a peculiarly pointed and persuasive character. In the? first place, however, it becomes material to a correct understanding of the subject, to settle what is meant by the qualification, “corroborating,” annexed.to the term “circumstances.” The phrase clearly does not mean facts
In this view of the case, a most' marked difference from that of Aaron, on which the prisoner’s counsel placed much reliance, cannot escape observation. No attending circumstance stated by him was proved to have existed; and although before the coroner’s inquest, and for three or four weeks after he was put in gaol, he continued to make the confessions, yet afterwards, and until the time of trial, he steadily denied the truth of what he had confessed.
’ In the charge to the jury the court say, “ there are some coincidences between the facts detailed in his confession and the real state of things, as testified by other witnesses; these would be strong proofs of guilt, if he could not have learned them from any other means, except by having 'gone to the house and seen the body and other things as they really were. But his confessions were made long after, there were other sources of information, and if you think it probable, or possible, that 'it was furnished from other sources, the evidence arising out of these coincidences will have but little weight.” In this passage, as well as in every other part of a very judicious charge, we see the cautious and humane intentions of the judge, that on so deeply important an occasion, no proper consideration should be overlooked by the jury, and that every thing which might justly have weight in favorem vitae should be presented to their view. , These considerations were earnestly urged
The age of the prisoner was earnestly pressed on our consideration by his counsel, who strenuously insisted he was too young to be exposed to punishment on such evidence. At the perpetration of the offence he was aged twelve years and somewhat more than five months. The sound, sensible and legal rule on this head is, in our opinion, judiciously, as well as lucidly, stated by Justice Southard in the case of Aaron. “This capacity,” says he, “to commit a crime, necessarily supposes the capacity to confess it. He who is a rational and moral agent, and can merit the infliction of legal sanctions, must be able to detail his motives and acts, and must be judged by them. If therefore the defendant was of an age to be punished, he was of an age to confess liis guilt.” These principles are conformable to the most approved and respected authorities. In Leach’s Edition of Hawkins, B. 1, C. 1, page 1, in note, it is said, “ from this supposed imbecility of mind, the protective humanity of the law will not, without anxious circumspection, permit an infant to be convicted on his own confession. Yet if it appear, by strong and pregnant evidence and circumstances; that he was perfectly conscious of the nature and malignity of the crime, the verdict of a jury may find him guilty and judgment of death be given against him.” Blackstone says,
In regard to a youth of the years of the prisoner', the law most wisely requires the utmost circumspection from the jurors; and it is satisfactory to find that in the present case the jury were distinctly reminded of their duty. “This •fact,” says the judge in his charge, “ should make you more cautious in admitting the confessions and induce you to resolve your doubts in his favor.”
•Under a deep sense of responsibility, after a careful deliberation, and feeling the strongest impression of the tenderness due to the life of a fellow creature, we hold ourselves bound to advise the Court of Oyer and Terminer not to grant a new trial, but to proceed to discharge the solemn duty which remains to them, by pronouncing the sentence of the law on the crime of murder.
The prisoner was sentenced and executed.