38 La. Ann. 686 | La. | 1886
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The accused was indicted, tried aud convicted of burglary and larceny, committed in the nighttime of the 23d of January, 1886, and from a sentence by the court, to fourteen years imprisonment in the penitentiary, in pursuance of the verdict of the jury, has appealed.
The indictment charges, in substance, that the accused and Nathan Taylor, “on the 23d of January, 1886, in the nighttime the dwelling house of Joseph 0. Toups * * feloniously and burglariously did break and enter, with intent the goods and chattels of the said Joseph ,0. Toups, in the said dwelling-house, feloniously and burglariously to steal, take and carry away ; and the said Charles Johnson and Nathan Taylor, one pocket-knife, of the value of ten dollars, the property of said Joseph 0. Toups, in the said dwelling-house, there being found, there feloniously and burglariously did steal, take and carry away.”
The record contains a bill of exceptions retained for the accused to the evidence of Charles Smith, witness for the State, to the effect that the accused Charles Johnson had told him that he had committed an
The judge a quo appends to the bill the following statement of facts, viz: “A witness was on the stand who was detailing a confession the accused. The confession related to other burglaries and thefts committed about the same time. The witness stated that accused stated he had stolen a gold watch-, whereupon the District Attorney showed the gold watch, and asked if that was the one which witness said was like one described.
“ The evidence was admitted to show intent of the accused in breaking and entering, and the court thought it be (the means) by which to test the truth or falsity of the witness’s statements as to the alleged burglary. The jury was charged that accused could only be found guilty of the offense charged in the indictment, viz: the burglary of the house, of Toups, and if the verdict was of larceny, then only of the larceny of the knife. Put the court charged that the jury might judge of the intent of the accused, if they found the breaking and entering from all the circumstances of the case, as proven.”
The judge erroneously overruled the objections of the counsel for the accused, to the reception of this testimony on part of the State.
It is difficult to conceive in what way the commission of a burglary, at a different time and place from that charged in the indictment, by the accused, could interpret the latter ; or in what w7ay the subsequent larceny, by the accused, of a gold toateh, from a person not named, could interpret the previous larceny of a pocket-knife, the property of Joseph 0. Toups. It was not proper to allow such evidence to be heard by jury, and the instructions of the trial judge were improper.
Such evidence could not affect the credibility of the accused because he was not a witness, and the truth or falsity of his statement was in no way involved.
The accused had not, upon his own motion, put his character in proof, and the State could not do so otherwise. The witness in question was suffered to testify as to matters that were wholly irrelevant to the main issue on trial — the guilt or innocence of the accused — and totally disconnected with the charge contained in the indictment. 38 Ann. 737, State vs. Gregory.