248 P. 176 | Mont. | 1926
On the evening of September 12, 1925, Chris Martin and James Stevens engaged in a fight in front of Martin's home on Utah Avenue in Butte. They were separated but almost immediately went into a dark alley nearby and renewed the fight. In the alley at the time was another man, or two other men were present, and this man, or these men, took some part in the fight. It was so dark in the alley that a light had to be produced in order to see the participants. Martin and Stevens were separated again, but they repaired to the street immediately and renewed the combat. They were then separated for the third time, and Martin then went into his home. Stevens walked down the street thirty or forty feet, turned, retraced his steps in whole or in part, and sat down in front of a store. About this time the police officers arrived on the scene. Stevens, appearing to be badly hurt, was taken to St. James Hospital and Martin was arrested and taken to the city jail. It was then 9:30 P.M. When he arrived at the hospital, Stevens was apparently conscious, but was very weak, suffering from several wounds on the head, two in the breast and one in the abdomen. At 11 P.M., Dr. O'Rourke arrived at the hospital, examined the wounds, observed Stevens' appearance, and determined in his own mind that the man was in a dying condition, but did not mention the matter to Stevens. At that time the ambulance driver, a policeman, a nurse, and Mr. Rotering, deputy county attorney, were present. Stevens was lying on an operating-table with his eyes closed. Someone asked him how he felt but he only mumbled or grunted, and what he said, if anything, could not be understood. Mr. Rotering asked him who stabbed him, but Stevens made no reply. Dr. O'Rourke then shook Stevens by the shoulder, and said, "Who stabbed you?" and in a whisper Stevens said, "Chris Martin." Stevens died two or three days later from hemorrhage, *568 shock, and general peritonitis induced by a knife wound in the abdomen and a like wound in the breast.
Martin was charged with murder, was convicted of manslaughter and has appealed from the judgment and from an order denying him a new trial.
To make out a case sufficient to go to the jury it was incumbent upon the State to prove that Martin inflicted the knife wounds from which Stevens died. Martin testified that he did not have a knife and did not inflict those wounds; and although there were eighty or ninety persons present who witnessed the two encounters in the street, no one testified that he saw Martin use a knife. Walter Hackett, a witness for the State, testified that Martin "had something in his hand, but I couldn't say what it was"; and George Strohl also testified for the State that Martin had what "appeared to be a knife in his hip pocket." But each of these witnesses was so utterly discredited on cross-examination that it seems inconceivable that the jury believed either of them. The only other evidence which tends to connect Martin with the offense is the so-called dying declaration of Stevens, and the principal error assigned upon this appeal is the ruling of the trial court admitting that declaration in evidence.
Assuming for present purposes that Stevens actually made answer to the question propounded by Dr. O'Rourke, the testimony of the State's witnesses reiterating that answer to the jury was pure hearsay, but it was admissible hearsay if the proper foundation was laid. The rule admitting it is expressed in our statute as follows: "In criminal actions, the act or declaration[1] of a dying person, made under a sense of impending death, respecting the cause of his death" is admissible. (Sec. 10531, Rev. Codes, 1921.)
"Now the general principle on which this species of evidence is admitted is that they are declarations made in extremity, when the party is at the point of death, and when every hope of this world is gone; when every motive to falsehood is silenced, and the mind is induced by the most powerful considerations to speak the truth; a situation so solemn, *569 and so awful, is considered by the law as creating an obligation equal to that which is imposed by a positive oath administered in a court of justice." (Rex v. Woodcock, 1 Leach, C.C. 500.)
It would be idle for us at this late day to enter upon a discussion of the origin of the rule. Its history will be found in 3 Wigmore on Evidence, 2d ed., Chap. 47. It will be observed that the rule requires, as a condition precedent to the admissibility of the declaration, preliminary proof of the concurrence of the following conditions: (1) That the declaration was made by a dying person, or, in the more flowery phrases of the courts, by one in extremis or in articulo mortis; (2) that the declaration was made under a sense of impending death; (3) that the declaration relates to the cause of the declarant's death, or, more exactly, to the cause of his dying condition.
For the purposes of this case we will assume that the record discloses satisfactorily that, at the time the statement was made, Stevens was a "dying person" within the meaning of the statute, although he did not die until two or three days after the statement was made, and that his statement related to the cause of his dying condition. We are then concerned here only[2, 3] with the second condition mentioned above, and the one question for determination is: Does the record disclose that the declaration was made by Stevens under a sense of impending death? The word "sense" as employed here means: Rational appreciation; recognition; apprehension; belief. The word "impending" means: Imminent; threatening to occur immediately; near at hand.
In 3 Wigmore on Evidence, 2d ed., section 1440, the learned author says: "It follows from the general principle that the belief must be not merely of the possibility of death, nor even of its probability, but of its certainty. A less stringent rule might with safety have been adopted, but this is the accepted one. The tests have been variously phrased: There must be `no hope of recovery'; `a settled expectation of death'; `an undoubted belief.' Their general effect is the *570 same. The essential idea is that the belief should be a positive and absolute one, not limited by doubts and reserves, so that no room is left for the operation of worldly motives."
In support of the text, Dean Wigmore cites the following: "These declarations would not be evidence, unless she was under a clear impression that she was in a dying state." (Reg. v.Mooney, 5 Cox Cr. 318.) "There must be a settled, hopeless expectation of death in the declarant." (Reg. v. Peel, 2 F.
F. 21.) The declarant "shall have a complete conviction that death is at hand. * * * Death, shortly to ensue, must be an absolute certainty, so far as the consciousness of a person making the accusation is concerned." (Peak v. State,
The prevailing rule in this country is stated succinctly in 30 C.J. 255, as follows: "It is not enough that the statement be made when the declarant is in extremis; it is also essential that it be made when he has abandoned all hope of recovery from the injury inflicted by the accused and is under the firm conviction that his death is inevitable and near at hand."
Again Dean Wigmore says: "It follows also that the expectation must be of a speedy death. All men are mortal and know it. An expectation of ultimate, but distant, death is obviously, in experience, not calculated to produce that sincerity of statement which is desired." (3 Wigmore on Evidence, 2d ed., sec. 1441.)
From the language of our statute, as well as from these observations, it follows that it is not the actual fact of the declarant's physical condition, not the belief of the trial court or the attending physician that the man was in extremis when he spoke, but it is the state of mind of the declarant which determines the admissibility of the declaration (People v.Falletto,
Practically all of the authorities now agree that the fact that the declarant was acting under a sense of impending death at the time the declaration was made, may be shown by circumstantial evidence, as well as by his own statement *571
that he had given up all hope of recovery (State v. Crean,
Among the circumstances tending to prove that state of mind are: That the declarant sought the consolation of religion, or received the last rites of his church, and whether his conduct was that of a person fully conscious of immediate approaching death, as evidenced by his directions for his funeral, the disposition of his property, the care of his family, and the like. Indeed, we may go further and adopt the extreme view of the text-writers and some courts, that: "If in a given case the nature of the wound is such that the declarant must have realized his situation, our object is sufficiently attained." (3 Wigmore on Evidence, sec. 1442.)
In Territory v. Eagle,
The authorities are all agreed that under the most favorable circumstances dying declarations are to be admitted with great[5] caution, for while the solemnity of the occasion may supply the place of an oath, nothing else can supply fully the absence of cross-examination. Furthermore: "Dying declarations have every element of dramatic evidence. As the last utterances of a sentient, conscious being, standing on the threshold of eternity, they possess an impressiveness out of all proportion to their evidentiary value." (Wharton's Crim. Evidence, 10th ed., p. 529.)
With these principles in mind, we recur to the one question[6] before us for solution: Does the record disclose that the declaration was made by Stevens under a sense of impending death? So far as we are informed by the record, the two words "Chris Martin" were the only words uttered by Stevens during the two or three days which elapsed from the time he was injured until he died, and whether he was conscious when he uttered those words is left entirely to speculation. He and Martin had been enemies; they had just been engaged in a fierce fight; he had been struck on the head with a blunt instrument five times; and someone had inflicted upon him knife wounds from the effect of which his vitality was rapidly receding. Under these circumstances we think it just as reasonable to assume that the words uttered by Stevens when aroused somewhat from his stupor were the offsprings of delirium, as that they expressed a conscious reply to Dr. O'Rourke's question. But, furthermore, we have failed to find anything in this record to indicate "a rational apprehension," "an undoubted belief," "a complete *573 conviction" on the part of Stevens that his death was "inevitable," "certain," "shortly to ensue," at the time he uttered the words mentioned. He may have spoken under a sense of impending death, but the nature and extent of his wounds, coupled with the brief statement dragged from him under the circumstances disclosed above, do not indicate any such condition to our minds.
So far as this case is concerned, there is but one rule of evidence which measures the quantum of proof in a criminal case. The burden was upon the state to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Stevens was conscious at the time he spoke; that the words spoken by him were intended as an answer to the question propounded by Dr. O'Rourke; and that he uttered them under a sense of his own impending death. (People v. White,
It is our conclusion that this record does not disclose beyond a reasonable doubt that Stevens was acting under a sense of impending death at the time he made the statement mentioned, and that the trial court erred in admitting the statement in evidence.
The judgment and order are reversed, and the cause is remanded to the district court of Silver Bow county for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES GALEN, STARK and MATTHEWS concur. *574