64 Vt. 101 | Vt. | 1891
The opinion of the coru’t was delivered by
The prisoner-, being in jail 021 a charge of assault and battery with intent to commit rape, wrote a criminatory letter to his wife, intended for her alone, and gave it unsealed to one of his daughters to hand to her; but before delivery it was taken fr-om that daughter’s pocket by another daughter, and produced at the trial by the prosecution and offered in evidence. The prisoner objected to its admission, for that it was a confidential communication and therefore privileged. But it was admitted,. to which he excepted.
Conceding, without deciding, that the letter was a privileged communication in the hands of the daughter to whom it was given, and conceding that it would have been a privileged communication in the hands of the wife, yet this was not a reason for excluding it, coming into the possessiotr of the prosecution as it did. When papers are offered in evidence, the court can take no notice of how they were obtaiired, whether legally or illegally, properly or improperly, nor will it form a collateral issue to try that question. 1 Greenl. Ev. s. 254a; 1 Whart. Ev. s. 586. Thus, in Jordon v. Lewis, H. 13 Geo. 2, B. R., reported
In Lloyd v. Mostyn, 10 M. & W. 478, the bond in suit was in possession of W., who held it as the representative of a former attorney of the obligors, and was himself the defendant’s general attorney, though not his attorney of record in the action, and who had undertaken to produce the bond at the trial if the judge should think he was bound to do so. Before the assizes the bond had been sent by W. to the defendant’s attorney in the action, in London, for the purpose of inspection and admission under a judge’s order, and the plaintiff’s attorney had there taken a correct copy of it. At the trial ’W. had the bond in court, but objected to produce it on the ground of privilege, and the objection was allowed. The plaintiff then tendered in evidence said copy of the bond. • The defendant objected that the bond having been in the confidential custody of W., a copy so obtained could not be used in evidence; and Fisher v. Heming, 1 Phil. Ev. 147, was relied upon as authority. But Baron Parke said he had always doubted that case, and Lord Abinger said it was impossible to say that the copy was not evidence.'
In State v. Buffington, 20 Kan. 599 (27 Am. Rep. 193), a letter, written by the defendant to his wife and sent to her by mail, was taken from the post-office by the prosecuting witness and handed to the wife, who read it and handed it back to the witness, who furnished it to the prosecuting officer to be read in evidence. There was no testimony tending to show that when offered in evidence it was in the custody or control of any one except the witness and the prosecuting attorney. Its admission
Exceptions not sustained and judgment on verdict.