130 Iowa 440 | Iowa | 1905
At a conference which was being held in a secluded place between the defendant, a young man nineteen years of age, and one Williams, in regard to the stealing of some jewelry from the latter’s store, at which one Baker, who was an officer, and Henry Matheson, the father of the defendant, and one other person, were present, a revolver which defendant had been carrying in his hip pocket, and which he was at the time taking from his pocket, was discharged, and Baker was wounded as a result of the discharge. The claim on behalf of defendant was that the revolver was accidentally discharged whilst he. was attempting to extract it from his pocket, while Baker testified that it was intentionally aimed and discharged at him by the defendant.
The principal objection urged to the introduction of the radiograph, and the use of it by the witness McRae for the purpose of determining the course of the bullet, is that it was not sufficiently identified as a representation of anything about which there was evidence before the jury. The-theory of counsel seems to be that, in general, a photograph is admissible in evidence only as a representation of something which a witness testifies to as of his own knowledge, resulting from observation, and that as no witness testified to, or could testify to, the presence of a bullet lodged in Baker’s body, near the spinal column, by any direct observation, the radiograph showing what appeared to be a bullet in that locality was not admissible.
But the court takes judicial notice of the fact that by the ordinary photographic process a representation may be secured, sufficiently truthful and reliable to be considered as evidence with reference to objects which are in a condition to be thus photographed, without regard to whether they have been actually observed by any witness or not. As is said in Luke v. Calhoun County, 52 Ala. 115 : “ A court cannot refuse to take judicial cognizance that photography is the art [of] producing fae-similes or representations of objects by the action of light on a prepared surface. As such, it has been so long recognized, and the mechanical and chemical process employed, and the scientific principles on which it is based, are so generally known that it would be vain for a court to decline cognizance of it.” And in Udderzook v. Commonwealth, 76 Pa. 340, 353, it is said that photography “ has become a customary and common mode of taking and preserving views, as well as liknesses of persons, and has obtained universal assent to the correctness of its delineations. We know that its principles are derived from science; that the images on the plate, made by the rays of light through the camera, are dependent on the same general laws which produce the images of outward forms upon the retina through the lenses of the eye. The process has become one in general
The process of X-ray photography is now as well established as a recognized method of securing a reliable representation of the bones of the human body, although they are
It is further objected that there was no evidence as to when the radiograph was taken, and therefore that it does not appear that the bullet, if such it was, occupied the same position in Baker’s body that it did when it first lodged there after being fired from defendant’s revolver. Of course, evidence as to the location of the bullet at a subsequent time would not be material, unless there was some reasonable ground for assuming that its location had not changed in the meantime; but we think that we can properly take judicial notice of the fact that a bullet imbedded in human flesh usually becomes encysted, and does not change its location without external interference; and it seems to us that the probability that the bullet when discovered by means of the radiograph was in the same position that it was when it first lodged in Baker’s body is sufficiently strong to have warranted the jury in taking the information furnished by the radiograph for what it was worth, in their judgment, in determining whether the course of the bullet after entering the body was downward or upward.
It is true that previous statements made by a witness as to a matter of opinion or a conclusion cannot be shown for the purpose of impeachment, although they tend to contradict the inferences which might be drawn from the recital of the facts given in the witness’ examination in chief. People v. Stackhouse, 49 Mich. 76 (13 N. W. 364) ; Saunders v. City & Suburban B. Co., 99 Tenn. 130 (41 S. W. 1031) ; Drake v. State, 29 Tex. App. 265 (15 S. W. 725) ; Welch v. State, 104 Ind. 349 (3 N. E. 850). It is also said properly that the answer solicited by a witness on cross-examination as to collateral matter cannot be contradicted; “ collateral matter ” being defined to be a matter which the cross-examining party would not have been permitted to introduce in evidence as a part of his original case. Hildeburn v. Curran, 65 Pa. 59; Johnston v. Spencer, 51 Neb. 198 (70 N. W. 982); Welch v. State, supra. And of course the prosecution cannot show declarations of a third person which are against the defendant, even though the person who has made such declarations is called as a witness by the defendant. State v. Keefe, 54 Kan. 197 (38 Pac. 302). These cases are relied on, in a. general way, in behalf of appellant, to support the propo
We think there was no error, therefore, in allowing the prosecution to inquire about and prove these prior declarations of Henry Matheson, for he had, in his examination in chief as a witness for the defendant, testified that he did not see his son, .the defendant, take his pistol out of his pocket or aim it at Baker, although he was in a position to have seen such acts on the part of defendant. The whole course of the witness’ testimony had tended to support the contention of defendant thát the revolver was not intentionally fired, and, if his testimony was true, he must have entertained the belief that it was not thus fired, and his previous declaration that the defendant had shot Baker was inconsistent with any such belief. At least, there was such apparent inconsistency as to make it proper to admit the declarations for what they were worth.
6. Assault withintent to . dent: intent: III. The court instructed the jury that the law presumes innocence; that it is incumbent upon the state, in order to sustain a conviction, to prove the guilt of defendant beyond any reasonable doubt, etc.; and that mere weight ox evidence is not sumcient, unless it excludes all reasonable doubt, etc.— and then proceeded to define murder, manslaughter, assault, etc., saying, that malice aforethought might be inferred from the kind of weapon used, and the manner and circumstances attending its use. In another instruction- it is said that “ the law warrants the presumption or inference that a person intends the results or consequences to follow an act .which he intentionally commits which ordinarily do follow such acts,” and that “ if a person makes an assault on another, and inflicts on him an injury of a more serious character than an ordinary battery, the presumption is warranted that he intends to inflict a great bodily injury, if there is no evidence tending to show that he intended a less injury. If you find that defendant committed the assault charged, you will determine his intent in doing so by the surrounding circumstances, and all the evidence in the case before you which tends to show the intent.” A subsequent instruction with reference to accidental shooting was as follows:
*450 It is claimed by tbe defendant that tbe pistol in question, at the time and place in question, was accidentally discharged. An accident may be defined to be an event happening without the concurrence of the will of the person •by whose agency it was caused. If you find from all the facts and circumstances in evidence before you that the pistol in question was discharged by the defendant, and that the said J". C. Baker was shot thereby, and that the discharge of said pistol was without the concurrence of the will of the defendant, then it was an accident, and defendant would not be guilty of any crime. If you fail to so find, then you should" disregard the theory of an accident, and inquire as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, as hereinbefore instructed.
It is to be borne in mind that the theory of the defense was that defendant was innocent of any wrongful intent, and that his revolver was accidentally discharged. This was not a defense by way of justification or excuse, but, if true, it completely negatived the commission of any crime. Yet the court told the jury that, if they failed to find from the evidence that defendant’s pistol was accidentally discharged (that is, without the concurrence of defendant’s will), then they should disregard the theory of an accident, and inquire as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, as already instructed.
Now, it seems to us this instruction was fundamentally wrong. Any evidence bearing on the question whether the defendant intentionally fired the pistol was evidence going to the very essence of the crime. Unless the jury found beyond a reasonable doubt that the pistol was intentionally, and not accidentally, fired, then it would be their duty to acquit; yet they are told, in effect, that, unless they find affirmatively— that is, by a preponderance of evidence — ■ that the pistol was accidentally discharged, they are not to take into account the evidence as to an accident, but are to apply the rule as to presumption of intent from a wrongful act which had been given in preceding instructions. In