53 Iowa 310 | Iowa | 1880
Lead Opinion
I. Jacob Odentbal was tbe uncle of the defendant. On tbe morning of the 2d of July, 1878, tbe dead body of Odentbal was found. lying in a road about one mile
It was claimed by the State upon the trial that defendant murdered the deceased in the house where they lived, and that upon the night before the body was found he placed it upon a horse and walked along side the horse through a gate and field, leaving the tracks of his shoes beside the horse’s tracks, and that he thus walked and kept the body in position upon the horse, to near the place where it was found, and that he there left the • body, the horse, -saddle, etc., to create the impression that the deceased was killed accidentally, by falling from his horse, or otherwise.
The claim made by the defendant was that the deceased took his horse on the evening before his dead body was found, and rode away after dark, and that was the last he saw of him alive.
There are many other circumstances found-in the evidence which bear upon the issue, such as the finding of an ax upon the premises stained with blood, and what appeared to be bloody spots upon the wall of a room in the house, and upon
• Andrew Bahl, a witness for the State, was one among the first persons who was present when the body of'the deceased wag found. He testified that certain shoe-tracks were found near the body, and in the line where there "were indications that the body had been dragged; that the tracks had marks of coarse nails in them; that defendant had coarse nails on each side of his shoes. A short time after the body was found the defendant was arrested, and taken to where it lay. The witness proceeded with his testimony as follows: “I saw defendant’s tracks made when brought by constable; was same track, in my opinion, as one made at body. Int. In appearance? Ans. In appearance made by the same shoe, whether it was made by the same person I can’t tell.”
This testimony was objected to because it was the opinion of the witness upon a question in which such opinion was not admissible. The witness may have been unfortunate in the use of the word “ opinion.” But taking what follows it is clear that he intended, in all that he said upon the subject, to say just what he did say in answer to the interrogatory, that in appearance the tracks were made by the same shoe. He evidently intended to say that in his judgment the tracks appeared to have been alike, or made by the same shoe. It is always allowable for a witness to describe the aj>pearance of an object or thing when material, as that a person appeared excited, or amused, or intoxicated or the like, and yet in a certain sense this is an opinion. But it is not an opinion so distinct from a fact as to be inadmissible.
This question was not objectionable. The witness had testified that there “was nails printed into the mud around the outside of the soles.” Taken in connection with what preceded the question, it was not leading, it merely asked whether the impression of the tracks were “ distinct or otherwise.” "We have examined the other objections made to leading questions, and, without setting them out in detail, will say that we find nothing therein which seems to us to be prejudicial to the defendant, nor an abuse of the discretion of the court. The jiermission to ask leading questions is a matter resting in the sound discretion of the court, which cannot be urged as error unless it be shown that there was
Objections were made to the refusal of the court to allow tbe defendant to prove bis statements and declarations made at tbe place where the body was found, and to allowing him to show that the tracks found in the field, in connection with the tracks of a horse, were found by reason of information given by defendant. The reason for the exclusion of this evidence is apparant. They were declarations of defendant in his own behalf, and were not admissible unless they were a part of a conversation drawn out by the State. It does not appear that they were.
Perhaps the statements made by the deceased to the witness, without more, would have been objectionable; but that
A large number of other questions are made upon the admission and exclusion of evidence. We have discussed those which seem to us to demand special mention, and have examined with care all the others, and conclude that no right of the defendant was prejudiced by the admission or exclusion of any of the evidence. We cannot take the time nor space to demonstrate the correctness of our conclusion, and must pass to a consideration of what are claimed to be errors in the insE actions given by the court to the jury.
VII. The defendant was examined as a witness in his own behalf, and the fourth instruction is as follows: “In criminal cases the law allows a defendant to testify, his evidence, however, is to be taken into consideration by you in connection-with the fact that he is the defendant, and charged with the crime, and while for that reason alone you are not to disregard it, yet the fact that he is testifying in his own behalf should be considered by you, and with that and the statement of the defendant as compared with the other evidence.” We confess to our inability to understand the closing part of this instruction; but takinght all together it amounts to no more than saying to the jury that the fact that the defendant was a party was proper to be taken into consideration by them as affecting his credibility as a witness; this was proper. “ Facts which have heretofore caused the exclusion of testimony may still be shown for the purpose of lessening its credibility.” Code, § 3631.
VIII. The court directed the jury that they might take into consideration all of the acts and conduct of the defendant as to his concealment or non-concealment of the crime, or of his not malting known or malting known the absence of the deceased, and that if the defendant had given unreasonable and contradictory statements in regard to the case they are to be considered in determining the case. It is urged that these instructions were not warranted by any evidence in
IX. In the fifteenth instruction it is said that “the use of a deadly weapon and several fractures on different portions of the slcull produced by blows, these if shown by the evidence would be prima facie evidence that the defendant intended it.” This is objected to because it assumes that the defendant inflicted the blows; it is not vulnerable to that objection; it is but a single sentence taken from an instruction of two pages. The instruction gives the rule as to the consequences of an act done, as that a person who does an act willfully necessarily intends the natural and probable consequences thereof, and that if the jury find from the evidence that the defendant with an ax, or with some other deadly' weapon, inflicted upon the head of Odenthal wounds of which he died, and the use of a deadly weapon and several fractures there, if shown, would be prima faeie evidence that the “defendant intended it,” that is, intended the consequences of his acts.
X. At the conclusion of the sixteenth instruction it is said that “ if the defendant killed the deceased in a fight suddenly and without premeditation or malice it would be manslaughter, but the fact reducing it to manslaughter, as done in a fight, must appear in the evidence, and cannot be presumed by the jury in the absence of any evidence showing it.” It is argued that this clause of the instruction is erroneous, because the jury was thereby led to believe that it required direct, pointed and a higher kind of evidence to' reduce the crime to manslaughter than to murder in the second degree.
We have examined the whole record with care, and find no prejudicial error in it. Indeed, it is seldom that an important cause is presented to us which is as free from irregularity, not to say error, as we find this to be. It is a case of circumstantial evidence it is true, but we believe the proven circumstances point to the defendant as being guilty of the crime charged with that certainty and conclusiveness Avhich leave no reasonable doubt upon the mind.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I think that Bahl should not have been allowed to testify as to the complaint made to him by the deceased that the defendant had threatened to kill him.