No. 309 | La. | Oct 15, 1891

(The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

The defendant is appellant from a conviction of the crime of murder without capital punishment, and a sentence to lifetime imprisonment in the State penitentiary, relying on three bills of exception.

L

The first bill of exceptions relates to the alleged illegal reception on the part of the prosecution of proof of previous threats made by the accused against the deceased.

The judge states that the witness said he heard the beginning of the conversation and could repeat the substance of it; that he said that he left the parties standing together, but did not know what they said after he left them; that he further said “that Maria Roan walked up to where the accused and others were standing and asked: ‘ Have you heard the lies George Sikes (deceased) told on his wife?’ Defendant said yes, and if he owned it to him to-day £ I’ll shoot the top of his head off.’ ”

The objection urged by defendant’s counsel was, that the witness was not able to repeat the entire conversation, and that it was not competent for the court to admit an isolated phrase or part of a conversation; that the accused was entitled to have the whole of it, or to have the whole excluded from the jury.

The objection is grounded on a general and well-recognioed rule of evidence, but we are of opinion that the language quoted by the judge, as the testimony of the witness, constitutes a distinct threat which was admissible, and that was the sole object of the District Attorney introducing the evidence. It may be true that much more may have been said in the course of the conversation between the *1005accused and the persons mentioned by Maria Roan- upon different topics, which she did not hear. That is immaterial. But if more was said on the same subject, it was the duty of defendant’s counsel to have introduced those other persons and proved that fact and not left it open to inference. We regard the testimony competent.

II.

The second bill relates to the rejection of parol proof of the purport and substance of the testimony of certain absent witness, who, since the former trial of this cause, have permanently removed from the State.

The objection urged to the competency of the proffered testimony is that it is hearsay evidence. While it is true that Greenleaf lays down the general proposition that the testimony of deceased persons given in a former trial, between the same parties, may be proven by other persons who were present, and who may testify - from their recollection of what it was; and that the same author says, 1 ‘ it is also receivable, if the witness, though not dead, is out of the jurisdiction of the court, or can not be found after diligent search, or is insane, or sick and unable to testify,” etc. (1 Gif., See. 168) ; and that “ in all cases when the party has, without fault or concurrence, irrevocably lost power of producing the witness again, whether from physical or legal causes, he may .offer the secondary evidence of what he testified in the former trial.” Id., Sec. 168. Yet this rule — possibly, a ferfectly safe one in civil cases — can not with propriety, in our opinion, be extended to criminal trials. We are aware of no case in our jurisprudence in which this has been done.

Mr. Bishop, after discussing the question very exhaustively, and citing a number of English cases and precedents, says:

“This principle applies, not only to these formal depositions, but likewise to the evidence of what a witness testified to orally at a previous trial. It moreover prevails, not only in civil cases, but in criminal; and,.in general, in the United States as well as in England, * * * But the admission of the evidence is limited, or nearly so, to the ease in which the witness is deceased; and in this case, it is the general American doctrine to receive equally the deposition taken, as before mentioned, and evidence of the formal oral testimony. * * * But when the witness is * * * merely in another *1006State, or otherwise beyond the power of the court, this is not sufficient.” 1 Bishop, Crim. Prac., Sec. 1098, 2d Ed.; Ibid, Secs. 1149 and 1195, 3d Ed.

We think this is the safe and conservative doctrine, and, while operating injuriously in exceptional cases, it will operate as a mutual safeguard to the State and accused persons generally. But it is proper to observe that this expression of opinion is limited to the sole question of the reproduction, by this means, of the parol evidence of absentees, and,'on this ground, we approve of the judge’s ruling as correct.

III.

The third bill of exceptions relates to the judge’s declination of the motion of the defendant for a new trial.

As it relates exclusively to the sufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, the allowance vel non by the district judge of a new trial is a question that is addressed to his sound legal discretion, and with which this court can not deal.

Judgment affirmed.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.