43 Minn. 385 | Minn. | 1890
The defendant was indicted, tried, and convicted of the erime of bigamy. The case comes here on a bill of exceptions which does not purport to contain all the evidence. The rulings of court in admitting certain evidence, and in certain parts of its charge to the jury, are here assigned as error. The state introduced evidence sufficient to prove the defendant’s first marriage, in Sweden,
The charge of the court assigned as error was as follows: “There is a presumption that a person living at a certain time continues to live until the contrary appears; that is, when the life is once shown, it is presumed to continue until it shown to have ended. That presumption may be stronger or weaker according to the circumstances -of any particular case. It is not a conclusive presumption, but it is .-a presumption which the jury is warranted in drawing from the fact of life being shown that life continues until it otherwise appears.” 'The court, however, explicitly charged the jury that the defendant was presumed to be innocent until his guilt was established beyond reasonable doubt, and that his guilt, and all the facts necessary to convict him of the crime, must be established beyond a reasonable doubt; and that among the facts of which the jury must be convinced beyond reasonable doubt, in order to convict, was the fact that his first ivife was living at the time of his second marriage. The jury were also instructed that they were to take all the circumstances into consideration in determin
It seems to us that neither of these views is correct. The statutory presumption, in certain cases, of death after seven years affords-no ground for the converse proposition that, if the person has been heard from within seven years, there is a presumption of law that he is still living. Neither is it true that there is any presumption of law one way or the other as to the continuance of life. It is a mere presumption of fact, which is subject to be controlled by facts and circumstances, and consequently by no means of equal strength at-all times, and under all circumstances; or, perhaps, more correctly speaking, there is no rigid presumption one way or the other. The evidence that a person was living at a particular time is but .one of the facts to be considered in determining the question whether he was living at any future given time, and which is to be considered with
It is usual to say, as did the trial judge in this case, that if a person is proved to have been alive at a given time, less than seven years before, there is a presumption, more or less strong according to circumstances, that he is still living, unless the contrary appears. This is but.another way of saying, what would perhaps be a more precise statement of the proposition, that it is a fact from which the existence of the other fact may be inferred or deemed proved. This is, we think, in effect what the court’s charge, when considered as a whole, amounted to. As the record does not purport to contain all the. evidence, we do not know what, if any, facts or circumstances were shown bearing upon the probability of the continuance of the life of the former wife, or indeed whether or not there was any direct, evidence that she was living at the date of the second marriage.
It follows from what has been said that defendant’s third request to charge was properly refused, and that it does not appear that there was any error in refusing the second. The first was fully covered by the general charge.
Order affirmed.
Vanderburgh, J., was absent and took no part in this case.