49 P. 964 | Or. | 1897
delivered the opinion.
The defendant was convicted of having committed the crime of murder in the first degree by killing one Joseph Benjamin Mache, whose wife and son, named respectively Mary E. Mache and Benjamin Mache, Jr., he also killed at the same time. The bodies of the latter had each a gunshot wound thereon of a nature to produce death almost instantly, and upon the body of Joseph Benjamin Mache there were found three gunshot wounds and a fracture of the skull, as to which latter there is some uncertainty touching the cause that produced
Other evidence shows that the body of Ben Mache, Jr. was found 310 feet distant from the shed, and the bodies of Joseph Benjamin and his wife 420 feet from the same point, and that the shooting was done with a Winchester rifle. Three exploded shells were found at the shed, and two within six or eight feet of the sleigh. The court
It is contended that the jury might have been misled by the court’s use of the term “confession,” that it was erroneously employed as synonymous with the word “admission,” and that under the testimony it was inapplicable and misleading, and hence there was no warrant of law for its employment in the instruction. It has been decided by this court that the word “ confession ” is not a synonym of “admission”: State v. Heidenreich, 29 Or. 381 (45 Pac. 755). Mr. Greenleaf has indicated
From these authorities we take it that the admission of a fact, or of a bundle of facts, from which guilt is directly deducible, or which within and of themselves import guilt, may be denominated a confession, but not so with the admission of a particular act or acts or circumstances which may or may not involve guilt, and which is dependent for such result upon other facts or circumstances to be established. Of the latter character were the admissions in the Heidenreich case. The defendant
Upon the trial, certain clothing of Ben Mache, Jr., and Mrs. Mache was offered in evidence by the prosecution for the purpose of locating and determining the direction of gunshot wounds upon their persons, to which objection was interposed upon the grounds — first, that it was not identified; and, second, that it was incompetent to introduce the clothing of the son and wife on a charge of killing Joseph Benjamin Mache. The bodies were all shown to have been buried in the clothing worn at the time of homicide, except that the overcoat of Benjamin Mache, Jr., was removed, and this garment was not offered. Some twenty-two days after the burial, the bodies were exhumed for the purpose of examination by the coroner, and it was then that the clothing was removed, under the direction of that officer. Thenceforward it was disposed of under the direction of himself and other officers, and when produced at the trial was identified as that removed from the exhumed bodies. Under these circumstances the objection was properly overruled, tested by the first ground therefor. Nor is the objection tenable upon the other ground. The killing of the three persons took place in close proximity with one another, and constituted a series of events of but one and the same transac
The defendant called as a witness in his behalf William Hansaker, who testified, in substance: That he went to the Mache place, and stayed all night with Rockwood; that Mr. Mache, the old gentleman, had been to the valley that day, and told him that he' had a few words with Porter; that he was talking to him about losing a cow or heifer; that he had asked Porter if he had found her yet, and, Porter having answered in the negative, that Mache said to him, “I guess you damn lie; you never lose
The instructions of the court touching the question were fully as favorable to the defendant as he could ask. Among other things, the court instructed the jury as follows: “ Under the statute of this str.te, a defendant in a criminal action is permitted to be a witness in his own behalf, and the jury are to be the exclusive judges of the weight and credibility to be given his testimony.” Exceptions were taken to the use of the word “permitted,” the defendant having the absolute right to testify in his own behalf. No question is made but that such was his
Again, the court instructed the jury, touching the law of self-defense, that the danger “ must, be absolute, imminent, and unavoidable, or the defendant must, from all the circumstances, have honestly believed it to be so”; and it is claimed that it was error for the court to tell the jury that the danger “ must be absolute, imminent, and unavoidable.” This expression was, however, coupled, and very properly so, with the alternative expression above quoted, which, with other language used in the same connection, intelligently informed the jury that the defendant might also have acted upon appearances if they were such, under the circumstances and surroundings, as to reasonably imbue his mind with the belief or apprehension that it was necessary to act as he did in order to avert the impending assault upon him, whether actual or apparent. The explanation was full, and the jury could not have been misled • by the language complained of, and error cannot be predicated upon said instruction.
Touching upon the effect of good character as a fact proven in the case, the court instructed the jury as follows: “ The defendant in this case has offered evidence tending to show his character as a peaceable, law-abiding citizen. The defendant has a right to show his previous good character as a circumstance tending to show the improbability of
Another objection is made and exception saved to the court’s instruction to the effect that the homicide of the three Maches was all one transac. tion. If it be conceded that the instruction was wrong, as a matter of law, under the facts as they really existed, it could not have injured the defendant, as he based his defense upon the theory that Ben Mache, Jr., assaulted him first, and that in resisting the assault the old gentleman was killed unitentionally, his death resulting from a continuous transaction commencing with the assault of the young man upon the accused. So that the instruction was in strict accord with his line of defense, and of this he cannot complain. These considerations affirm the judgment of the court below.
Affirmed.