85 Me. 252 | Me. | 1893
The defendant took exceptions to certain portions of the charge to the jury on the ground that the language employed was in contravention of the statute which prohibits the presiding judge from expressing "an opinion upon issues of fact arising in the case.” (R. S., c. 82, § 83.)
The assault appears to have been committed about two o’clock in the morning, and the proof of the defendant’s identity with the perpetrator of the crime consisted mainly of circumstantial evidence. The complainant stated that she recognized the defendant by his voice at the time of the assault, and twro witnesses testified that, in the light of the early morning, they followed a man’s tracks from the place of the assault across a public street and several dooryards to a stable where the defendant was found asleep soiled with mud. The defendant denies the possibility of tracing footsteps through that part of thé town, and claimed that he was on the street intoxicated at an earlier hour, and being assaulted and thrown to the ground by two men, at another point in the street, fled to the stable and fell asleep. Several witnesses for the defendant testified that the complainant stated to them that, before the defendant was found in the stable covered with mud, she did not know' who assaulted her.
After instructing the jury that the presumption of defendant’s innocence must be overcome by testimony which should convince them of his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, the presiding judge proceeded to explain the nature and operation of circumstantial evidence, closing as follows : "Now, if you have an impression that circumstantial evidence is necessarily inconclusive and imperfect, I instruct you that its convincing power, like that of any other testimony, depends upon its character. Do the circumstances all concur not only to show the guilt of the prisoner, but are they all inconsistent with any other rational conclusion? A single circumstance may or may not have force in proving guilt. Jurors must avoid being carried away by the impulses of hastily formed conclusions and slight suspicions arising from independent, isolated facts, and weigh every circumstance proven in connection with all the other circumstances ; and if they are found all consistent with each other, all
“ If circumstances lead me I will find WRere truth is hid,”
says Shakespeare. The conclusion may follow necessarily from the proof of the circumstances, or may be deduced by a process of comparison and special inference. In the latter case the result is affirmatively reached in the first instance by means of the probabilities arising from the established facts examined in the light of the general experience and observation of mankind. But before it is deemed sufficient to warrant conviction in a criminal case, its accuracy and soundness must be negatively tested by inquiring whetherit excludes every other hypothesis than that of
The objection next urged is to the instruction that in weighing testimony the jury " are not of course to take into consideration the mere fact of numbers as being conclusive, . . . but rather the character of the witnesses as they exhibit themselves to you upon the stand, the consistency of their statements, the human probabilities and the natural course of events.” These were also, general remarks intended to remind the jury that it was their province to determine the credibility of witnesses and the force of testimony, and that in so doing they were not compelled to prefer physical weight to moral power. It has already been seen that "probability” is the great source of belief and basis of judgment in all investigations of fact. But it is apparent without discussion that the considerations here suggested by the judge were purely of an elementary and axiomatic character, and altogether unobjectionable. Sweetser v. Lowell, 33 Maine, 449.
Again, it is insisted that the following sentence from the charge is an invasion of the province of the jury, viz: "The complainant has given you her statement of the circumstances as she remembers them, and, of course, in a case like this her statements are of the utmost importance.” If this remark had comprised all the comments made by the judge on the statement of the complainant, it might have been understood by the jury as an intimation of opinion on the weight to be given to her testimony. But this is only a single sentence selected from many in the charge respecting the conflict between the testimony of the complainant and the witnesses for the defendant. The "issue of fact” thus raised was elsewhere clearly
Finally the defendant complains that the following sentence : " Here are circumstances which finally led to the finding of the party who stands here accused,” states as an established fact what the defendant had uniformly denied. But it is evident from the context that this reference to "circumstances” had a broader scope than that ascribed to it by the defendant and embraced other incidents and conditions besides the alleged tracks leading to the stable. The feasibility of following the tracks to the stable and all questions arising from the discovery of the defendant after the assault were properly left to the determination of the jury; and if, in this sentence the judge inadvertently assumed as proved any fact which had been the subject of controversy, it was here again the duty of counsel to request the court to rectify the mistake before the jury retired.
The other parts of the charge, the exceptions to which have not been urged, clearly fall within the principles and considerations above stated. It is, therefore, the opinion of the court that the charge contains nothing which can fairly be deemed an infringement of the statute prohibition. State v. Rollins, 77 Maine, pp. 383-4.
Exceptions overnded.