109 P. 865 | Or. | 1910
Opinion by
In Ellis v. State, 65 Miss. 44, 48 (3 South. 188: 7 Am. St. Rep. 634), cited by defendant’s counsel, it was held that in order to render a defendant’s confession admissible in evidence, the trial court, if so requested, was required to hear, in the absence of the jury, testimony, and to determine therefrom whether or not the admission of alleged participation in the commission of the crime was voluntarily made. Mr. Justice Arnold, in rendering the decision, says: “After a confession has been admitted by the court, either party has a right to produce before the jury the same evidence which was submitted to the court when it was called upon to decide the question of competency and all other facts and circumstances relevant to the confession, or affecting its weight or credit as evidence; and if it should be made to appear at this point, or any other, during the progress of the trial, that the confession was made under such circumstances as to render it incompetent as evidence, it should be excluded by the court.” In that case no request appears to have been made that the preliminary proof as to the competency of the confession should be received in the absence of the jury. The remark just repeated was there
“Whether evidence is competent to be admitted on the trial of a cause is a question of law which must be determined by the court; and, if it can be possibly avoided, evidence which it is probable may be ruled out, or which is in fact ruled out, should not be heard or discussed in the presence of the jury.”
If the doctrine last quoted is controlling in the case at bar, no error was committed, for the confession was received in evidence, and it is not suggested that the same was not voluntarily made. It is impossible to see how the defendant could have been prejudiced by the action of the court of which he complains. If, in the absence of the jury, the preliminary proof had been received, and, from a consideration thereof, the conclusion had been deduced that the confession was made under such circumstances as to entitle it to be given in evidence, it would have been necessary, if demanded, to repeat the antecedent testimony when the jury were recalled. To facilitate the dispatch of business, the court permitted such testimony to be given but once, and in the hearing of the jury. Its action in this respect as we view it, was a matter of discretion which was not abused, and hence in denying the request no error was committed.
“When a person,” says Mr. Justice Thayer in State v. Murray, 11 Or. 413, 415 (5 Pac. 55, 57), “is charged with the. commission of a crime, he is entitled under the law to interpose as a defense a plea of insanity — that is, an unsoundness of mind, a derangement of intellect — and if it be established upon the trial that the accused, at the time of the commission of the act was laboring under such a defect of reason as not to know that the nature and quality of the act he was doing was wrong, the defense will be made out; but if it appears that the accused, although suffering from mental derangement, had capacity and reason sufficient to enable him to distinguish between right and wrong, as to the particular act he did; that he had a knowledge and consciousness that it was wrong and criminal and would subject him to punishment, the defense will fail.”
The line of demarcation between sanity and insanity is so indistinct, in some instances, that it is difficult accurately to be determined even by a physician. It is also perplexing for a medical expert to explain the extent of mental infirmity, or to elucidate the degree of intellectual strength so that a person unacquainted therewith may gain a correct idea of the capacity or responsibility of a person whose particular act is the subject of judicial inquiry. Thus in Choice v. State, 31 Ga. 424, 466, Mr.
“It is within the discretion of the trial court to admit evidence upon the question of the sanity of the person accused, at the time of committing an offense, and of his acts, conduct, and habits at a subsequent time which would fairly justify any inference of insanity relating back to the time of the alleged offense.”
It was there intimated that the opinion of a nonexpert witness, respecting the mental condition of the defendant on the day after a homicide with which he was charged, could not have prejudiced the accused. In that case the mental infirmity relied upon was attributed to the excessive use of alcoholic liquors. When the intoxication had ceased the person addicted to the habit might not show the symptoms of its use unless it had been long continued. In cases of derangement, however, the indications of the infirmity frequently manifest themselves for some time
An exception having been taken to the court’s refusal to give the following instruction, it is insisted that an error was' committed in denying the request, to wit:
“You are hereby instructed that there is no testimony-herein to warrant a verdict against the defendant of guilty of murder in the first degree, and all question as to his guilt of the crime of murder in the first degree is hereby withdrawn from your consideration.”
The bill of exceptions states, in effect, that no evidence was introduced at the trial tending to show deliberation or premeditation, except the defendant's written confession and oral statements claimed to have been made by him to witnesses who detailed the same, and the evidence of twelve persons whose names are given. The bill of exceptions does not purport to contain all the evidence, and the recital therein, to which attention has been called, does not necessarily disclose the absence of all testimony on the subject mentioned.
Believing that the defendant had a fair and impartial trial and was justly convicted of an atrocious crime, the judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.