74 P. 1114 | Kan. | 1904
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On the night of July 5, 1902, while Maud Holmes was in her chamber preparing to retire, a gun was fired near the house, a charge of shot from which passed through a screen window near which she was standing, striking her head, neck, and breast, and inflicting serious wounds. She was a young unmarried woman who lived on a farm with the other members of the Holmes family, consisting of her father, mother, and sister, all of whom were in the house when the shooting occurred. No one was seen to fire the gun and who did it was, for some time at .least, a puzzling problem. Attention was finally directed toward A. B. Ryno, who resided in another neighborhood about three miles distant from the Holmes place. He was about fifty years of age, married and having a family of five children, the youngest of whom was sixteen years of age.
It appears that in January, 1901, some, one representing himself to be George R. Clark wrote to Maud
There were submitted to this witness a large number of letters and other writings, and he made a comparison between them and other writings admitted or proved to be genuine. His testimony was therefore necessarily quite extended. It was competent to in
Complaint is also made pf the use of certain writings not acknowledged to be in the handwriting of defendant, as standards of comparison. Some of these were admitted to be genuine, but a larger number were only shown by the testimony of the state to be the handwriting of the defendant. Among the papers so used were the recognizances in the case, as well as school orders, agreements and leases which witnesses saw the defendant sign. There were other writings upon which defendant had acted, or which he acknowledged to witnesses to be his own, or which were shown by testimony to be his. There was practically no dispute in the testimony as to the genuineness of these
The recent case of The State v. Stegman, 62 Kan. 476, 63 Pac. 746, was a prosecution for the forgery of a bond purporting to be the act of another, and involved the point whether the standards of comparison used by experts called as witnesses must be admitted to be genuine, or can be proven to have been written by the party. It was there held, that “a writing clearly proved to be genuine, and- about which there is no dispute in the evidence, may be used as a basis for comparison of handwritings and to show that a certain other writing with which it is compared is not genuine.” (See, also, Macomber v. Scott, 10 Kan. 335; Joseph v. National Bank, 17 id. 256; The State v. Zimmerman, 47 id. 242, 27 Pac. 999; Gaunt v. Harkness, 53 id. 405, 36 Pac. 739, 42 Am. St. Rep. 297.)
Error is assigned on the refusal of the court to instruct the jury that defendant was not on trial for the writing of letters to Maud Holmes, and that the letters could not be considered for any purpose except as they might throw light on the motive of the defendant. This instruction was properly refused. In the first place, it was unnecessary for the court to name any offenses or charges for which the defendant was not on trial. The court did clearly define the offense with which the defendant was charged and for which he was on trial, and did direct the application of the testimony to that charge. In the second place, the letters were receivable for other purposes than the mere motive of the defendant. They tended to establish the identity of the author of . the letters, as well as the connection of the defendant with the
Exception was taken to the refusal of the court to give the following instruction :
While this request was not allowed, the court did not overlook the individual'duties and responsibilities' of the jurors. In one of the instructions given they were told that “the burden is upon the state to prove by competent evidence every essential element of the crime charged, to the satisfaction of each and every juror, beyond a reasonable doubt.” This was a sufficient admonition that each juror might act upon his own judgment, and each'should be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that every element of the offense had been proved, and unless it was so proved there could be no conviction.
If is argued that this rule of individual responsibility should have been applied to the matter of alibi. It is- not necessary, nor wodld it be proper, for the court to make special application of the rule of individual right and duty of each juror to every branch and feature of the case. When the rule 'has been stated’ to the jury, and applied generally’ to every phase of the cáse and every ifigredient of the offense, the purpose of the law has been subserved. There was no request for a special -and distinct declaration
There is criticism of the instruction as to circumstantial evidence, but we think it a fair statement of law as applied to the facts in this case, and that noth-, ing in it could have misled the jury.
In connection with the letters themselves are the admissions made by him at the time of his visit, that he was the George R. Clark who had written the preceding letters, and he was fully identified as the defendant ; the vindictive feeling exhibited toward a young man who was paying special attention to Maud, including an attempt to blacken his reputation and discredit him with the Holmes family ; his ill will toward Maud herself, and intimations of a coming tragedy when his plans were thwarted; his prowling about the house where Maud lived, in the night-time, and his attempted assault upon her which was interrupted; the poisoning of the dog, so that he might go to the Holmes place without interference ; the tracks such as his shoes would make, which were traced from the Holmes place to his farm ; the wadding of the gun found after the shooting which corresponded with some used by the defendant ; and the indications, too, that the shot was fired from such a gun as he-had. These facts and circumstances, together with matters not enumerated, furnish sufficient support for the verdict.
All the objections made have not been mentioned, but all have been examined, and we find nothing in them disclosing prejudicial error.
The judgment will therefore be affirmed.