77 Vt. 80 | Vt. | 1904
/The respondents were charged-; .with having killed with poison two colts belonging to a neighbor y^They were tried together and convicted and the case is here upon exceptions taken during the course of the trial.
Upon the part of the State a story was developed substantially as follows p/In the small village of Bast Arlington lived Sanford Hicks and his wife, occupying a house upon the street. On the same premises was a barn in which Blair, who lived near by, kept the colts under an arrangement with .Hicks. In the same village lived Sargood, one of the respondents. The other respondent, Doyle, was in and about the village more or less. Sargood was ambitious to get the Hicks place and turn it into1 a hotel where he might sell liquors under a license to be procured from the authorities. He had succeeded in his negotiations so far as Hicks himself was concerned, but had found his plan blocked by Mrs. Hicks, whose consent was necessary and could not be obtained.y/Sargood had been selling liquor to' Blair in violation of law, and believed, as he expressed it, that “Blair had gone back on him,'” and so1 he was bent on “getting even with Blair.” Doyle had no apparent interest in Sargood’s plan in respect to the Hicks house, and no ill will against Blair. He was friendly to Sargood and not unwilling to1 please him. On the third day of April, in the afternoon, Blair discovered that his- colts were sick; the next day they were worse and were found to- have been poisoned with paris green, some of which remained in their feed boxes. They died the morning of the next day, which was Sunday, the fifth. Detectives were employed and some time later procured an admission from Doyle, while he was in liquor, that the poiso/iing had been done by him at the instigation of Sargood. Very soon after the colts were poisoned Sargood attempted to' direct suspicion towards Mrs.
One of the chief exceptions is that which was taken to the admission of any and all evidence touching the attempted poisoning of the Hickses. This evidence, it is urged, was irrelevant as tending to establish a distinct crime unconnected with the one charged. On the other hand it is claimed by the State to be relevant as tending to establish a motive for the crime charged and to- identify Sargood as the criminal. It is all a question of relevancy. That the accused has committed another crime is usually irrelevant. It is relevant only when it tends to prove that he committed the crime charged. It does tend to' prove that he committed the crime charged when it tends to prove that he was actuated by a motive, or enter
Webb, the father-in-law of' Blair, had testified to requesting Sargood, in October, 1902, not to sell Blair any more liquor, and to Sargood’s replying with an oath that he would get even with Blair for having gone back on him. After-wards Blair was allowed to testify that more than once in the fall of 1902 Sargood had furnished him. liquor; it being conceded that Sargood had no. authority to sell. This testimony of Blair’s came in against exception, and under that exception it is now urged that it did not appear that the furnishing was before the conversation testified to by Webb. The exceptions as amended, however, make it clear, especially in view of the argument which took .place in the court below, that the offer was to show that Sargood “had been letting Blair have intoxicating liquor,” that is to say, had been letting him have it before the time of the Webb-Sargood conversation. That was the offer upon which the court passed. The evidence as given was
In the July following the April in which the colts were poisoned, Doyle had offered Blair a drink of whiskey out of a bottle. Blair had asked him where he got it and he had replied, “Of Sargood.” Blair then expressed his surprise that he could get it of him; whereupon.Doyle said, “I can get what I want of Sargood; he dare not refuse me anything.” Sargood had no authority to- sell whiskey at that time. This evidence was admitted as against Doyle alone over the exception of both respondents. We think it was admissible as having some tendency to show that Doyle was the one who did the poisoning for Sargood, if the jury should find, as they might upon other testimony, that Sargood was at the bottom of the business. Evidence admissible against one only of the respondents was in this and other instances properly received, its use by the jury being duly guarded and restricted by the court. State v. Cram, 67 Vt. 650, 32 Atl. 502.
Among- the dishes on the table in the Hicks kitchen was a tumbler containing poison, and the evidence tended to show that the tumbler, which was of an unusual pattern, was like others which Sargood had in his house. Sargood’s wife was offered as a witness by both respondents to- show that there had been no such tumbler in her husband’s house. She was excluded as incompetent. The evidence of the State did not tend to- connect Doyle with the attempted poisoning of the Hickses; still, any evidence which tended to show that Sargood had no hand in poisoning the colts would- have helped Doyle, because the theory was that Doyle was only a tool, having no personal hostility to Blair; so we cannot agree with
For similar reasons the wife of Doyle was properly excluded.
The offer to show that on a certain occasion Mrs. Hicks drank and gave Doyle to drink of whiskey was properly excluded as immaterial. We do not state the point more fully because it is a mere question of connection and furnishes no illustration of the law that could be useful hereafter. The' same reason leads us to dispose of another exception in the same way, namely, that which was taken to the exclusion of the offer to show that Mrs. Hicks before her marriage ter Mr. Hicks had sometime complained of him to a justice of the peace.
The exception to the action of the Court in permitting the State, upon re-examination of O’Brien, to clear up- a point in his testimony which respondents’ counsel had thrown into momentary confusion upon cross-examination, need not claim our attention further than to remark that the question presented by the respondents’ brief is not the question presented by the bill of exceptions.
The position of the respondents now is that the jury was told that there was evidence upon which it might convict Doyle alone and evidence upon which it might convict Sargood alone, and that it was left at liberty to convict the two jointly upon this evidence which tended to show each guilty independently of the other. The answer of the State is that the charge was a virtual compliance with the request. The request was not expressly complied with. In no part of .the charge was the jury explicitly told that it could not convict both respondents in the absence of proof of a common understanding. The only part of the charge that deals with the subject of a joint conviction proceeds upon the theory, already
The respondents excepted to what the court said in its charge “about the testimony of the respondents before the gran-d jury, and its effect if they testified differently there from what they did on this trial.” What the court said upon this subject is contained in two separate paragraphs and in substance was that if either of them testified differently there from what he did before the petit jury, it impeached him as a witness, affected his credit, to- some extent, (how much, the jury was to say) and also constituted a piece of evidence in the nature of an admission that the fact was as then stated
The court was requested to charge that Doyle could not be convicted merely upon the evidence of his own admission made to the detective, if Doyle was intoxicated and the intoxication was procured by the detective for the purpose of getting the admission. The request was properly refused, the court charging fully and correctly touching the necessity of the admission being understanding^ made, which was the only legal importance attending the question of intoxication.
Judgment that there is no1 error in the proceedings of the County CourtJ and that the respondents take nothing by their exceptions. Let a mittimus issue and execution be done.