58 Kan. 783 | Kan. | 1897
This is an appeal from a sentence of conviction for robbery. Just after dark on the twenty-third of February, 1897, two masked men entered the house of Jacob Willems, a farmer residing in the northeastern part of Reno County, and robbed
The defendants objected to the introduction of the envelope because incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and because it had not been connected with either of them by proof of their ownership or possession of it, nor by proof of their handwriting upon it. These
A robbery having been committed, and the defendants being charged with its commission, proof of the fact that they were in the vicinity where it occurred was, of course, logically pertinent. Pieces of paper were found at a point a few miles from the scene of the crime. When they were put together, the name of one of the defendants and his post-office appeared addressed thereon, and the return-card of the other defendant likewise appeared on it. No evidence was offered showing that the defendant to whom the envelope was addressed had ever had it in his possession, nor was any evidence offered tending to show that the other defendant addressed the envelope to him, or that the two defendants were, or ever had been, in correspondence with each other. The jury, however, were
"The facts alleged as the basis of any legal inference must be clearly proved, and indubitably connected with the factum probandum. . . . No weight, therefore, must he attached to circumstances which, however they may excite conjecture, do not warrant belief. Occurrences may he mysterious and justify vehement suspicion, and yet the supposed connection between them may be but imaginary, and their coexistence indicative of accidental occurrence merely, and not of mutual correlation. . . . Every circumstance, therefore, which is not clearly shown to be really connected as its correlative with the hypothesis it is supposed to support, must be rejected from the judicial balance; in other words, it must be distinctly established that there exists between the factum probandum and the facts which are adduced in proof of it, a real connection, either evident and necessary, or so highly probable as to admit of no other reasonable explanation.” Wills Circumstantial Evidence, 178, 174.
" The fact that an unanswered letter or other paper is found in the custody of a party, but not acknowledged by him, is not ground for the admission of the-paper as evidence against him. Were it admitted, an. innocent man might, by the artifice of others, be* charged with a prima facie case of guilt which he might find it difficult to repel.” Wharton’s Criminal Evidence, § 682.
*788 “ In a portmanteau, not proved to belong to the prisoner on trial, was found a paper folded like a letter, and containing in the inside what purported to be an inventory of goods pawned at different times. The inventory was not in the prisoner’s handwriting ; but on the outside of the paper his name, and the word ‘ private,’ both in his handwriting, were indorsed. It was ruled that the contents of the paper were not admissible against him.” Reg. v. Hare, 3 Cox C. C. 247.
“A letter found on the person of the defendant when arrested for robbery, containing damaging statements and warnings to keep out of reach of the officers, and identified by a witness as having been written by him to defendant, is inadmissible in the absence of evidence that defendant answered it, or acted on the information contained therein.” People v. Colburn, 38 Pac. Rep. (Cal.) 1105.
Other claims of error are made. We have examined them but do not find any of them well founded. For the error pointed out, however, the sentence of conviction is reversed, and a new trial 'ordered.