65 Conn. 93 | Conn. | 1894
The defendant was bound over to the Superior Court by the City Court of New Haven, upon complaint of the city attorney charging him with the crime of assault with intent to murder, and tried to the jury and convicted in the Superior Court on that complaint. This appeal is from the judgment on that verdict. The appeal asks a new trial for alleged errors in the rulings of the Superior Court relating to the admission of testimony.
The person assaulted was one Grace Phillips, who lived with her father and mother by adoption, in a house having a basement, the entrance to which is in the rear, the entrance to the floor above being from the street, and above this floor is an attic in which Grace slept. The assault was made at half after eight o’clock in the evening, Grace then being in bed. There was no other person in the house. The assailant entered at the basement door and went upstairs to the attic, where Grace was in bed. Immediately upon entering the attic he beat her on the head, gave her two or three violent blows, and with a sharp instrument, which the State claimed to have been a razor, cut a deep gash on her face and another on the right side of her neck, barely escaping penetration of the jugular vein. The night was dark, and Grace could not identify the assailant; she screamed, and he ran out of the room, down the stairs, and escaped by the basement door. Grace got to the window as soon as she could, opened it and screamed. Police officer Kerr was near by, heard the screams, and came towards the house, where he saw Grace at the window. He went into the house and up to the attic, lit a light and saw Grace
The main error assigned relates to the proof of these facts. Kerr was called as a witness and testified to the declaration of Hodge: “ The girl says she found the glove in the bed and handed it to me.” The defendant objected, and the court overruled the objection.
The court erred in admitting this declaration. It was hearsay evidence, and did not come within any exception to the rule excluding such evidence. The claim of the State, that the declaration was admissible as a part of the res gestee is not supported by the facts. Hodge’s declaration is plainly no part of the res gestee; and even if the declaration of Grace could be treated as a part of the transaction to be proved, it should have been proved by the direct testimony of Hodge, and not by the hearsay testimony of Kerr.
But we do not think this error is sufficient ground for a new trial, in view of the circumstances of this case appearing in the record. The only facts that the declaration of Hodge tended to prove were that Grace found the glove in the bed, and handed it to Hodge. It appears in the record that these facts were subsequently fully proved by direct testimony; that Grace testified to finding the glove on the bed; that Hodge testified that Grace while sitting on the bed handed the glove to him, and that he handed it to Kerr, and that there was no claim by the defense that the glove exhibited at the trial was not the one found by Grace on the bed. We fail to see how the erroneous admission of the declaration of Hodge could in any way have added to the force of the testimony of Hodge, Grace and Kerr, which
The other rulings complained of relate to the exercise of discretion by the court in controlling the examination of witnesses by counsel, and to the determination of the materiality of evidence admitted and excluded. The finding of facts details at considerable leugth the facts claimed to have been proved by the State and by the defense, and portions of the testimony. We are satisfied that under the well settled and familiar rules of evidence, there is nothing substantial in the errors alleged, and a brief statement of the objections will be sufficient to show that the court did not err in the exercise of its discretion, and that the defendant did not suffer from the admission of immaterial, or the exclusion of material, evidence.
First. The State called as a witness Henry H. Phillips, who had adopted Grace as his child, and examined him as to a conversation he had had with the defendant, in which the defendant asked his consent to marry Grace. The State claimed that the jealousy and anger of the defendant at the rejection by Grace of his addresses, was the main inducement to the assault. The witness was examined on no other point. On cross-examination the defendant inquired: “You were arrested for this offense, were you not?” The question was objected to and excluded. The court did not exceed its legitimate discretion in excluding that question at that time upon such cross-examination. Chapman v. Loomis, 36 Conn., 459. Subsequently the same witness, Phillips, was called as a witness for the defense, and asked on direct examination: “ By the way, you were arrested for this offense, were you not?” The defense claimed that immediately after the assault Grace had declared that her
Second. The defendant was called as a witness in his own behalf and asked: “Do you know if Grace Phillips was discharged from the choir? ” The court excluded the ques
Third. The State claimed that the assault was made with a razor; that the accused at the time of the assault owned a razor; and after the assault falsely told an officer, and also had himself testified, “that he had broken his razor two months before the assault by dropping it, and had thrown it awajq and that he had been shaved by one Anthony since.” In connection with evidence tending to prove that the accused had not broken his razor as he claimed, and had used it to shave himself, down to two or three days before the assault, the State called as a witness one Samuel Sands and asked him: “ What do you remember about Stevens, if anything, using that razor, or allowing him to use it?” The question was objected to as indefinite as to time, and admitted. Whereupon Sands testified that Stevens used his razor about three months before the cutting, without his permission, and when he charged him with it he admitted using it, and gave as an excuse that his razor was broken. The accused then objected to the question and answer, on the ground that the evidence was immaterial, and the court overruled the objection. The answer of Sands removed the objection as to the form of the question. Tyler v. Todd, 36 Conn., 221. And we cannot say that the court was not justified in regarding the evidence of Sands as a circumstance not wholly immaterial in connection with the other evidence offered, tending to prove that the accused falsely denied his possession of a razor, and made untrue statements in asserting the loss of his own razor, and in attempting to account for its alleged loss. There can be no question as to the materiality of such fact.
Fourth. The State called as a witness one George R. Burton, and claimed to be surprised by the testimony of the witness, and that the witness had told a different story, and claimed the right to cross-examine him as a hostile witness. The court was of the opinion that the witness was hostile
A new trial is denied.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.