8 Or. 177 | Or. | 1879
By the Court,
The first question presented is as to the challenges of the jurors, George Klum and Lewis Cox, for actual bias. To disqualify a juror for actual bias, he must be shown to have a state of mind in reference to the action or party challenging, which satisfies the judge trying the cause, in the exercise of a sound discretion, that the juror can not try the issue impartially. (Code, sec. 183.) “But on the trial of such challenge for actual bias, although it should appear that the juror challenged has formed or expressed an opinion upon the merits of the cause, from what he may have heard or read, such opinion shall not of itself be sufficient to sustain the challenge, but the court must be satisfied, from all the circumstances, that the juror cannot disregard such opinion, and try the issue impartially.” (Code, sec. 185.) These provisions of the statute have somewhat modified the practice from what it was in the matter of trying
The questions propounded to the jurors elicited answers from them, that they had formed opinions as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, and that they thought they were fixed opinions, and that it would take evidence to remove them. The opinions were therefore not so fixed that they could not be removed by evidence which should show the facts of the case different from what the jurors had heard them related. This kind of opinions would not, under the rule laid down in section 185 of the code, disqualify a juror, for his opinion could and would be changed if the evidence should show the facts not to be as he had heard them stated. As to whether the juror was impartial or not, was a question to be tried by the court from the evidence before him. Before we can judge whether the discretion exercised by him in overruling the challenges was a sound discretion and properly exercised in this case, we must have all the evidence before us in this court that was adduced on the trial of the challenge in the circuit court.
It does not appear from the bill of exceptions whether or not all the evidence that was before that court has been reported to this court. We can not, therefore, try the challenge here, for this court will not review any question of fact unless all the evidence is reported on which the circuit court based its opinion or finding. If all the evidence adduced in the court below in the trials of these challenges is in the bill of exceptions, that fact should have been stated; and as it is not stated, we must presume that the circuit court had sufficient evidence to support its findings.
The next question presented is as to the objections to the evidence of the declarations of Ruby Sumption, the child on whom the rape was alleged to have been committed. The court held that she was not possessed of sufficientintelligence to receive just impressions of the facts concerning which the counsel for the state proposed to examine her, or of relating them truly. But the court permitted her mother and stepfather to detail communications they had had with her, in
It is a rule that the declarations of the prosecutrix in case of rape, made immediately after the commission of the crime, may he given in evidence to corroborate her testimony on the trial, and it may also be proved that she made complaint, but the particulars of the complaint made can not be admitted in evidence as to the truth of her statement. In Phillips on Evidence, vol. 1, p. 184, the rule is laid down, “ The particulars stated by the prosecutrix as to the violence used, or the person who committed the violence, can not be received. The evidence should be confined to the bare proof of the fact that a complaint of personal violence was made, and that an individual was charged, without mentioning his name.” Also the appearance of the person of the prosecutrix and her clothing may be shown, and that she promptly divulged the crime and made search for the offender. If the rape be charged to have been committed on an infant, her declarations of the circumstances can not now be proved further than that she made complaint. It was once held by Sir Matthew Hale, that though the infant had not sufficient understanding to be competent to testify as a witness, still she ought to be heard without oath, to give the court information.
But, says Sir William Blackstone (4 Com. 214): “It is now settled (Brazier’s case, before the twelve judges), that no hearsay evidence can be given of the declarations of a child who hath not capacity to be sworn, nor can such child be examined in court without oath; and that there is no determinate age at which the oath of a child ought either to be admitted or rejected.” The rule that the declarations of one incompetent to testify can not be admitted in evidence, is now the established doctrine in the states of the Union, so far as we have been able to discover. In New York, in the case of People v. McGee (1 Denio, 24), the court says: “The rule is that when the person upon whom the offense is charged to have been committed, is incompetent
Tbe only remaining point in tbe case, is that there was error in tbe proceedings in tbe circuit court, in admitting tbe statements of Ruby Sumption to be made to tbe jury without her having been first sworn. Tbe statement shows that she bad some intelligence, and was capable of relating what she knew, and that she should have been sworn, and her statement then taken. Under our present practice, more liberality prevails in admitting witnesses than formerly, and all tbe tests, except unsoundness of mind and want of intelligence, are abolished, and tbe jury are allowed to receive tbe evidence and weigh it, and give to it such consideration as in their judgment it deserves. But no witness can testify without being first sworn, unless by tbe consent of parties, and we think it was error to receive her statement without her having first been sworn. (Code, 251, sec. 699.)
The judgment of tbe circuit court will be reversed, and a new trial ordered.