7 Nev. 148 | Nev. | 1871
By the Court,
The appellant was convicted upon conflicting and partially circumstantial evidence, of the crime of murder in the first degree. The court, in charging the jury, after giving the statutory definition of the crime, used the following language: “ Such is the law which you, as jurors, are called upon to vindicate, and such is the charge against the defendant, who looks to you for the benefit of any reasonable doubt. * * Do simply that duty which naturally presents itself, as you act under your oath and the law and the testimony before you, and you cannot greatly err, whatever may be your verdict.”
The word “ vindicate,” it is argued, means to “ punish for an infraction of,” and consequently, it is said, the charge assumes that the law has been broken: on the other hand, it is contended that the instruction only enjoins the jury to assert and maintain the law. Admitting that the latter is the proper construction, it would have been much better to have told the jury so, in language plain and unambiguous, and it would have been still better to have omitted altogether this portion of the charge. It was error, to tell the jury that whether they convicted or acquitted, their verdict would be substantially correct.
We agree that the whole charge must be fairly construed, as an entirety; but, with the aid of the context, it is not easy to say exactly what idea was intended to be conveyed by this particular sentence. Probably, it was intended to guard against a misapprehension in regard to the quantity of proof necessary to a conviction. It has been laid down that “ the doubt which entitles to an acquittal must be real, not captious or imaginary. It must not be a forced or artificial doubt; manufactured, so to speak, by the sym
Under our practice, the judge should intimate no opinion upon the facts. “ If he cannot do so directly, he cannot indirectly; if not explicitly, he cannot by innuendo; and the effect of such an opinion cannot be obviated by announcing in distinct terms the jury’s independency of him in all matters of fact.” 2 Winston, 47. One object is stated to be, to guard against the well known proneness of jurors to seek to ascertain the opinion of the judge, and to shift their responsibilities from themselves to the court. 3 Jones, (Law) 6. The dissenting opinion of the present chief justice of this court in State v. Millain, expresses fully what we consider the law on this subject. It is also settled that any instruction, from which inferences plainly prejudicial to the defendant can be drawn, is erroneous. Of course, we intimate no opinion as to the sufficiency in fact of the evidence. We think it was sufficient in law. But the defendant had the right to attempt to convince the jury that, under the circumstances, a conviction would be palpably against the weight and fair construction of the evidence, and would work a flagrant injustice ; or he may have contended that the case was difficult and intricate, demanding the nicest discrimination and the closest attention; that at first blush, and upon a superficial examination, the testimony was suggestive of erroneous conclusions; but that a full investigation and thorough understanding of it would insure an acquittal.
Upon the truth of his theory or hypothesis, he was entitled to the
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.