201 P. 1083 | Or. | 1921
The deceased, Robert H. Krug, met his death on the evening of March 24, 1919. He was a bachelor, sixty-five years of age, and resided alone in his cabin situate about five miles north of the village of Sisters, in Deschutes County, Oregon. His nearest neighbor was Joe Wilson, who owned, operated, and resided at a sawmill located about three quarters of a mile southwesterly from Krug’s cabin. Living at the mill and employed by Wilson were the defendant and George Stilwell. Wilson and Stilwell
Ahont 7:45 o ’clock on the evening of March 24, 1919, flames of fire arose in the vicinity of the Krug cabin. Owing to the season of the year, the fire attracted notice from a number of witnesses residing as far distant as the little town of Sisters. However, no person made any investigation at that time. On that night, Wilson was away from his mill, but the defendant and George Stilwell were there. Between 10 and 11 o’clock in the forenoon of the following day, defendant telephoned Mrs. H. N. Cobb, in charge of the telephone exchange at Sisters, and said to her that he started from the mill to Krug’s cabin that morning after eggs; that when he got in sight of the place he saw a smouldering fire, and that on closer investigation he was positive the body was in the flames. He further stated that:
“I set my bucket down at the gate and came over to the Tones place here to notify the sheriff.”
. In response to defendant’s request, Mrs. Cobb called the sheriff of Deschutes County by telephone and advised him of the burning of the cabin and that there was someone burned up in it. The sheriff immediately notified the district attorney and the coroner and the three went to the scene of the fire. When the sheriff arrived at the Krug place, H. N. Cobb was in charge of the premises and a number of others, including the defendant, were present. A coroner’s jury was impaneled, an inquest held, the body identified as that of Krug, and, so far as the record before us shows, no offense was charged. Before the coroner’s jury had left the premises, Joe Wilson arrived, George Stilwell already being present.
After the- destruction of the mill, Weston resided on his place situate about three and one-half miles east of Sisters and about five miles south and east of the Wilson sawmill. He was arrested in the latter part of September, 1920, and incarcerated in the county jail at Bend, Deschutes County, charged with the killing of Krug.
The theory of the prosecution was that the defendant, A. J. Weston, Joe Wilson, and George Stilwell were engaged in operating a still in the manufacture of whiskey at the sawmill owned by Wilson; that Krug had obtained knowledge of the same; that Weston knew that Krug realized what defendant and his accomplices in crime were doing, and, believing there was danger of Krug’s making a complaint to the officers, killed him.
From the time of the death of Krug until about the time of defendant’s arrest, Joe Wilson and George Stilwell, the state’s leading witnesses, kept their knowledge of the homicide from the officers. If their story is true, the killing of old man Krug constitutes an atrocious homicide.
The record in this case shows that upon his arraignment the defendant answered that his true name was A. J. Weston.
“The manner of stating the act constituting the crime as set forth in the appendix in this Code is sufficient in all cases where the forms there given are applicable * # .” Section 1439, Or. L.; State v. Dodson, 4 Or. 64; State v. Spencer, 6 Or. 152; State v. Brown, 7 Or. 186; State v. Lee Yan Yan, 10 Or. 365; State v. Farnam, 82 Or. 211, 224 (161 Pac. 417, Ann. Cas. 1918A, 318).
The indictment contains every allegation set forth in Form No. 1 of the appendix.
The defendant in the instant case was not prejudiced by the inability of the grand jury to state the means by which the life of Krug was taken.
The defendant asserts that the court erred in admitting his alleged confessions as evidence in the trial of the cause before the corpus delicti was established. He also asserts that the ruling of the court was erroneous whe’rein the introduction of certain admissions, declarations and acts of the defendant was permitted before proof of the corpus delicti, and, that such declarations, admissions and acts do not constitute competent proof of the corpus delicti. He vigorously contends that the state failed to prove the corpus delicti, and at the trial moved the court for an order directing the jury to acquit the defendant by returning a verdict of not guilty.
To avoid repetition of the evidence, we will discuss these contentions together.
In the case of State v. Stevenson, 98 Or. 291 (193 Pac. 1030), the following definition of “confession” was approved:
“A confession is a voluntary admission or declaration made by a person who has committed a crime to another of the agency or participation which he had in it.”
In State v. Rinehart, 26 Or. 477 (38 Pac. 822), this court said:
*114 “A confession in a legal sense is restricted to an acknowledgment of guilt * * and does not apply to a mere statement or declaration of an independent fact from which such guilt may be inferred.”
To like effect are State v. Rogoway, 45 Or. 610 (78 Pac. 987, 81 Pac. 234, 2 Ann. Cas. 431); State v. Brinkley, 55 Or. 141 (104 Pac. 893, 105 Pac. 708), on motion for rehearing, also additional authorities therein cited.
Admissions, in the law of evidence, have been defined as concessions or voluntary acknowledgments made by a party of the existence of certain facts, and have been said to be direct or express, implied or indirect, or incidental. They are statements by a party or someone identified with him in legal interest, of the existence of a fact which is relevant to the cause of his adversary: 22 O. J. 296, 297.
“The words ‘confession’ and ‘admission’ are not synonymous, the latter relating to the acknowledgment of facts, and the former to the acknowledgment of guilt.” State v. Heidenreich, 29 Or. 381 (45 Pac. 755).
Our Code provides as follows:
“Evidence of facts which may be given on the trial: (1) The precise facts in dispute; (2) the declaration, act or omission of a party as evidence against such party.” Or. L., § 727, subd. 1
Section 1537, Or. L., relates to that class of declarations and admissions whereby a person accused of crime acknowledges that he committed it, or that he is an accomplice therein. Such a declaration is denominated a confession. Said section reads:
“A confession of a defendant, whether in the course of judicial proceeding's or to a private person, cannot be given in evidence against him, when made under the influence of fear produced by threats; nor is a*115 confession only sufficient to warrant his conviction, without some other proof that the crime has been committed. ’ ’
It was held in State v. Brinkley, supra, that:
“Statements of extraneous facts by accused not involving guilt even when his confession is inadmissible because not voluntary, or for any other reason, may be received against him as evidence of such fact and may be sufficient to prove the corpus delicti.” Par. 7, Syllabus.
The general rule that confessions are not admissible until after proof of the corpus delicti should prevail where the question of the corpus delicti is clearly separate and distinct from that of the guilt of the defendant: 1 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence, § 325f.
*117 “But, in many cases, the two matters are so intimately connected that the proof of the corpus delicti and the guilty agency is shown at the same time; hence, the order of proof in a criminal case is generally within the discretion of the trial court, and this prevails so generally that error committed in admitting testimony as to the guilt before the proof of the corpus delicti, is cured where the subsequent testimony establishes the corpus delicti.” 1 Wharton, supra, and collection of authorities under notes 5, 6 and 7.
From an inspection of the record, we are convinced that the discretion vested in the court by law, relating to the regulation of the order of proof, was not abused.
“The Corpus delicti: The body of a crime; the body (material substance) upon which a crime has been committed; e. g., the corpse of a murdered man, the charred remains of a house burned down. In a derivative sense, the substance or foundation of a crime; the substantial fact that a crime has been committed.”
The corpus delicti consists of two fundamental facts: First, the death, and, second, the existence of criminal agency as the cause thereof.
“ ‘The corpus delicti is made up * * ,’ says Mr. Best, ‘of two things; first, certain facts forming the basis; and secondly, the existence of criminal agency*118 as the cause of them.’ ” State v. Rogoway, 45 Or. 601 (78 Pac. 987, 989, 2 Ann. Cas. 431).
It has often been stated that in murder the corpus delicti has two components; death as the result, and the criminal agency of another as the means.
“The finding of a dead body establishes only the corpus. The finding of such body under circumstances that indicate a crime would indicate the delicti, or felonious killing. When these facts concur, the first element of the corpus delicti, the criminal act, is made to appear. Hence, it is not necessary to the establishment of a complete corpus delicti that identity should be shown, because the dead body and the crime against it complete all that is indicated by the corpus delicti.” 1 Wharton’s Crim. Ev., § 325.
We take the following from note 4, 1 Wharton, supra:
“The idea conveyed by the phrase ‘corpus delicti’ is not obscure. While it is generally defined as the body of a crime, it is more clearly expressed by calling it the body or thing which is the victim of a wrong. The body of a man produced under circumstances that show a felony is corpus delicti in homicide, but the expression is equally correct applied to all crimes. The bodies of sheep or other domestic animals, with indications of poison feloniously administered, is corpus delicti in malicious mischief. A house partly burned, with evidence of incendiary fire, is corpus delicti in arson. The primary fact is the corpus delicti. When that appears in any crime, then follows the investigation which has for its object the detection and punishment of the criminal agency.”
In State of Iowa v. Millmeier, 102 Iowa, 692-698 (72 N. W. 275, 277), the court said:
“Counsel do not agree as to what constitutes corpus delicti, and we find that courts are as far apart as*119 counsel in defining the term. The expression means, primarily, the body of the offense. But in applying it, courts and text-writers have not at all times agreed as to what is meant by the ‘body of the offense.’ In our opinion, the term means, when applied to any particular offense, that the particular crime charged has actually been committed by someone. It is made up of two elements: first, that a certain result has been produced, as that a man has died, * * ; second, that someone is criminally responsible for the result: Ruloff v. People, 18 N. Y. 179; People v. Bennett, 49 N. Y. 137; Winslow v. State, 76 Ala. 42; Pitts v. State, 43 Miss. 472; People v. Palmer, 109 N. Y. 113 (16 N. E. 529).”
Now, as to the sufficiency of the evidence to prove the death of Krug as the result, and the criminal agency of another as the means:
In discussing the sufficiency of evidence to establish the corpus delicti in a criminal cause such as the case at bar, the courts have frequently and very correctly stated that no universal and unvariable rule can be laid down as to what will amount to proof of the corpus delicti, as each case depends upon its own peculiar circumstances. We quote the following:
“No universal and unvariable rule can be laid down in regard to the proof of the corpus delicti. Each case depends upon its own peculiar circumstances. The body of the crime may be proved by the best evidence which is capable of being adduced, if it is sufficient for the purpose. Such an amount of accompanyiug or relative facts, whether direct or circumstantial, must be produced as establish the fact beyond a moral certainty, and to the exclusion of every other reasonable hypothesis.” State v. Williams, 46 Or. 287, 297 (80 Pac. 655).
There are many examples of cases that illustrate the rule that the evidence required to prove the corpus delicti in a case of homicide, depends upon the facts peculiar to the given case. The reports afford instances of homicide where the victims have been killed and their bodies destroyed by chemicals, fire or other agencies, thus concealing not only the identity of the deceased, but the manner and means of procurement of death as well. The trial of such a case cannot be bound by an inflexible rule relating to the proof of the corpus delicti. The case at bar depends upon its own peculiar facts and, so long as the corpus delicti is proved by clear, unequivocal, cogent and convincing evidence, the law is satisfied.
“The fire was burning around the body. He was lying on his back and the feet up to his knees partly burned off. The hands and arms were burned off. When I first went there I believe the head was on.
“Q. How was it later?
“A. Well, it fell into ashes. The fire kind of fell down and it went in the ashes.”
He testified that defendant came to the scene of the fire and, while there, said to witness, that:
“He came down there after eggs and the house was burned and he left his bucket; and he said he was down Sunday night and he [Krug] was all right Sunday night.”
We have previously shown the statement made by defendant to Mrs. Cobb when requesting her, as telephone operator, to notify the sheriff.
E. N. Harrington, G-eorge E. Aitken, Bertha Wilson and Carl Wood testified to their observation of a fire on the evening of the 24th of March at about the hour of 7:45 o ’clock, which fire was in the immediate vicinity of Krug’s cabin.
S. E. Roberts, sheriff, testified to the fact of his being called to the Krug place after the fire; that he started to walk out to investigate and had gone about thirty yards with the idea of making a complete circle of the Krug house, when he saw some fresh tracks.
“I stopped and was looking at these tracks, and about that time Jack Weston says: ‘Say, Sheriff, those are my tracks where I came over this morning*122 to get some eggs. Here is my pail I set down, I was going to get the eggs in.’ ”
Relating to the body, witness said:
“It was pretty badly burned. The arms and legs were burned off and the head was gone. The body was twelve or fourteen feet from the fireplace. Some portion of clothes was on the body on the back, some little clothing between the legs.”
He further testified that:
“After he [defendant] called my attention to the fact of those tracks here, I watched him. I thought he was watching me pretty close.”
Q-eorge Stilwell testified that at the time of the trial he was a resident of Portland, but had resided in Central Oregon for eighteen years; that he was at the Krug cabin after the fire; that in March, 1919, he lived at Joe Wilson’s sawmill for three or four weeks.
“Krug used to come over to the mill once in a while and talk to us. * * One particular time he come through there and we were making whiskey. So he come up and caught us making whiskey. * * Weston was there. He came through another time and Mr. Weston thought he caught us moonshining. # #
“Q. What did Weston do or say at that time?
“A. He said: ‘We got to work some way of getting rid of Mr. Krug on account he caught us moon-shining. If we don’t get him he will get us.’
“Krug had come up and asked me if I was washing. When he first came there he asked me what I was doing, and I said I was washing. The next time he said: ‘I see you are still washing.’ I said: ‘Yes.’ After he went away Weston said: ‘He caught us moonshining.’ So he wanted me to go over and help kill him. * * He said Krug must have lots of money. He said: ‘We just as well get the money because he caught us. If we didn’t get him — ’ he said, ‘while we are getting him we just as well get the money. ’
*123 “On the evening of the 24th he [Weston] left somewhere about dark and he came back some time in the night, but I was asleep and couldn’t say what time it was. * * Next morning I started a fire in the cook stove. Fifteen minutes or half an hour after, Mr. Weston came down. I smelled fumes of flesh burning * * , thought it was cattle. I drawed his attention # * . He said: ‘It must be Krug’s; it is coming from that direction.’ The smoke was very small. It was from the northeast direction. He said: ‘It must be Krug.’ After breakfast, he took the little bucket and said: ‘I will go over and get eggs.’ He was gone half an hour. Came back and said Krug’s house had burned down, ‘and it looks as though he had burned up in it.’ He said: ‘I will notify the sheriff.’ ”
Joe Wilson testified that he had lived near Sisters for eighteen or twenty years, and that he was engaged in the sawmill business; that he had been acquainted with Weston ten or eleven years, likewise, that he had known Robert H. Krug, deceased, for twenty-five or thirty years; that in 1918, witness had built an addition to Krug’s old log house, consisting of a lean-to, and had reshingled and refloored the cabin; that he was not at home on the 24th of March, but returned on the 25th, arriving at the Krug place about 2 o’clock in the afternoon, where he saw the ruins of the cabin and the body of a human being that in his best judgment was Krug’s body. He further testified to a declaration made by defendant, as follows:
‘ ‘ On our way home to the mill from the Krug cabin on the day of the inquest, defendant said to me: ‘Mum’s the word.’ I said, ‘It is all up with us now, Jack.’ He said: ‘It is all off, anyway.’ He said: ‘Krug caught us making whiskey. There had to be something done.’ ”
“He [defendant] came there [Cloverdale] and got his pistol and dog and took them away. He said: ‘Boys, I am going to keep him off that land and make that whiskey if I have to go to the penitentiary for life.’ ”
Cross-examination by Mr. Wallace:
“Q. What was it he said?
“A. He come and got his pistol and his dog and took them with him and said he was going to keep Krug off that land and make that whiskey if he went to the penitentiary for life.”
W. T. E. Wilson testified as follows, concerning a declaration made by the defendant:
“Mr. Weston came down to my house and stayed all night and in the morning after breakfast he spoke about running his business up at the sawmill close to Mr. Krug’s. Well, he said he could not do anything up there in that business in the line of moon-shining on account of Mr. Krug came over there every day or two nosing around and interfered with the business. He said: ‘When I go back, I will stop him from coming to that mill. ’ ’ ’
Witness further testified that the defendant took his pistol away with him.
W. S. Fullerton testified that about the 18th day of February, 1918, he made, executed and delivered to Bobert H. Krug his promissory note for the sum of three hundred dollars, and that on March 18, 1919, he paid the interest then due on the note, by a check in the sum of $16.60. Within a very few days following the death of Krug, a note answering the description of the Fullerton note was seen by Stilwell and by Wilson in the personal possession of the defendant. Stilwell swore that defendant exhibited to him the
T. J. Sanders testified that the defendant said to him the day he was put in jail:
“They have got me in wrong, on the wrong side of the bars; but I will show them I done it in self-defense.”
The death of Krug seems to have been proved. The associations, habits, occupation, the place of finding the body, and the life history of Robert H. Krug, together with the many circumstances surrounding the destruction of his home, all tend towards establishing the charred body found in the ruins of his cabin as that of Krug, and of no one else. In fact the defendant, in his brief, admits that the body found in that cabin was Krug’s body. For that reason, we have omitted much of the testimony relating to the identification of the body.
We will now quote excerpts from the testimony of defendant’s confession, made to his two accomplices in the manufacture of intoxicating liquor.
George Stilwell said:
“After the coroner’s inquest, we were sitting on the bench, and he said: ‘I went over last night and took a club and knocked Krug in the head * * . Then I tied him up with a rope and tied a rope around his neck and choked him to get his money. The old fellow was so stingy he would not give it. I still believe he has money buried there, but he would rather die than give it up to us. I took his shoes off and stuck his feet in the fire to torture him, to get his money.’ * *
“We were working at the mill the day the cabin burned; working with the tubs, getting ready for moonshining. ”
“Q. Who have you talked to about what your testimony would be?
“A. Bill Wilson.
“Q. Did you make a statement to him similar to what you have stated here to-day?
“A. Not exactly; no sir. I told him about Krug coming over there. I don’t know just exactly the words I said to him. The talk was a few days after Krug’s house burned.- * *
“Mrs. Combs (now Mrs. Weston) asked me: ‘Do you think it would be possible Jack done that?’ I ¡said: ‘I don’t know if he could or not. I don’t see how he could. He stayed with me last night.’ I didn’t intend at that time to tell anybody he did or didn’t do it. I didn’t explain it.”
Joe Wilson’s version of the confession by defendant is as follows:
“On Sunday he [Weston] followed him [Krug] down to Sisters and walked through Sisters to see if he made any report down there in regard to catching them making whiskey. He said that on Monday he went over to Mr. Krug’s house and stayed there most of the day with him; stayed there until it was too late in the day for Mr. Krug to go away anywhere. Then he went back to the mill and got his supper. He went back over again in the evening. Krug * * was eating his supper. He came out of the kitchen on to the porch. Weston stood by the door and as he came in hit him with a stick * * and knocked him down. He had a flour sack that he had made up into a dish cloth or tea towel * * . He had that with him and gagged him with the tea towel. Then he took a rope and tied his hands and feet — he didn’t say how, and drawed on it. He just said he*127 tightened np on him this way [illustrating]; that he held him that way and when he released him he told him he [Krug] had caught him making whiskey and he would have to get out of the country and give him $500 to leave the country on. Mr. Krug said to him: ‘I thought you were my friend.’ He would not give up any money, and Weston tightened on him the second time and also took his shoes off and burned his feet and tried to make him give up the money. * * Krug said to him not to hurt his crippled knee, that he had rheumatism in his knee. While he [Weston] was talking, I said: ‘I suppose he did some manful begging.’ He answered: ‘No. He said: “If you want to kill me, kill me quick.” ’ Krug told him if he would go and get a little box there, he would find what money he had. Weston went there and got $16. He took the money. * * He had it in a tomato can on a table. * *
“He said when Krug would not give the money up after he had released him a second time, he just drawed on it and in a few minutes it was all over, and he set fire to it. He used magazines and papers under the bed. Said he set them all on fire and went out and sat under a tree until the building fell in and the ammunition was going off, quite a number of cartridges exploded * * .
“I said I would always believe that Krug had money there, and Weston said: ‘If he did, he would rather go the route than give it up.’ ”
On cross-examination, Wilson said:
“Q. Didn’t you say to Bill Young: ‘Krug burned himself up?’
“A. Likely I did, if we were talking about it, because I was not telling people what I knew about it, at that time.”
Witness said:
“I told the sheriff this fall, before the arrest, for the first time. I didn’t want to get this into the hands of the officers, because I was making whiskey,*128 and I conld not very well get this in the hands of the officers without exposing myself. When the mill burned down, it ruined my chances of making whiskey. Then I got another outfit and went to Crook County and went to making whiskey. I was arrested in February.”
Again he said:
“I didn’t want to tell at that time what we were doing. * * The moonshining was not exposed yet. I didn’t want to tell what we were doing.”
“Declarations accompanying the act, or so closely connected therewith,, in time, as to be free from all suspicion of device or afterthought, are admissible in evidence as part of the res gestae and subject to be charged and weighed by the jury under the same rules which I have given you for weighing and considering other evidence in the case; that is, the connection of the defendant with the case, his interest in it, if any, whether such declarations are consistent throughout or are conflicting with themselves or other facts. ’ ’
“To render declarations made by a party after the commission of an act which is the subject of inquiry admissible in evidence as a part of the res gestae, they must have grown out of, and be so intimately connected and contemporaneous with, such act as to illustrate its character, affording a mirror which involuntarily reflects the cause, motive or effect of the particular action: State v. Glass, 5 Or. 73; State v. Anderson, 10 Or. 448; State v. Ching Ling, 16 Or. 419 (18 Pac. 844); State v. Henderson, 24 Or. 100 (32 Pac. 1030); State v. Brown, 28 Or. 147 (41 Pac. 1042); State v. Sargent, 32 Or. 110 (49 Pac. 889); State v. Smith, 43 Or. 110 (71 Pac. 973).
18. Defendant assigns error of the court in permitting W. S. Fullerton, called on behalf of the state, to give testimony, over the objection of the defendant, concerning a certain note, and in refusing to strike the evidence relating to the same upon motion. The testimony of Fullerton relative to the execution and delivery by him of a promissory note to Krug and to his payment to Krug of interest thereon on March 22, 1919, is relevant. Whenever a motive for slaying another is robbery, the possession of valuables by the deceased may always be shown. In the instant ease, the note, when traced to defendant’s possession, was also admissible in evidence as affording some
There was no error in permitting Charles Gist, called by the state, to testify concerning the statement made by defendant on Saturday before the fire; nor did the court err in permitting George E. Aitken to testify over objection of defendant that he saw deceased in Sisters on one day and that he saw the defendant there the day following.
‘ ‘ They have got me in wrong, on the wrong side of the bars, but I will show them I done it in self-defense.”
This objection can afford the defendant no comfort. The testimony was admissible. The objection goes to its weight. Had the state exercised its right to establish the fact, if it be a fact, that the defendant was informed at or about the time he was incarcerated in jail, and prior to his statement above set out, that he was arrested and jailed for the killing of Krug, then such evidence would be of greater value as a circumstance tending to prove guilt.
Upon its own motion, the court could have instructed the jury that the check did not, in itself, corroborate the defendant’s confession as related by Wilson and Stilwell, in the matter of the $16 they say he obtained from Krug; and, had defendant so requested, this instruction should have been given.
“Q. Now, did you not make a statement to J. E. Warner, known as Grabe Warner, on or about the first day of February, 1920, in the jail at Portland, Oregon, being present yourself and the said J. E. Warner, as follows: ‘Jack Weston squealed on me and got me in here to do time, and I will make him do time, the s- of-a-b-’; and also: ‘It seemed to me that Krug burned himself,’ or words to that effect. ’ ’
The object of this inquiry was to impair the force of the testimony of the witness by showing that he entertained hostile feelings against Weston. That such testimony is admissible, see State v. Welch, 33
“Such inquiry necessarily involves a consideration of relations he sustains towards, or the feelings of friendship he entertains for, the party in whose favor, or the enmity and wrath he nurses towards the party against whom, he testifies. All matters which tend in any manner to show the condition of his mind towards the party who may be benefited or injured by his testimony, are proper subjects of investigation and may be proved by competent evidence, either by the cross-examination of witness himself, or by other witnesses who may be called to testify concerning such fact.” State v. Welch, supra.
To like effect, see State v. Bacon, 13 Or. 143 (9 Pac. 393, 57 Am. Rep. 8); State v. Ellsworth, 30 Or. 145 (47 Pac. 199); Sayres v. Allen, 25 Or. 211 (35 Pac. 254).
It is said in State v. Mah Jim, 13 Or. 235 (10 Pac. 306), that:
“In a criminal case, any question which tends to show a feeling or bias of the witness against the accused is competent.”
In State v. Olds, 18 Or. 440, 442 (22 Pac. 940, 941), it is said:
“The state had the right, on the cross-examination, to ask this witness anything that would show his interest in the result of the trial.”
As provided by Section 704, Or. L., the presumption that a witness speaks the truth may be overcome by evidence affecting his motives.
State v. Maclcey, 12 Or. 154, 156 (6 Pac. 648), says:
*134 “The ends of justice are best attained by allowing a free and ample scope for scrutinizing evidence and estimating' its real value.”
In State v. Bacon, supra, it is stated:
“There is no doubt that the state of feelings and relationship of a witness towards the party for or against whom he testifies may properly be shown, to be weighed with his testimony.”
And the court quotes with approval the following from 1 G-reenleaf on Evidence, Section 446, page 146:
“The situation of the witness with respect to the parties and the subject of the litigation, his intent, his motives, his inclination and prejudices * * are all fully investigated and ascertained and submitted to the consideration of the jury before whom he has testified, and who have thus had an opportunity of observing his demeanor and of determining the just weight and value of his testimony. ’ ’
The extent of the cross-examination of witnesses rests largely in the discretion of the court. But, as stated in Sayres v. Allen, supra:
“As the defendant had the right on cross-examination to require that Sayres should give a detail of the circumstances surrounding the facts to which he had testified, prejudice will be presumed where this right is denied.”
The record discloses a tendency, in a number of instances, to restrain the cross-examination of the witnesses Stilwell and Wilson. In sustaining the state’s objection to a question upon cross-examination, so relevant as the inquiry put to Joe Wilson by the defendant’s counsel, a substantial injury has been done defendant, and that wrong affirmatively appears of record. The defendant cannot lawfully be deprived of his valuable right to cross-examine upon
For a year and a half, these two witnesses kept their knowledge of Weston’s awful deed from the officers of the law. For as long a time, by their silence they aided the defendant in concealing his crime. Only an overt act upon their part stands in the way
Under the condition that confronted the court, there was but one course to follow, and that was to allow a full and complete cross-examination of these witnesses upon all relevant matters. No worthy man could keep silent for a year and a half under circumstances as disclosed from the witness-stand by Joe Wilson and George Stilwell. To deny the right to cross-examination under the existing conditions, was an abuse of the discretion vested in the court by law. “Guilty men may have escaped punishment altogether ; others may have been punished too lightly for their crimes; others may have unreasonably delayed their punishment”; but none of these conditions, nor all of them together, can excuse the court in denying to a human being upon trial for his life or for his liberty, the right that the law of the sovereign State of Oregon gives him, the right to a fair and impartial trial. In weighing the testimony of the witnesses, the jury are entitled to know the hostile feelings, if any, that the witnesses entertain for the defendant, in order to consider what motives may have actuated such witnesses to shade, color, or to give false testimony. Any lawyer of trial experience should know that the denial of the right to cross-examination on all relevant matters is a refusal of a fair trial.
For this error of the trial court, this case must be reversed, and remanded for further proceedings as cprovided by law. Beversed and Bemanded.