On his trial, the prisoner made two objections to the admission of testimony which were over-ruled, and prayed an instruction to the jury which was refused, all which are set forth in his bill of exceptions as the grounds of his application to have the judgment against him reversed, and a venvre de novo awarded. lie has also submitted a motion that, if another trial be refused him, the judgment shall be arrested for an alleged insufficiency of the indictment.
In order to understand the pertinency of the objections to the testimony, as well as that of the instruction which was prayed, it is necessary to observe that every criminal charge involves two things; first, that an offense has been committed; and, secondly, that the accused committed it. In the present case, neither ol' these things could be proved by direct or positive testimony, so that it became necessary on the part of the' prosecution, to resort to circumstantial or pre *451 sumptive evidence for the -purpose of establishing both. After the finding of what were alleged to be the charred bones of a human being in the ashes of the log pile, and in the creek, it became all important to identify them, if possible, as parts of the remains of theeupposed deceased, Peggy Isly. The first testimony objected to, was offered to show that certain hair pins which were found among the bones in the creek, belonged to her, and with that view it was proposed to prove that she was in the habit of wearing such pins. No objection was, or could be, offered to the proof that the pins were found-; and, we presume, that none would have been made to a statement that she had such in her hair when she left home. But as the witnesses could not testify to that fact, the point of the objection was to the proof that she had been in the habit of wearing them sometime before; and particularly for so long a time as two years before the time when she was last seen. The objection, it will readily he perceived, applies more against the force than the competency of the testimony. The fact, if it had been so, that the hair-pins formed a parfof her head-dress when she left home, might have been proved as one, in a chain of cir* ■cumstances, to show that the human bones found in the creek were those of a female, and that, that female was probably the supposed deceased. The testimony actually offered and <given, tended to prove, though with less strength-, the same thing, and it was, therefore, pertinent and natural-. There can be no doubt that it was open to the prisoner to reply to this testimony, and to proven if he could-, that the supposed deceased had never worn hair-pins, for the purpose of negativing the inference that the remains were her;s.
The testimony offered to 'show the proper season for burning plant-beds for tóbacC'o, and the manner in which the prisoner usually prepared his, bad too obvious a tendency to conneetbim with the transaction relative to the burnt human bones, *452 fasten him to the guilty deed. See State v. Bill, 6 Jones’ Rep. 34.
. The question raised by the instruction which the prisoner requested the Court to give to the jury, is one of much more importance than those which we have already considered, and has been attended with more trouble in the discussion and decision ofit. The instruction prayed and refused, was “that there was no evidence in the case identifying the bones and pins found, as being part of the bones and apparel of the deceased.” In support of the propriety of his prayer, the counsel for the prisoner conterds that, if it were admitted that the bones found in the log pile, the beach stump, and the creek, were those of a human being, there is no part of the testimony which shows, from any particular mark about them, or relating to them, that they were the bones of the supposed deceased more than any other dead body; and that, in this respect, the case differs essentially from that of
Rex
v.
Clews,
4 Car. and Payne 221, (19 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 354,) where the body of a man was, after lapse of twenty-three years, identified by his widow, from some peculiarity about his teeth; and also from that of the celebrated case of
Commonwealth
v.
Webster,
The motion- for the reversal of the judgment and the grant ©f a
venire d-e novo
is o-ver-rnled, and that brings up for consideration the motioir for an arrest of the judgment. This isfonnded- upon the alleged insufficiency c-f the indictment, and the objection to it is the means whereby the homicide is charged to have been committed, are-stated-to be to the jurors-unknown. The indictment is substantially, if not literally, the same with the fourth- count, of the indictment against Dr-Webster, which, after argument and matare deliberation, waesustained by the judgment of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts see
Commonwealth
v.
Webster,
Judgment affirmed.
