37 N.H. 175 | N.H. | 1858
By tbe common law an accessory could not be punished until tbe guilt of tbe principal had been established. Roscoe’s Cr. Ev. 218*; Russell on Crimes 21, n. A; Whar. Cr. Law, Tit. Accessories. Before tbe statute of 1 Anne, chap. 9, in England, whenever tbe attainder of tbe principal was prevented by bis death, pardon, or being admitted to benefit of clergy, whether before or after bis conviction, tbe accessory could not be arraigned. But where tbe principal was attainted, that is, bad received judgment of death, upon conviction by verdict, plea of guilty, or outlawry, bis subsequent death or .pardon would not avail tbe accessoiy. Hawkins’ Pleas of
I have found no statutory provisions in this State on the subject of the indictment, trial or conviction of the accessory in reference to that of the principal, prior to the Revised Statutes, chap. 221, by which it is enacted that accessories shall be punished in the same manner as the principal, and may be tried and convicted either before or after the conviction of the principal. Until the passage of this act, in 1842, proceedings in this State against the accessory were governed by the rules of the old common law, as modified by the statute of Anne. The accessory could be tried with the principal upon the same indictment, or by a separate trial upon the same or another indictment, after the conviction of the principal. Commonwealth v. Andrews, 3 Mass. 126; Commonwealth v. Phillips, 16 Mass. 423; Commonwealth v. Knapp, 10 Pick. 484; State v. Butler, 17 Vt. 146; United States v. Burr, 4 Cranch 502, 503. If tried separately he could be convicted only upon proof of the prior conviction of the principal. The death or escape of the principal consequently gave complete immunity to the accessory. It thus resulted that the accessory before the fact, always equally guilty
The motion in arrest of judgment is denied. Confessions, to be received in evidence against the prisoner; must be voluntary. If obtained by the influence of hope or fear, applied by another to his mind, they must be rejected. In 1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 219, the rule of law on this subject is laid down as demanding only that the confession shall have been made voluntarily, and without the appliances of hope or fear by any other person; and in applying the rule it is there said the matter rests wholly in the discretion of the judge, upon all the circumstances of the case ;■ the proof of the confession being admitted to the
A new trial granted.