10 P. 359 | Ariz. | 1886
The defendant in this case, on the eighth day of June, 1885, at a session of the district court in and for the county of Cochise, was convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree, the jury affixing thereto the death penalty. He brings the case to this court, alleging various errors both in the admission and exclusion of testimony, and in the charge of the court. It is not deemed necessary to a disposition of the case to go into any very full or detailed statement of the testimony therein, or the facts as disclosed by the testimony. It is sufficient to say that on the seventeenth day of January, 1885, the defendant shot and killed one Matthew Alexander, in the town of Tombstone. The shooting occurred upon the street on the morning of the day last mentioned. The theory of
The assignments of error, when grouped, present the following questions: First, were challenges to certain jurors by the accused improperly overruled? Second, was there an abuse of discretion on the part of the district court in declining and refusing to continue the cause? Third, should the testimony offered by the defendant, as to the effect upon his mind of his habits of intoxication, have been received? Fourth, was there error in the instructions given? These questions will be considered in their order.
1. As to the jurors. E. D. Waffle was called as a juror, and, questioned by the defendant’s counsel, testified in substance that he was in Tombstone the day of the shooting, and heard of that fact, and that he had some opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant; and, in reply to questions, he stated that the opinion he had'was not a fixed or unalterable one; that,, notwithstanding such opinion, he could sit on the jury and give the defendant a fair and impartial trial; that he would decide the cause upon the testimony given, and not upon his former opinion or impression; and, further, that the opinion which he had formed was one that would be changed by the testimony of witnesses upon the stand. We think the juror was entirely competent to sit in the case. The opinion of the juror did not seem to be founded on any evidence at all, and was nothing more than a mere impression based upon what he had heard in the street or read in the newspapers. Such an opinion
2. As to the error alleged in not continuing or postponing the trial upon the application of the defendant. The record discloses that the defendant was put upon his trial on the twenty-eight day of May, 1885; that the jury disagreed; and that during the same term, and on the eighth day of June succeeding, he was placed upon trial again, in which trial a conviction was had. The defendant in due time filed an affidavit, setting forth the absence of a material witness, and set out at great length what he expected to prove by such witness. The affidavit in substance alleged that the witness was present at the first trial of the cause, and gave testimony therein; that, after he had so testified, he left the territory and went to New Mexico to attend to business there; that, immediately upon the court setting down the cause for trial the second time, the defendant procured a subpoena to be issued, and made every proper and possible exertion to secure the attendance of the absent witness, but that it was impossible to reach him, or to have him at the trial; and setting up the circumstances attending his departure, and the fact that the defendant would have him present at the next succeeding term of court. The affidavit then proceeds and sets out at considerable length the facts the defendant expected to prove and would prove by the absent witness; among others, that upon the night before the' shooting the deceased came to the house where the defendant was stopping, and attempted to break into the house, and made threats against the defendant, among others, that he would take his life; and, further, that the defendant, from the excessive use of spirituous liquors, was mentally incapacitated and weakened to such a degree as not to fully understand or be responsible for his acts or . conduct. It was made to appear that the trial court had informed counsel for defendant that the defendant would not be put upon trial again during the then present term,
3. The testimony shows that, shortly after the deceased was shot, and within two or three minutes thereafter, he was carried to a drugstore a few feet from where he was shot, and instantly made a statement to the effect that the defendant called to him to get down on his knees, and that on his refusal to do so the defendant shot him. This testimony was objected to as incompetent and hearsay, but admitted by the court. We think the testimony was clearly competent and admissible. It was clearly part of the res gestae and admissible. Hurd v. People, 25 Mich. 405. In Harriman v. Stowe, 57 Mo. 93, it is held that where an accident happens, and the injured party declares to the physician, called soon after the accident, how it happened, such statement is admissible in evidence. In Commonwealth v. McPike, 3 Cush. 181, 50 Am. Dec. 727, it is held that, where a person immediately escaping from an assault declares who
4. The defendant alleges error with reference to the admission of testimony as to the effect upon his mind of the continuous use of intoxicating liquors. The defendant offered testimony tending to show that from a continuous use of ardent spirits his mind had become weakened, and that he was suffering, at the time, from an attack of delirium tremens or alcoholism. Both legal and medical writers recognize the fact that a continuous and excessive use of ardent liquors may result in such a state of insanity as to relieve from criminal responsibility for acts done while in a con-. dition of mind produced and caused by such excessive drinking. It is very different from acts produced in a state of ordinary intoxication, and must be governed by wholly different rules and principles. The trials of causes, as reported, show that there is no species o'f insanity in which the mind is so completely filled with hallucinations as that produced by this means. In the case before us the defendant claims that certain proof offered by him bearing upon this point was improperly excluded. It is said by the attorney general, in reply to this, that although in the beginning the trial judge expressed the opinion that such proof was not competent, that still the question was gone into fully by the witnesses for the defendant, who answered such questions as were put to them on that subject. We think from an examination of the record that this is so; but we find, further, that the whole effect of this testimony was destroyed by the remarks of the district judge throughout the trial, to the effect that such testimony was of no importance at all, and could effect nothing on behalf of the defendant, unless it could be shown that he was in an actual state of intoxi
The defendant put upon the stand Dr. Dunn, a physician, in active practice in Tombstone, and offered to show by him an injury or depression of the skull or brain of the defendant, and the probable effect of the continuous use
5. Certain errors are alleged with reference to the cross-examination of the defendant, who went on the stand as a general witness on his own behalf. When upon the stand, he was cross-examined as to what he thought and intended to do at the time he fired the shot. This was clearly proper cross-examination. No question seems to have been asked beyond those indicated, and certainly the defendant could not complain so long as the questions were confined to that limit. The defendant went on the stand as a general witness in his own behalf, and testified fully as to the shooting, as well as to the circumstances occurring the night before. In view of such fact, the cross-examination might very properly have been extended beyond the point where it did actuaily stop, had the prosecution seen fit to pursue it further. Stover v. State, 56 N. Y. 315; People v. Reinhart, 39 Cal. 449; People v. Russel, 46 Cal. 121; Commonwealth v. Price, 10 Gray, 472, 71 Am. Dec. 668; People v. Beck, 58 Cal. 212. These California cases were under a statute which required the cross-examination to be confined to matters about which the prisoner was examined in chief. In our statute on the subject there is no such limitation. Comp. Laws, p. 101, § 408. This rule does not violate the principle that a person accused of crime shall not be compelled to testify against himself; but this is a privilege which a defendant upon trial may waive, and when he does so, and goes upon the stand as a
This disposes of all the question raised on the trial except those alleging error in the instructions given. We do not deem it necessary, however, to consider this branch of the case.
The sentence and judgment of the court below are reversed, and a new trial granted.