8 Mont. 1 | Mont. | 1888
The defendant, Charles Clayton, was indicted by the grand jury of Silver Bow County, at the October term, 1887, of the District Court in and for the said county, for the offense of murder, alleged to have been committed on the tenth day of August, 1887, by the killing of one Zadoc C. Maddox. The trial took place at the May term, 1888, of said District Court, and defendant was found guilty of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to the territorial prison for a term of fifteen years. A motion for a new trial was made in the court below, which was denied, and this appeal was taken from the judgment and order denying said motion.
The errors complained of by the defendant are as follows: —
The court erred in not sustaining defendant’s challenge to the grand juror, Charles M. Joyce, on the ground that said juror
The motion to quash the indictment was based principally upon the ground that “two persons, not allowed by law, were permitted to be present during the session of the grand jury, while the charge embraced in the indictment was under consideration, to wit, C. M. Joyce and John E. Davis.” The motion was simply a distinct and separate mode of raising the question of the qualification of those persons as grand jurors. We have held above that Joyce was a competent grand juror. It appears from the record that one John E. Davis was regularly drawn to serve as a grand juror at the October term, 1887, of the District Court of Silver Bow County, at which the indictment in this case was found. By some error or oversight, the sheriff did not serve John E. Davis, but did serve one John A. Davis, who appeared in court in obedience to the summons, and, showing that he was a citizen of the State of Illinois, was discharged. The return on the venire showing a service upon the above-named John E. Davis, the court issued an attachment for him; and, being brought into court, he was impaneled and served as a juror upon the grand jury which found this indictment. He was regularly drawn, but was not summoned, and this is made •ground of objection by the appellant. If Davis was a grand juror, then the motion to quash the indictment, because of his presence at the meetings of the grand jury, was properly denied. It will be observed that Davis, as far as the record shows, had all the personal qualifications of a grand juror, and that no challenge could have been successfully urged against him upon any of the grounds which are enumerated in section 120 of the Criminal Practice Act, as causes for challenge to an individual grand juror. It is very doubtful if a challenge could have been sustained if made to the panel. The only ground for such a challenge is found in section 119 of the Criminal Practice Act, and is as follows: “ The challenge to the panel may be for the cause that the same was not drawn in accordance with the essential provisions of the law of this Territory.” The objection to the juror Davis was not that his name had not been drawn properly, but that he had not been properly summoned. It
Benjamin Plummer was called as a witness for the prosecution. He was present at the time the shooting took place; and, considering the character of his testimony, the conclusion is inevitable that the prosecution called him as a witness, not from choice, but in order to comply with the rule laid down in Territory v. Hanna, 5 Mont. 248. If that case is to be construed as meaning that the res gestae must be proved by each and every person present, and that the prosecution must call every such person as a witness for the Territory, and if the rule is not to be limited to the calling of witnesses sufficient in number to prove all of the facts, then it would seem that a more liberal rule should be allowed the Territory as to contradicting witnesses called for the prosecution. The reason given for the law which forbids a party contradicting a witness called by him is that he has voluntarily (failed such witness, and that he thereby guaranties his veracity. If the rule in the Hanna Case is to be extended to the limit indicated, it could scarcely be said that the Territory would be acting voluntarily in calling its witnesses. The witness Plummer testified, among other things, that, at the time of the shooting, deceased, who had driven up to the place where he met the defendant, jumped out of the wagon with his shotgun in his hand. The prosecution called Frank Marsh, one of the grand jurors, evidently for the purpose of contradicting
The shooting occurred at a place about two miles from the town of Melrose. The defendant was called as a witness in his own behalf, and, among other things, testified that, after the shooting occurred, he and others remained at the place for some time; that defendant rode to the home of the deceased, and notified the family of the shooting; that he then started for Melrose to surrender himself to the sheriff; that he met Mr. Justice Smith about one-half mile from Melrose, and that he gave the shotgun to him. The defendant’s counsel then asked the defendant, “ What did you say when you delivered up this gun to Judge Smith.” To this question the prosecution objected, the objection was sustained, and the defendant excepted to the ruling of the court. Judge Smith had been called as a witness to identify the gun referred to; and in his testimony he confined himself strictly to that fact, and gave no part of any conversation between himself and the defendant. The testimony sought does not come within the rule which allows a party to give any portion of a conversation already introduced in evidence by the other side, whether or not such conversation was properly introduced. The defendant, how
The witness Power, called in behalf of the Territory, testified that, so far as he knew, the deceased did not have any pistol on him at the time of the shooting. He was then asked this question : “ If he had had one, do you think you would have seen it?” The defendant objected to this question as irrelevant and immaterial, and his exception was noted to the ruling of the court admitting the question. It is urged that this calls for the opinion of the witness, and that it was a question which the jury should have decided. The answers are few which do not more or less contain the opinion of the witness; inferences drawn from facts known or thought by him to be known to him; the ultimate .fact deduced from precedent facts known perhaps to no one save himself, and which cannot be described. And it is impossible to suppose that the jury could arrive at the ultimate fact sought by this question. Take the question of identity: The witness is asked if he saw the defendant, and answers that he did see him. Is that not the opinion of the witness, an inference drawn from facts known to him? Mr. Wharton in his work on Criminal Evidence, section 13, says: “ But here comes another question of inference: Is the defendant the person by whom the shot was fired? .... Men’s faces and figures, like their handwritings, may sometimes be so similar that the keenest observer is baffled when seeking to discover a difference. The witness is asked how he knows that the prisoner at the bar is the person who fired the fatal shot, and his answer is: ‘I infer it from a similarity of eyes, of hair, of height, of manner, of expression, of dress.’ Human identity, therefore, is an inference drawn from a series of facts, some of them veiled, it may be, in disguise, and all of them more or less varied by circumstances. Analyze the answer of the witness given in the foregoing quotation. Does it not call for the opinion of the witness? Are the eyes similar? Is not that an opinion of the witness? The similarity of the hair, of height, of manner, is that not the opinion of the witness? Certainly it is.' It is an opinion formed without conscious mental process,
Another alleged error is, that the record at the time of the trial did not show that the defendant had made any plea to the indictment. If such was the full history of the case, it would seem that the trial, verdict, and j udgment are nullities. (See Wharton’s
It is urged that the court below had no power to make the amendment to read that the plea was made orally, as that did not appear from the affidavits. We are of the opinion that the fact of the plea is the essential, not its form; but we think that the court below was warranted in finding that, when the plea was made, it was made in the usual and proper manner, nothing to the contrary appearing.
A new trial is sought upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, concerning certain threats made by the deceased against the defendant in the presence of one John Price. In the affidavit of the defendant, made in support of the motion, he states that he had known, for a long time, that the deceased had made threats, that he had been unable to procure the evidence of any witness at the trial, and that he did not know that Price would swear to the threats referred to, until after the trial. Price was a witness for the prosecution, was cross-examined by the defendant’s counsel, and in the latter examination the very conversation set out in the affidavit for continuance is referred to. We do not think that the record shows due diligence. Moreover, the evidence is cumulative. The witnesses Moore and Peterson, called by the defendant, testified as to threats made by the deceased against defendant.
It is also claimed that the evidence does not justify the verdict. It appears from the evidence that on the tenth day of August, 1887, the deceased, and the witnesses Peterson and Power, were driving to some hay lands, part of the public domain; that on the way they met the defendant, and stopped; that the deceased and the defendant then had a quarrel about the right to cut the hay upon the land mentioned, each claiming the right to be his own; that defendant called to the deceased “to come on”; that deceased, during the quarrel, had a shotgun in his lap, but handed the gun to Powers, and then, upon the challenge “to come on,” jumped out of the wagon, and exclaimed, “I am not armed; I haven’t anything to defend myself with whatever;” that defendant took a few steps backward towards his mowing-machine, and procured a pistol; that deceased, when he jumped to the ground, had his back to the defendant, and was in the act of turning, and had turned about half way around, when the defendant fired three shots, two of which were described
Judgment affirmed.