8 N.M. 133 | N.M. | 1895
Lead Opinion
It appears from the record in this case that after the jury had retired to consider their verdict, and had been out for forty hours, they returned into court, and reported that they were unable to agree. Thereupon the judge, while disclaiming any desire to influence their verdict, spoke of the importance of their agreeing if it was possible. He alluded to the importance of this particular case as affecting public interests, and of the expense it had caused. The following colloquy between the judge and jury .then occurred: “The Judge: Gentlemen, I know it is a great hardship for you to be locked up. I appreciate the situation you are in, but in the interest of the public I think it my . duty to give you every possible chance to agree upon a verdict. Mr. Freeborn [one of the jurors], how do you feel this morning? Mr. Freeborn: Pretty bad, sir. Judge: Is there anything 1 could give you, or order for you, — any medicine or doctor? Mr. Freeborn: No, sir; I have some medicine. Judge: Is there any kind of food you would like to have? Mr. Freeborn: No, sir. Judge: While I dislike to keep you locked up, gentlemen, I think it my duty to give you one more chance. Mr. Stackpole [another juror]: It strikes me that everything has been done that can be done to find a verdict in this case, and the jury is only punished. It is almost impossible to find a verdict. Judge: Gentlemen, as I said awhile ago, I think I will give you one more chance in this case, to see if you can agree. You can retire and make another trial.” This occurred between 8 and 9 o’clock in the evening. The jury retired, and at 11 o’clock the following morning the jury returned into court, and the following occurred: “Judge: Gentlemen, have you agreed upon your verdict! Jury: No, sir. Judge: Gentlemen of the jury, there is an instruction in the charge which I might have given you ordinarily, which I did not give you, but which the law authorizes me to give. It is this: While the law fixes the punishment in the case, or rather while the court assesses the punishment, the law authorizes you, in case you find the defendant guilty, to recommend him to the mercy of the court; and that recommendation made by the jury will be considered by the court in fixing the punishment. I thought it proper, gentlemen, to give you these instructions,, and have brought you in for that purpose. This is all I have to say to you, and you can retire to your room.” The jury retired, and in half an hour the jury returned the following verdict:
“We, the jury, find the accused, Maximiano Griego, guilty as charged in the indictment. Owing to the long lapse of time since this murder has been committed, the jury recommends the prisoner to the mercy of the court. Richard Stackpole, Foreman.”
The declaration of law made in this case, that upon a recommendation of clemency by the jury the judge would consider it in fixing punishment for murder in the first degree, was erroneous, and, being erroneous, if it can have had any influence on the jury, their verdict ought to be set aside. This was the rule laid down by Marshall, C. J., in Etting v. Bank, 11 Wheat. 75, and since then the supreme court of the United States has established a rule even broader. Thus in Deery v. Gray, 5 Wall. 807, Justice Miller says that, while a cause will not be reversed for error which has worked no injury, “whenever the application of this rule is sought it must appear so clear as to be beyond a doubt that the error did not and could not have prejudiced the party’s rights.” See, also, Gilmer v. Higley, 110 U. S. 47; Boston & Albany Railway Co. v. O’Reilly, 158 U. S. 337. For the foregoing reasons this cause is reversed, and remanded for a new trial.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — I feel constrained to disagree with the majority of my brothers upon the bench, and believe it is a duty incumbent on me to express my views, and give my reasons for dissenting from the able opinion handed down on the important questions raised in this case.
Appellant’s counsel have assigned a great number of errors, but only those considered in the opinion of the court will be considered here. After the jury had been out nearly fifty-four hours deliberating on their verdict, the presiding judge called them in, and gave them the following additional instructions, to wit, “Judge: Gentlemen, have you agreed upon your verdict? Jury:* No, sir. Judge: Gentlemen of the jury, there is an instruction in the charge which I might have given you ordinarily, which I did not give you, but which the law authorizes me to give. It is this: While the law fixes the punishment in this case, or rather while the court assesses the punishment, the law authorizes you, in case you find the defendant guilty, to recommend him to the mercy of the court; and that recommendation made by the jury will be considered by the court in fixing the punishment. I thought it proper, gentlemen, to give you these instructions, and have brought you in for that purpose. This is all I have to say to you, and you can retire to your room.” The jury retired, and in about half an hour returned into court with the following verdict: “We the jury, find the accused, Maximiano Griego, guilty as charged in the indictment. Owing to the long lapse of time since this murder has been committed, the jury recommend the prisoner to the mercy of the court.” Appellant contends, and with much force, too, that this instruction, together with the colloquy cited in the opinion of the court between the judge and the jury, influenced the jury to his prejudice, and that it is a fatal error, because such an instruction is not authorized by law in cases where the offense is murder in the first degree, and where the court charges only in that degree. The statute on that subject is section 10: “In the trial of all criminal cases punishment within the limits prescribed by law shall be assessed by the .court in its discretion; but juries may, in their discretion, upon return of a verdict of guilty in any criminal case, recommend defendant to the clemency of the court, and any such recommendation shall receive due consideration by the court.” Laws 1891, p. 151. The court disclaimed to the jury in plain language any intention to in any manner influence the jury in their deliberations, and it is perfectly plain that he did not intend to so do, and it should not be presumed by this court that the trial court varied intentionally in any manner from his duties and responsibilities, upon the trial, unless it shall affirmatively appear from the record to the contrary. If the statute, supra, means what it says, and if that meaning is to be favored with a plain common-sense construction, then it was the duty of the court to give the instruction in question. It is the duty of the trial court to instruct on all the law applicable to the ease, and if it was error at all it was in favor of appellant, and not such that he can be heard to complain of. This statute specially provides that juries may, in their discretion, recommend the defendant to the clemency of the court, and that such recommendation shall receive due consideration by the court. It could not, I believe, be contended that, if the court had failed to give the alleged fatal construction, and the jury of its own motion had returned a verdict with the recommendation for clemency to the court, that it would have been a void verdict, or that the court would have been authorized in refusing to accept it with that recommendation in it. I think a court would be guilty of error to refuse to receive such a verdict, and would erf not to give such “recommendation due consideration.”
But it is contended by 'appellant that the court was powerless in the premises, and was compelled to pass sentence of death by hanging by the neck until dead, and that, the court committed a fatal error in not doing so; and this may be true, considering the whole record together. But the court is not powerless in' such matters when he has such a recommendation from the jury. He could, with that as a basis, recommend the defendant to the governor, and secure executive clemency, and a commutation to imprisonment, and it is well known that on the petition of the jury like this, and on the recommendation of the trial judge, executive clemency is seldom, if ever, refused. And there are many other ways in which a trial court can properly aid the prisoner after conviction. Moreover, to say that the jury were influenced by the objectionable instructions is to hold that they disregarded their solemn oaths, and I can not see anything in that instruction even tending to support that contention, unless it is that the jury returned a verdict very soon after the instructions were given; and this is a presumption not authorized by law. The legislature had an object and purpose in view, no doubt, when the statute, supra, was enacted, for putting into it the provision authorizing the jury to recommend the prisoner to the clemency of the court, because from 1846 to that time (1891) it had been the province of the jury to assess the punishment in all eases, and it is evident that the legislature intended by the insertion of that clause to reserve to the jury that right in all criminal trials, and it is only humane and proper in its intent and effect. These views are not unsupported by respectable authority. The following excerpt is from the case of State v. Murrell, 33 S. C. 99: “Because his honor erred in bringing into court the jury and making the following statement: ‘By the Court: Have you agreed on your verdict? The Foreman: No, sir. The Court: Is it a question of law? The Foreman: We think so. We wish to know if we can supplement our verdict with a recommendation to mercy. The Court: Yes, sir. The law provides that in certain cases the jury are allowed to supplement the verdict with a recommendation to mercy, and that of itself changes the verdict. In cases like this, a recommendation to mercy would have its influence with the court. It would not be binding upon the court, but it would have its influence upon the court. There is no provision that the court shall be governed by the recommendation, but, of course, the court is always, more or less, owing to the circumstances, governed— influenced, I should have said — by the recommendation of the jury.’” The court in that case held that the court below did not err in giving the jury the instruction above quoted, although the offense was a capital one; and that case was decided in 1890. And in support of the opinion citations are made. State v. Frink, 1 Bay, 165; State v. Gill, 14 S. C. 415. It is true, many decisions can be, and have .been, in the opinion of the court, cited against this contention.
The court passed sentence on the appellant here, and assessed his punishment at twenty-five years’ confinement in the New Mexico penitentiary. The statute fixes the punishment on conviction for murder in the first degree at death, and I fully concur in the opinion of the court that the sentence to a term of imprisonment was erroneous; but I do not concur in the opinion that that error is sufficient to reverse the case for a trial de novo. The statute provides (Comp. Laws 1884, sec. 2479): “When an appeal is taken by the party indicted, if the supreme court affirms the judgment of the district court, it shall direct the sentence pronounced to be executed, and the same shall be executed accordingly; if the judgment be reversed, the supreme court shall direct a new trial, or that the defendant be absolutely discharged, according to the circumstances of the case.” Id., sec. 2480: “When the appeal has been taken by the territory, if the judgment of the district court be affirmed, the party shall be discharged; if reversed, the supreme court shall direct the district court to enter up judgment upon the verdict rendered; or, when no judgment has been rendered, to proceed to trial on the indictment.” It is held in the opinion of the court that this court can do only one of two things under section 2479, supra; that is, to affirm or reverse for a trial anew.
Assuming that the trial was in all respects regular, and that no reversible error intervened in the record, I believe that this court had the power, as §,n appellate tribunal, to remand the case, and order the court below to pass sentence on the prisoner in accordance with the verdict returned by the jury. It will be seen by section 2480, supra, that this court is required when the. appeal is taken by the territory, and the judgment of the lower court is reversed, “the supreme court shall direct the district court to enter up judgment upon the verdict rendered.” Suppose the district court had, on the incoming of the verdict of the jury, sustained a motion in arrest, and that the territory had prosecuted an appeal from that decision, and this court had reversed it, would it, in such an event, be contended that a trial de novo should be had on the indictment! I think not. I think this court would direct the court below to enter up a judgment upon that verdict as rendered. If this position is correct, can any sound reason be given why a rule should be applied to the defendant when he is the appellant other than that applied to the territory when it is the appellant! Those two sections are parts of the same act, and a part of the Kearney Code, and have been in force since 1846, and I am unable to see why this court has not the same power to direct the lower court to enter up a judgment upon the verdict, when the party indicted appeals, that it has when the territory appeals. The party indicted should have the same right to a new trial in either case, if the trial and conviction was proper, fair, and impartial in both instances: and, so far as the opinion of the court in this case is considered, the trial was fair and impartial, except as to the instructions, and the form of the sentence therein passed upon, which I am now considering. In one case exception is taken after trial to the indictment; the court sustains it, and the territory appeals and succeeds, and this court directs the court below to enter up judgment upon the «yerdiet as rendered, and the defendant is denied a new trial. In the other case, exception is taken to the sentence of the lower court, and it is overruled, and he appeals, and succeeds on that point m this court, and is allowed a new trial. After reading the two sections, supra, together, it will be seen that the distinction is reduced to a refinement, and such a refinement is not at this time a part of the common law. In re Friedrich, 51 Fed. Rep. 747, is cited in the opinion of the case as authority. That was an opinion by United States Circuit Judge Hanford in habeas corpus proceedings in a case somewhat like the one at bar. The defendant was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree, in the state of Washington, and the trial judge passed the death sentence on him in accordance with the law, and on a review of the case by the supreme court that court found that the facts did not sustain the verdict in the first degree, and under section 1429, Hill’s Code of that state, which provides that “the supreme court may affirm, reverse or modify any judgment or order appealed from, and may direct the proper judgment or order to be entered, or direct a new trial or further proceedings to be had,” instead of reversing and remanding for a new trial, it ordered that the verdict stand, and remanded the ease to the court below, and directed it to enter a judgment against the prisoner, adjudging him guilty of murder in the second degree, and to proceed thereon in accordance with law; and from that the prisoner sued out a writ of habeas corpus. In commenting on the section of the Code, supra, the learned circuit judge said: “This law does not, in terms nor by implication, give any power not usually possessed by appellate tribunals. Power to modify a judgment or direct a proper judgment is given; and power to order a new trial of a cause, whereby the verdict of a jury may be annulled, is given. But to the word ‘judgment’ in this statute must be given its true legal and accurate definition. It does not stand as a synonym for the word ‘verdict;’ ” and he then proceeds to quote from a very able opinion of Mr. Justice Gray in Com. v. Lockwood, 109 Mass. 323, in which he says: “The ordinary legal meaning of ‘conviction,’ when used to designate a particular stage of a criminal prosecution triable by a jury, is the confession of the accused in open court, or the verdict returned against him by the jury, which sustains and publishes the fact of his guilt; while ‘judgment’ or ‘sentence’ is the appropriate word to denote the action of the court before which the trial is had, declaring the consequences to the convict of the fact thus ascertained.” This is a clear and strong-drawn distinction between the office of a verdict and the judgment or sentence of the court, and this court has the power, under section 2480, supra, to direct the court below to enter a judgment upon a verdict rendered when the territory is appellant. And Mr. Justice Hanford, in commenting on the Washington statute,' supra, expressly says that “this law does not, in terms nor by implication, give any power not usually possessed by appellate tribunals.” And if that statute in express terms does not confer any additional power on that court, under our statute (section 2479, supra) does this court possess the power to direct the court below to enter up a judgment upon the verdict rendered in accordance with law? The error in the Washington supreme court was in directing the court below to enter a judgment not authorized by the verdict. This was clearly an invasion by the court on the province of the jury in an attempt to pass, upon the facts and find a verdict. This no court has any right to do,. however pure, just, or wise it may be. And in this respect the case is very dissimilar from the case at bar, and from the contention here urged.
It is contended in the opinion of the court that the decision in the case of In re Friedrich, 13 Sup. Ct. 793, is conclusive in the case at bar. That is true in so far as it applies. That is the same case, and on the same point, passed on by Circuit Judge Hanford in 51 Fed. Rep. 747. Mr. Justice Jackson, in speaking for the supreme court, said: “At common law the general rule undoubtedly was that where an erroneous judgment was entered by a trial court, or an erroneous sentence imposed, on a valid indictment, the appellate court, on error, could not itself render, such a judgment as the trial court should have rendered, or remand the ease to the trial court with directions for it to do so, but the only thing it could do was to reverse the judgment, and discharge the defendant. This rule was recognized in England in the case of Rex v. Bourne, 7 Adol. & E. 58, when the court of king’s bench reversed the judgment of the court of quarter sessions, and discharged the defendants, because the sentence imposed upon them by the court was of a lower grade than that which the law provided for the crime of which they had been ■convicted. Some of the states in which the common law prevails or is adhered to have adopted the same rule, but in most of the states it is expressly provided by statute that when there is an error in the sentence, ■which calls for a reversal, the appellate court is to render such - judgment as the court below should have rendered, or to remand the record to the court below with directions for it to render the proper judgment; and this practice seems to prevail in the state of Washington.” It will be seen here that the opinion of this court does not follow either proposition laid down by the supreme court of the United States in the case cited. It did not reverse and discharge the prisoner, it did not render any judgment as to the court below, nor did it remand thQ record to the court below with directions for it to render the proper judgment on the verdict, but it did reveíase the case, and remand it for a trial anew on the indictment.'
In Benedict v. State, 12 Wis. 313, a defective or erroneous judgment was entered in the court below, because it was not in accordance with the statute, and Chief Justice Dixon, after commenting on and reversing the judgment because it did not contain the words “hard labor and solitary confinement,” said: “We are of opinion that the sentence or judgment which the law declares shall be pronounced upon the plaintiff in error for the crime of which he stands regularly convicted according to the laws of the state, has not yet been pronounced; and, as it. is doubtful whether this court has the power to supply the deficiency, the proper course appears to be for us to order the court below to proceed to give judgment on the conviction. In thus disposing of this ease, we have adopted the practice of the court of king’s bench in England, when, under like circumstances, a procedendo is awarded. See King v. Kenworthy, 1 Barn. & C. 711; (8 E. C. L. 196); Reg v. Holloway, 5 Eng. Law & Eq. 310.” In that state a statute exisited in almost the same words as that of the state of Washington, supra, and the court held that: “The case must, therefore, be remitted to the court below, with directions that that court proceed to pronounce the judgment required by law.” Beale v. Com., 25 Pa. 22, was a case on an erroneous sentence, and Chief Justice Lewis, in delivering the opinion of the court, on that point said: “The doubts which formerly existed respecting the power of the supreme court upon reversing a judgment in a criminal case are entirely dissipated. We have authorities to show that the supreme court, on reversal of a judgment in a criminal case for error in the sentence, has power to pass such sentence as the court below ought to have passed. Drew v. Com., 1 Whart. 281; Daniels v. Com., 7 Barr. 375; Com. v. Ellis, 11 Mass. 465; Kane v. People, 8 Wend. 211. It has also the power to award a procedendo in a criminal case. Rex v. Kenworthy, 1 Barn. & C. 711. And it may, in its discretion, remit the record with orders to proceed on the indictment, after reversal of an erroneous judgment. Com. v. McKisson, 8 Serg. & R. 422; Com. v. Church, 1 Barr. 110. The act of the sixteenth of June, 1836, conferred no new power in this respect. It was designed to remove doubts which had arisen in consequence of conflicting decisions. The common law embodies in itself sufficient reason and common sense to reject the monstrous doctrine that a prisoner whose guilt is'established by a regular verdict is to escape punishment altogether' because the court committed an error in passing sentence. If this court sanctioned such a rule, it would fail to perform the chief duty for which it was established. Our duty is to correct errors, and to ‘minister justice.’ But such a course would perpetuate error, and produce the most intolerable injustice.” In the case of Dodge v. People, 4 Neb. 220, where the sentence and judgment were erroneous because the prisoner was not present in court when it was pronounced, the contention was made that by reason of this error the supreme court of that state had no power to either pass sentence or to remand the case to the. district court with instructions to pronounce sentence in conformity to law. And Mr. Justice Maxwell, delivering the opinion of 'the court, said: “We are aware that cases can be found holding, under a statute similar to ours, that there is no authority in this court either to reinstate the prisoner or remand the case to the court below'for that purpose. We may correct errors in any other respect, so that the accused has had a fair trial, and that his rights have been properly guarded and secured; but the moment it appears that the court has not fully complied with the law in pronouncing sentence, it is at once ousted of jurisdiction, and the accused must go acquit. This doctrine, originating in England at a time when the courts of that country held that they had no authority to review proceedings and judgment in cases of felony, and grant new trials, partakes of the reasoning of that period that the judgment in a criminal case was absolute, unless a pardon was granted; that, if the judgment did not conform to the law, there was no power, of revision or amendment; and, as the prisoner could not be held on an invalid judgment, he must, therefore, be discharged.
This doctrine was expressly overruled in King v. Kenworthy, 1 Barn. & C. 711; Reg v. Holloway, 5 Eng. Law & Eq. 310; and the English courts now hold that they have full authority in such cases to impose the sentence required by law. * * * This case is therefore remitted to the court below, with directions to proceed to pronounce judgment on the verdict in the manner prescribed by the statute.” In the case of Williams v. State, 18 Ohio St. 46, the error assigned was an erroneous judgment and sentence, and the court, in passing upon the error, said: “As the error in this case is only in the insufficiency of the judgment and sentence of the court, their reversal will not affect the validity of the conviction. The case will be remanded to the court of»'common pleas of Defiance county, whither the plaintiff in error will be sent, for judgment and sentence upon the verdict of the jury pursuant to law.” The same doctrine was maintained in Richett v. State, 22 Ohio St. 405. And in Peglow v. State, 12 Wis. 534, where the error assigned was an erroneous sentence because the words “at hard labor,” were left out, Chief Justice Dixon, in passing on that error, said: “The judgment which the law authorizes and requires has not been pronounced, and the case stands as if no attempt to do so had ever been made. The circuit court is therefore directed to proceed to give judgment in this case in accordance with the requirements of the law. Let the record be remitted to the court below with directions to that effect.” In the case of People v. Riley, 48 Cal. 549, Chief Justice Wallace said: “The defendant was indicted and found guilty of the crime of house-breaking in the daytime, which is an offense punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for a term not exceeding five years. Upon the coming in of the verdict the court adjudged the defendant to suffer imprisonment in the state prison for the term of ten years. The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to the court below to proceed to judgment on the verdict.” There are other state authorities affirming the doctrine hereinbefore cited, but it is not necessary to cite them here.
I have assumed, for the purpose of this dissenting opinion, that there are no other assignable errors than the two hereinbefore stated, and upon which the opinion of the court is founded; and upon that assumption I contend: First, that the court did not err in giving the supplementary instructions as to the jury recommending clemency; and, that not being an assignable error, that, second, this court should have remitted the record, with directions to the court below to pronounce sentence upon the verdict rendered according to law.
I am unable to. see why the county of Socorro should be put to the expense and delay of another trial de novo, if there were no errors on the former trial on its merits, simply because the court passed an erroneous sentence. He was ably defended; all his rights were fully presented and fairly passed upon by the trial court; and the jury found him guilty on the facts as charged in the indictment, and the county should not be called upon to bear the expense of another trial on the same facts unless prejudicial error intervened on the trial. It only affords him another opportunity to escape the punishment of a crime of which a jury of his peers have found him guilty. It is a bad precedent to establish in this territory that when a fair and impartial trial has been had on a valid indictment, and a verdict rendered on the facts by a jury, the accused should be awarded a second trial on the indictment, because an erroneous judgment and sentence was entered by a clerk or passed by the court. It seems to me to be a waste of valuable time, a needless expense to the public, and a possible subversion of justice to require a trial anew of this cause. The general rule is that history never repeats itself with reference to lawsuits, but the general underlying principles for the disposition of criminal cases always remain the same, among which are that the indictment must be valid, and the jury a legal one; that all the rights of the accused must be guarded and protected by the court; that he must be confronted face to face by his accusers; that he must be present in court during all the proceedings of the trial and at the passing of the judgment, and must be asked why sentence should not be pronounced upon him; that he is entitled to the presumption of innocence of the crime charged, and that that halo of innocence surrounds and continues with him until the contrary is made to appear affirmatively to the jury by legal evidence to the exclusion of all reasonable doubt; and when he has been,awarded these rights he has had a trial by due process of law, and he is not then entitled to another trial de novo on the indictment.