140 Ky. 294 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
Appellant was convicted of the crime of voluntary manslaughter. He has had two trials, each resulting in verdict of guilty. The verdict upon the first trial was set aside and a new trial granted by the circuit court upon the ground of newly discovered evidence. There , appears to have been some difficulty in obtaining a qualified jury on the second trial. While the jury was being empanelled one of the veniremen notified the court that he had been approached by a son-in-law of appellant, who sought to influence his verdict, should he be selected.^ The court upon a. trial of the party charged, found him' guilty of contempt and punished him. The jury was finally selected and the'trial begun. It lasted for several days. Toward the close of the trial and at the noon •adjournment, while the jury was in charge of the sheriff under admonition to be kept together, and not suffer any one to approach them on the subject of the trial, they were taken to the public water-closet at the court house by the sheriff. One of the jury, necessarily, or under the pretense of necessity, went into the closet, the others and the sheriff remaining outside. A son of appellant then came up and went into the closet also. He claims that he did not know that it was occupied, did not know the juror, and said nothing to him; which the juror confirms. While they were in the closet the presiding judge of the court, having occasion to use it, and not knowing it was occupied, went in there also, when he found the parties in earnest, and apparently confidential conversation. When they saw him they appeared confused and hurriedly withdrew. The jury had been put in charge of the sheriff by the court. But, without the knowledge of the court, and as the judge certifies, to his
‘ ‘ There is one man on this jury who has been ‘ fixed ’ in this case. This fact is known by the judge on the bench. Eleven of you have not been ‘fixed.’ Eleven of you know who this juror is. I will expect that juror to be for an acquittal, but I expect the other eleven of you to be for a conviction. Judge Frank Finley, while circuit judge and while presiding at the trial of a case, and knowing that one of the jurors had been ‘fixed’ to find for the defendant, peremptorily instructed the jury to find the defendant guilty, and afterwards set the verdict aside. I appeal to the ‘fixed’ juror to look at the embiem of justice here on the judge’s stand, the beautiful figure of a woman, blindfolded with the scales of justice equally poised in her hand. She administers justice without fear and without knowing any man. She is blindfolded as shown by this figure.”
. The defendant then moved the court to discharge the jury, which was also overruled.
Another attorney for the Commonwealth in his argument of the case to the jury, said:
“A great and outraged populace is appealing to you to do your duty in this case.”
That remark was objected to. The court sustained the objection and admonished the jury not to consider the statement, These arguments of counsel are the only grounds urged, for a reversal.
The matter last quoted, irregular and improper as it was,, was probably cured by the admonition of the court. Whether we would have reversed for it alone is not necessary to decide. But the other matter is moi’e serious. It contained a statement of fact, not in evidence before the jury, of a-most damaging character as affecting the guilt of the accused. It charged that the fact was within the personal knowledge of the presiding
A fair summary of the principle under discussion is found in Wigmore on Evidence, section 1806, as follows:
“A counsel’s argument is in its purpose a connected presentation of the facts supposed to have been proved by the evidence tending in favor of his client. He is not a witness. He may have testified as a witness; but in his argument his is solely the functions and rights of counsel. Any representation of fact, therefore, which is ,made by him in the argument, must not be an assertion made upon his own credit; it must be based solely upon those matters of facts of which evidence has already been introduced or of which no evidence need be introduced because of their notoriety as judicially noticed facts. To bring forward in argument an assertion of fact not of these two sorts is to become a witness; and to be a witness without being subject to cross-examina
Authorities are numerous and consistent in support of that announcement. This court has had frequent occasion to consider the subject. The rule announced was applied in Cook v. Commonwealth, 86 Ky. 663; Bates v. Commonwealth, 13 Ky. Law Rep. 132; McHenry Coal Company v. Sheddon, 98 Ky. 687; Howard v. Commonwealth, 110 Ky. 356; 22 Ky. Law Rep. 1845.
In Sasse v. State, 68 Wis. 530, the district attorney intimated that some one on behalf of the defendant had tampered with the witness for the state, or spirited him away, and, upon objections being made, remarked that he would prove- it before he got through, after which he did not even offer to prove the charge. It was held error, and ground for reversal.
In Nally v. State (Texas), 13 S. W. 672, the prosecuting attorney stated to the jury that he expected to show by a witness that Sam Nally had induced him to leave the county so as not to testify. The court, reversing the judgment, said:
“There was no statement by the district attorney to the effect, and no pretense, that he sought to inculpate the defendant in any manner directly with this attempt to suppress the testimony. Even if the prosecuting officer could have proved what he stated, such testimony would have been clearly inadmissible against defendant, unless he has been directly connected with the matter. Favors v. State, 20 Texas App., 158; Marshall v. State, 5 Texas App., 273. There being no proof that these overtures to the witness were made by the authority or with the knowledge of the accused, such statement by the district attorney was illegal and unjust, and was highly calculated to prejudice the accused. Barbee v. State, 23 Tex. App., 199. Anything Sam Nally, the brother, might have done in the matter, in the absence and without the knowledge of defendant, was most clearly inadmissible against and could not be binding upon him, and offered no reasonable presumption or inference pertinent to the issue in the case for which defendant was on trial, and the court should have so instructed the jury.”
If an effort on the part of the accused to influence witnesses in his behalf to fabricate evidence, or to have the evidence against him suppressed, would tend, and it does, to establish his guilt under the main charge, it is
We commend the efforts of the trial judge in endeavoring to protect the jury against outside influence. The question necessarily arose in his mind, what to do,
As neither course suggested was adopted, when the attorney indulged the argument complained of, it should have been withdrawn in such manner as to leave no doubt that its evil effect was removed, or, the court, upon the consent of the accused, should have set aside the swearing of the jury.