8 N.M. 99 | N.M. | 1895
The appellant was indicted by the United States grand jury for the Second judicial district, at the March, 1894, term of said court, on the charge of selling liquor to Indians under charge of an Indian agents of the United States, and was tried and convicted at the March, 1895, term of said court, and sentenced to imprisonment in the New Mexico penitentiary for the term of one year, and to pay a fine of $1 and costs. The appellant moved for a new trial, and his motion was argued three times, and was passed upon and denied by both Judge Hamilton and Judge Collier, and from their rulings the cause is here on appeal.
Appellant filed in support of his motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence an affidavit of one G. L. Altheimer, who was one of the jurors who returned a verdict of guilty} in which said Altheimer swore that some members of the jury made a statement during their deliberations to the effect that said Lobato was a truthful and reliable witness, and, upon such statement being made, several of the other jurors changed their votes from acquittal to conviction, and that said Lobato’s testimony was much relied on by some of the members of the jury; but that he, said Altheimer, did not regard said Lobato as a truthful witness, and did not rely on the statements made by others of the jurors as to the truthfulness of said Lobato, and that he voted for conviction, rather than remain in the jury room longer, or during the night, as he claimed he was not well at that time, and that he so voted for conviction on the theory that the majority might be right. Counsel for appellee admits that the subsequent confession of perjury by said Lobato, followed by his conviction and sentence, destroyed completely his testimony, and that it should be eliminated from the record;- but he contends that if sufficient legal testimony remains in the record, given by other competent witnesses, to sustain a verdict, the judgment should be affirmed. This proposition is admitted „by counsel for appellant. This leaves for determination by this court the fact whether or not there is in the record sufficient legal evidence to sustain the verdict after the elimination of all of said Lobato’s testimony, and the further consideration of the admissibility and effect of said Altheimer’s affidavit. Lobato testified that he saw appellant deliver whisky to a Navajo Indian on the eighteenth day of February, 1894, at La Posta, in Bernalillo county; but this testimony is eliminated, and is here given for the purpose of distinguishing it from the other dates testified to by other witnesses. Witness Vicente Torres testifies positively that he saw appellant deliver a keg and bottle to Indians between 6 and 7 o’clock on the twenty-third day of December, 1893, at La Posta, his place of business; and that the keg and bottle were filled from a barrel in which appellant kept whisky; and that he (witness) had drank whisky drawn from the same barrel. This testimony was substantially corroborated by witness Meliton Cordova. Another witness for the prosecution ■ — Q-audalupe Jaramillo — testified positively that he went to the store of appellant to purchase a bag of flour some time during the year of 1893, and that he saw appellant deliver a gallon of whisky to two Navajo Indians; but he did not give the date in that year, and his testimony is not corroborated by any other witness. Here are two separate and distinct offenses established by legal evidence, either of which would be sufficient to support a verdict; and Lobato’s testimony, even if believed by the jury, established a third offense, and was only cumulative evidence — that is, it is evidence of the same kind, and to the same point, except as to date, — but it goes to establish a conviction on the same charge. It is a well settled principle of Jaw that a new trial will not be granted on the ground of newly discovered evidence where it appears that such newly discovered evidence is only cumulative (Territory v. Yarberry, 2 N. M. 391), and not then until it shall bo made to appear that, if a new trial should be granted, the newly discovered evidence would probably produce a different result on the new trial from that arrived at on the first trial (Ruhe v. Abren, 1 N. M. 247; 16 Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law,575; Lamyv. Remuson,.2N. M.245). It is perfectly clear from the record in this case that if a new trial should be granted, and the same evidence, after excluding that of Lobato, were placed before a jury, it would be amply sufficient to justify a verdict of guilty; and courts never grant a new trial where it is apparent from the record that the result would probably be the same.
Courts should look upon affidavits of jurors seeking to impeach their own verdicts with much suspicion, and admit them with great caution. After trial and conviction it is not usually "very difficult to obtain an affidavit from some of the jurors to some misconduct on the part of some of the other jurors, or some technical defect in their deliberations; and if appellate courts were to grant new trials on such affidavits, unless it is made to appear plainly that substantial justice had not been done, there would be few convictions, and in numerous instances crime would go unwhipped of justice. It would be an abuse of time, and a dangerous precedent, to encourage jurors in filing affidavits to impeach their own solemn verdicts, and in many instances it would render the proceedings in trial courts a mere farce.
Strong efforts were made and an unusual quantity of energy expended in this case on the part of the appellant to impeach the witnesses for the prosecution, as to their truth and veracity, and to break down and destroy their testimony before the jury, all of which efforts seem to have failed, as is generally the ease in such instances, for it will not be presumed that the jury believed Lobato, and did not believe all the other witnesses who testified for the prosecution positively to separate and distinct facts. . The proofs show that appellant did keep and sell liquors, and that he sold and delivered liquors in small kegs and bottles to his customers, and that Navajo Indians were frequently seen drinking and drunk in the immediate vicinity of his place of business, and these were simply corroborative circumstances in support of the other facts testified to by the witnesses; and under our system the jury are the sole judges of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony, and where they pass oh disputed facts their verdict will not be disturbed, unless it shall be made to appear affirmatively that their verdict is contrary to the weight of the material facts and weight of the preponderating circumstances established in the case.
Many other grounds of error are assigned, but they are not well taken, and not pertinent to this case; and there being no fatal errors appearing from the record, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.