25 F. Cas. 52 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia | 1807
Although this is precisely the same question relative to the order of evidence which was decided by this court on the motion to commit, yet it is now presented under somewhat different circumstances, and may, therefore, not be considered as determined by the former decision. At that time no indictment was found, no pleadings existed, and there was no standard by which the court could determine the relevancy of the testimony offered, until the fact to which it was to apply should be disclosed. There is now an indictment specifying the charge which is to be proved on the part of the prosecution, there is an issue made up which presents a point to which all the testimony must apply, and consequently it is in the power of the court to determine with some accuracy, on the relevancy of the testimony whiph may be offered. ■
It is contended in support of the motion which has been made, that, according to the regular order of evidence and the usage of courts, the existence of the fact on which the charge depends ought to be shown before any testimony explanatory or confirmatory of that fact can be received. Against the motion, it is contended that the crime alleged in the indictment consists of two parts, the fact and the intention; that it is in the discretion of the attorney for the United States first to adduce the one or the otter, and that no instance has ever occurred of the interference of a court with that arrangement which he has thought proper to make.
As is not unfrequent, the argument on both sides appears to be, in many respects, correct. It is the most useful and appears to be the natural order of testimony to show first the existence of the fact respecting which the inquiry is to be made. It Is unquestionably attended with this advantage: there is a fixed and certain object to which the mind applies with precision all the testimony which may be received, and the court can decide with less difficulty on the relevancy of all the testimony which may be offered; but this arrangement is not clearly shown to be established by any fixed rule of evidence, and no case has been adduced in which it has been forced by the court on the counsel for the prosecution. On one side it has been contended that by requiring the exhibition of the fact in the first instance a great deal of time may be saved, since there may be a total failure of proof with respect to the fact; and this argument has been answered by observing that should there even be such failure they could not interpose and arrest the progress of the cause, but must permit the counsel for the prosecution to proceed with that testimony which is now offered. Levying of war is a fact which must be decided by the jury. The court may give general instructions on this as on every other question brought before them, but the jury must decide upon it as compounded of fact and law. Two assemblages of men, not unlike in appearance, possibly may be, the one treasonable and the other innocent. If, therefore, the fact exhibited to the court and jury should, in the opinion of the court, not amount' to the act of levying war, the court could not stop the prosecution, but must permit the counsel for the United States to proceed to show the intention of the act, in order to enable the jury to decide upon the fact coupled with the intention. The consumption of time would probably be nearly the same whether the counsel for the prosecution commenced with the fact or the intention, provid
It has been truly stated that the crime alleged in the indictment consists of the fact, and of the intention with which that fact was committed. The testimony disclosing both the fact and the intention must be relevant. The court finds no express rule snat’ng the order in which the attorney is to adduce relevant testimony, nor any case in which a court has interfered with the arrangement he has made. No alteration of that arrangement, therefore, will now be directed. But it is proper to add that the intention which is considered as relevant in this stage of the inquiry is the intention which composes a part of the crime, the intention with which the overt act itself was committed—not a general evil disposition, or an intention to commit a distinct fact. This species of testimony, if admissible at all, is received as corroborative or confirmatory testimony. It does not itself prove the intention with which the act was performed, but it renders other testimony probable which goes to that intention. It is explanatory of, or assistant to, that other testimony. Now it is essentially repugnant to the usages of courts, and to the declarations of the books by whose authority such testimony is received, that corroborative or confirmatory testimony should precede that which it is to corroborate or confirm. Until the introductory testimony be given, that which is merely corroborative is not relevant, and of consequence, if objected to, cannot be admitted without violating the best settled riles of evidence.
This position may be illustrated by a direct application to the testimony of General Baton. So far as his testimony relates to the fact charged in the indictment, so far as it relates to levying war on Blennerhassett’s island, so far as it relates to a design to seize on New Orleans, or to separate by force the Western from the Atlantic states, it is deemed relevant and is now admissible. So far as it respects other plans to be executed in the city of Washington, or elsewhere, if it indicate a treasonable design, it. is a design to commit a distinct act of treason, and is therefore not relevant to the present indictment. It can only, by showing a general evil intention, render it more probable that the intention in the particular case was evil. It is merely additional or corroborative testimony, and, therefore, if admissible at any time, is only admissible according to rules and principles which the court must respect, after hearing that which it is to confirm.
The counsel will perceive how many questions respecting the relevancy of testimony the arrangement proposed on the part of the prosecution will most probably produce. He is. however, at liberty to proceed according to his own judgment, and the court feels itself bound to exclude such testimony only as at the time of its being offered does not appear to be relevant.