Alexander v. United States

138 U.S. 353, 11 S. Ct. 350, 34 L. Ed. 954, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2088
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 2, 1891
Docket1309
StatusPublished
Cited by117 cases

This text of 138 U.S. 353 (Alexander v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. United States, 138 U.S. 353, 11 S. Ct. 350, 34 L. Ed. 954, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2088 (1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a writ of error sued out under the sixth section of the act of February 6, 1889, 25 Stat. 655, 656, c. 113, § 6, to review a judgment, of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Arkansas, imposing a sentence of death upon the plaintiff in error for the murder of David C, Steadman at the Creek Nation in the Indian country.”

*354 The plaintiff in error relied upon the following grounds for reversal:

1. That the court erred in its selection of the jury, in that the defendant was required to make his challenges without first knowing what challenges the government’s attorney had made, and thus challenged two jurors, to wit, C. F. Needles and Samuel Lawrence, who were also challenged by the government, whereby he was deprived of two of his challenges contrary to law.

2. That the court erred in excluding the testimony offered by the defendant to prove threats to kill Steadman made by House and others, while they were hunting Steadman under the belief that he had seduced the wife of the said House, and was secreting himself with her in the neighborhood.

3. Because the court erred in admitting the testimóny of J. G-. Balls as to confidential communications made to him as the attorney of the defendant.

(1) With regal’d to the first error assigned, it appears from the record that “ the court directed two lists of thirty-seven qualified jurymen to be made out by the .clerk, and one given to the district attorney and one to the counsel for the defendant ; and the court further directed each side to proceed with its challenges independent of the other, and without knowledge on the part of either as to what challenges had been made by the other. To which method' of proceeding in that regard defendant at the time offered no objections, but proceeded to make his challenges, and in so. doing challenged two jurors, to wit, C. F. Needles and Samuel Lawrence, who had been also challenged by the government.” We do not deem, it necessary to inquire whether there was error in the method pursued by the court in impanelling this jury. It appears distinctly. from the bill of exceptions that the defendant offered ¿0 objection to it at the time, and made no demand to challenge any of the jury beyond the twenty allowed by Bevised Statutes, section 819; Indeed, it does not clearly appear which, side made the first challenges, or that defendant had not exhausted his challenges before the government challenged the two jurors in question. If it were a fact that the defend *355 ant had made his twenty challenges before the government challenged these two men, it is difficult to see how his rights were prejudiced by the action of the district attorney.

But the decisive answer to this assignment is, that the attention of the court does not seem to have been called to .it until after the conviction, when the defendant made it a ground of his motion for a new trial. It is the duty of counsel seasonably to call the attention of the court to any error in impanelling the jury, in admitting testimony, or in any other proceeding during the trial by which his rights -are prejudiced, and in case of an adverse ruling to note an exception. Stoddard v. Chambers, 2 How. 284; De Sobry v. Nicholson, 3 Wall. 420; Canal Street Railroad v. Hart, 114 U. S. 654; Thompson on Trials, §§ 690, 693, 700.

(2) To understand fully the force of the second error assigned, it ■ is necessary to state so much of the evidence as exhibits substantially the case made out by the government. The evidence tended to show that the defendant and ' the deceased, Steadman, had agreed to go into the stock business together, and, upon the day of the murder, were endéavoring to rent a farm for the purpose' of wintering their horses, and making a crop the following year.- They were returning to their camp both armed with guns. Defendant was also armed with a pistol. So far as the evidence discloses, Steadman disappeared and was never, seen alive again. A few minutes after they were last seen, a witness, who had met them, saw the two horses, without riders, standing in the road near a wood. Shortly after, eight or nine shots were heard in the wood, and after this the defendant was seen' upon the road, sitting upon one of the horses, and leading the other, which had no rider, In abdut twelve days .the body of Steadman was found half a mile from the place from which he and defendant had been seen, and within seventy-five yards of the place where the horses were séen standing. His skull was crushed; and-there Was a bullet hole'ih it b'abk of the ear. There was also evidence that Steadman'had a large amount of money on his person at the. time' he disappeared. The defendant offered contradictory, explanations of Steadman’s disappearance — at *356 one time said he had probably been killed, and at another time suggested suicide, and, at another, pretended to believe a story that had been circulated in the neighborhood that Stead-man and a married woman by the name of House had disappeared and were hiding together. Evidence was admitted tending to show that Mrs. House and Steadman had been seen in conference the day before, and that the general impression in the neighborhood at the time was that they had gone off together. House and his friends had armed' themselves with guns and pistols and had ridden through the country hunting for them, under the belief that they were hiding together in the neighborhood, or had fled the country together.

Now, if evidence was admitted to show that House had armed himself, and was hunting for. Steadman under the impression that the latter had eloped with his wife, and was secreting himself in that vicinity, it is difficult to see' upon what principle his threats in that connection were excluded. Accepting the theory of the government that mere threats, unaccompanied by acts of a threatening nature, were irrelevant to the question of defendant’s guilt, it is not easy to understand how the acts themselves could be made pertinent without testimony tending to show the reason why House had armed himself, and, with other parties, was scouring the country for Steadman. Their statements in that connection would be clearly illustrative of the act in question, and a part of the res gestee, within the rule laid down in' Lord George Gordon's Case, 1 Greenl. Ev. § 108, and within all the authorities upon the subject of declarations as part of the res gestee.

At the same time we recognize a certain discretion on the part of the trial judge to rule out this entire testimony, both of the acts and the declarations of House, if, in his opinion, they were so remote or insignificant as to' have no legitimate tendency to show that House could haye committed the murder. If, for instance, it were clearly proven that the murder was committed before the threats of House were uttered, or the two occurrences were so remote in time and place as to demonstrate that there could have been no connection between them, it would be the duty of- the court to exclude the testi

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Bluebook (online)
138 U.S. 353, 11 S. Ct. 350, 34 L. Ed. 954, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-united-states-scotus-1891.