Commonwealth v. Piper

120 Mass. 185, 1876 Mass. LEXIS 147
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 120 Mass. 185 (Commonwealth v. Piper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Piper, 120 Mass. 185, 1876 Mass. LEXIS 147 (Mass. 1876).

Opinion

Morton, J.

1. The statutes conferring and defining the right of challenge in capital cases contain no provisions as to the order of time in which the right shall be exercised by the government or by the defendant. Gen. Sts. c. 172, § 4. Sts. 1862, c. 84 ; 1873, c. 317, § 1 ; 1875, c. 167. There is no general rule of court upon the subject, and all directions as to the time when and the mode in which either party shall challenge, except so far as regulated by the statutes, like other matters affecting the proper conduct and order of the trial, are within the discretion of the court. The defendant, therefore, [187]*187had no right of exception to the ruling of the court permitting the government to challenge Charles E. Whiting, one of the persons called to serve as jurors, after the defendant had apparently-declined to challenge him.

2. The government produced one Glover as a -witness, who testified that, about the time the murder was committed, he saw the defendant jump out of the window of thé tower of the church on Warren Avenue, and that on the next day, having heard of the murder, he went with officer Savage and pointed out to him the window. The government was permitted to show by officer Savage what window Glover pointed out to him, to which the defendant excepted.

If the government had proposed, as the defendant contends was the case here, to corroborate the testimony of Glover by showing that he had made the same statements as those testified to by him, at other times, it would have been incompetent. Commonwealth v. Jenkins, 10 Gray, 485. Of .this character was the evidence excluded in the case of Commonwealth v. James, 99 Mass. 438, upon which the defendant relies. But such was not the purpose of the evidence objected to. Its purpose and effect was to identify the window referred to by Glover, and to show with more certainty that it was the window of the tower in which the murder was committed. The principle is the same as in the common case where a witness testifies that he took certain property from the possession of a defendant charged with larceny and delivered it to an officer. The officer is permitted to testify what property was delivered to him, not for the purpose of corroborating the witness, but to trace and identify the property. So in this case, Glover described the window referred to by him as the one which he pointed out to officer Savage. We are of opinion that it was competent for the officer to testify what tvindow was pointed out to him for the purpose of identifying it.

We have considered this question in the same manner as if the testimony of Glover had been introduced before that of Savage. In fact it was introduced after, but the legal effect is the same. By the subsequent introduction of the testimony of Glover, the testimony of Savage was made applicable and competent, and the order in which testimony shall be introduced is within the discretion of the presiding judge, whose ruling is not subject to exception.

[188]*1883. The exceptions to the testimony of the witness Martin can* Hot be sustained. It is not necessary to consider whether the question first put to him was unobjectionable in form, because it was withdrawn or modified before the witness answered, and Ms reply was competent and admissible. He testified that the defendant “ took no interest apparently in what was going on; that is, he took no interest in it to ask questions or answer questions.” It is enough to say that Ms testimony merely described the acts and appearance of the defendant as observed by him, soon after the murder, and did not state Ms judgment or opinion.

4. The next exception is to the testimony of Mr. Pentecost as to Ms conversation with the defendant. The defendant contends that the statements made by him in this conversation should have been excluded, because they were induced by threats or promises of Ham, the officer who had him in custody.

The rule of law is well settled, and was recognized at the trial, that confessions of a defendant, induced by fear of personal injury or hope of personal benefit held out by any one in authority, are not admissible in evidence.

When a confession is offered in a criminal case, and the defendant objects that he was induced to make it by threats or promises, it necessarily devolves upon the court to determine the preliminary question whether such inducements are shown. And the finding of the court upon tMs question cannot be revised upon a bill of exceptions, unless it involves some ruling in matter of law, or the whole evidence is reported with a view of submitting its sufficiency to the appellate court. If the presiding judge is satisfied that there were such inducements, the confession is to be rejected; if he is not satisfied, the evidence is admitted. But if there is any conflict of testimony or room for doubt, the court will submit this question to the jury with instructions that if they are satisfied that there were such inducements, they shall disregard and reject the confession. Commonwealth v. Cuffee, 108 Mass. 285. Commonwealth v. Cullen, 111 Mass. 435. Commonwealth v. Smith, 119 Mass. 305. In the case at bar, these principles were adopted so far as they were applicable, and the rights of the defendant were carefully guarded. When the testimony of Mr. Pentecost was first offered, it appeared to the presiding justices to be proved by the [189]*189testimony of officer Ham, on Ms cross-examination, that he had held out promises to the defendant to induce him to confess, and they thereupon ruled that confessions induced by such promises were inadmissible.

The attorney for the government then stated that he did not offer a confession of the defendant, but proposed to show hia conduct and declarations as showing a consciousness of guilt. The court rightly held that such evidence was admissible. The fact that promises or threats are held out will exclude a confession influenced thereby, but it will not preclude the government from showing independent acts and declarations of the defendant not in the nature of a confession, wMch tend to prove his guilt.

The witness then detailed the interview with the defendant. The statements of the defendant were not, in form, a confession, but were a denial of his guilt. But we do not deem it necessary to inquire critically whether any part of it can be regarded as in the nature of a confession. If it can be so regarded, the bill of exceptions shows that the defendant is not aggrieved. After Mr. Pentecost left the stand, officer Ham was recalled, and testified that he had not intended to state that he held out any inducements to the defendant, as appeared by the report of the testimony, but had misapprehended the question put to Mm. He was examined at length upon the subject, and the result was that upon all the evidence the court found as a fact that no inducements were held out to the defendant. This being so, the court could not properly withdraw from the jury the statements made to the witness, Mr. Pentecost, by the defendant, even if they were in whole or in part in the nature of confessions. But the presiding justices did, in accordance with the rule we have stated above, and with a careful regard to the rights of the defendant, instruct the jury that, if they were satisfied that officer Ham held out inducements and the defendant made any statements under their influence, they should reject such statements.

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Bluebook (online)
120 Mass. 185, 1876 Mass. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-piper-mass-1876.