Davis v. State

35 Ind. 496
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 35 Ind. 496 (Davis v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. State, 35 Ind. 496 (Ind. 1871).

Opinion

Downey, C. J.

This was an indictment against the appellant for murder in the first degree. Plea of not guilty. Trial by jury; verdict of guilty; motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment overruled; and judgment that the defendant be hanged.

[497]*497Several errors are assigned, but they are all expressly waived in the brief of appellant’s counsel, except that which alleges the improper refusal of the circuit court to grant a new trial.

Two physicians were introduced and examined, on behalf of the State, as rebutting witnesses on the subject of insanity. It is urged by the defendant that they are not shown to be sufficiently conversant with insanity to entitle them to-be regarded and examined as experts. One of them had' been practicing his profession for fifteen, and the other for twenty-five, years, and they had each given the subject of' medical jurisprudence some attention, by reading works on. the subject and by attending lectures.

We think .they were competent to testify on the subject, as experts. “ Insanity being deemed a disease, it is believed to-be the general custom of our American judges, throughout the country, to accept of all educated and practicing physicians as experts, whether they have given special attention to the disease of insanity or not.” 1 Bishop Crim. Law, sec.. 544. The witnesses in this case, however, had, in addition to their medical studies, given some attention to the subject of insanity. See Baxter v. Abbott, 7 Gray, 71. The extent of the witness’s acquaintance with the subject may always, be inquired into, to enable the jury to estimate the weight of his evidence. Whether he is competent to testify at all as an expert, is a question for the court. But after he has been allowed to testify, the weight of his evidence is a question for the jury.

The prosecuting' attorney was allowed to enumerate cer- - tain facts, which he assumed were established by the evidence, and upon them to ask each of these witnesses his opinion as to whether they indicated soundness or unsoundness of mind in the defendant. Counsel for the defendant objected to this, insisting that all the facts bearing on the subject were not enumerated in the question. But the-court allowed the question to be answered. If there is no - [498]*498dispute as to the facts on which the witness is to base his opinion, as an expert, it is then proper to require that the question shall embrace them all, and that the witness shall take them all into consideration in giving his answer. But if the facts are in dispute, this course is impracticable. In such a case, it seems to us proper to allow counsel to base their questions upon the facts which' the evidence tends to prove, and let the jury decide, ultimately, whether they are established by the evidence or not.

After the prosecutor had propounded to these witnesses the question as to the sanity or insanity of the defendant, based on the facts assumed by him to have been proved by the evidence, and got an answer thereto, the defendant’s counsel propounded to the witnesses the same' question based on facts which they assumed to have been proved by the evidence, and claimed an answer thereto. To this the prosecutor objected, on the ground that it was not a cross examination, and the objection was sustained by the court. This .ruling was wrong. We think that when such a ¿witness has • expressed an opinion based on facts assumed by the party introducing him to have been proved, or upon a hypothetical case put by such party, the other party may cross examine him by taking his opinion based on any other set of facts assumed by him to have been proved by the evidence, or upon a hypothetical case put by him. The witness having • expressed an opinion as to the sanity of the party, it is extremely important to such party to go fully into the reasons for such opinion; and he should be allowed to call the attention of the witness to any and every view of the facts which will tend to test the correctness of such opinion. The witnesses having been called and examined as rebutting witnesses, this right of cross examination was of the utmost importance to the defendant, as he could not introduce the persons as his own witnesses at that stage of the case, or bring others to overcome their evidence.

In The People v. Thurston, 2 Parker Cr. 49, such a cross examination of a medical witness as that demanded in this [499]*499case was allowed, without objection. In Huckleberry v. Riddle, 29 Ind. 454, this court had occasion to consider the subject of cross examination, and, among other things, said: “A cross examination is worth little, if thereby false impressions, created by the examination of the party calling the witness, may not be corrected by it, by showing additional facts connected with the same subject, in the light of which inferences, otherwise legitimate and natural, would be prevented.”

After the jury were charged and put in the care of a bailiff, that they might consider of their verdict, the bailiff, with two of them, went to a liquor and billiard saloon, where other persons were drinking and playing billiards, and the bailiff procured for each of them a drink of brandy, ginger wine, nutmeg and sugar,” which they drank, and which was paid for by one of them. The -saloon-keeper swears, in his affidavit, that the bailiff asked him if he could not fix up something for said jurors for the diarrhoea.” The evidence does not show where the other jurors were at the time when the two with the bailiff were in the saloon. There was no attempt to show that the jurors were really suffering with diarrhoea, how much liquor they drank, what effect it had upon their fitness to deliberate on the case, where the other jurors were, or in any other way to break the force of the showing made by the defendant.

The bailiff, we may presume, had been sworn in the usual form, to take charge of the jury, and keep them together without meat or drink, water only excepted, &c. The jurors had taken upon them an oath, well and truly to try the cause, &c., and had been solemnly sent out to deliberate upon questions involving the life of an unfortunate fellow-being. If misbehavior, such as that shown by the affidavits, and which is without attempted palliation or justification, should riot be regarded as sufficient to set aside the verdict, it would be a stigma upon the law and a disgrace to the courts. We do not mean to say that the court should enter upon the question as to how far such conduct was or was [500]*500not excusable or innocuous. It will be time to decide that question when it shall come up. In this case it does not arise. We concede that on this point the authorities- are not uniform. But as to the sufficiency of such misbehavior unexplained, to set aside the verdict, the authorities are abundant and satisfactory.

Without deciding the question, this court intimated this opinion in Creek v. State, 24 Ind. 151. In Ryan v. Harrow, 27 Iowa, 494, a civil cause, the court, after reviewing the decisions on the point, held, for the second time, the first having been in a criminal case, that the drinking of intoxicating liquor by one or more of the jurors, during the discharge of their duties as such, constituted sufficient ground for setting aside the verdict and ordering a new trial. The learned judges refused to enter into any inquiry as to how far, or whether at all, the jurors became intoxicated.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ind. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-state-ind-1871.