Dunn v. People

50 N.E. 137, 172 Ill. 582, 1898 Ill. LEXIS 2914
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 50 N.E. 137 (Dunn v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunn v. People, 50 N.E. 137, 172 Ill. 582, 1898 Ill. LEXIS 2914 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the November term, Í896, of the Pike circuit court an indictment was returned by the grand jury charging the plaintiff in error with the murder of one Alice Grimes. At the April term, 1897, of the said circuit court the cause was tried and the plaintiff in error adjudged to be guilty of the charge alleged in the indictment, and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for a term of fourteen years. This is a writ of error brought to reverse the judgment of conviction.

The theory of the prosecution was that the said Alice Grimes became pregnant with child, and that the plaintiff in error, with intent to produce a criminal abortion, supplied her with and induced her to take repeated large doses of calomel; that the effect of the administration of the said drug caused a miscarriage, and that said Alice Grimes died as the result thereof. The death of said Alice Grimes was fully proven. The evidence that calomel was furnished by the plaintiff in error to her consisted wholly of her dying declarations, nor was there any proof that he advised or counseled her to use calomel, other than such declarations. The proof as to her pregnancy and that an abortion was produced was her dying statements, together with proof of circumstances which the People insist are corroborative upon the point.

The circuit court ruled that the deceased was in such condition, physically and mentally, for a period of seven days prior to her death, that statements made by her were admissible in evidence as dying declarations. Witnesses were produced and allowed to testify to declarations made by her in their presence on four different days, and proof was also made that statements made by her on still another day were reduced to writing and signed by her, and this written statement was produced and read in evidence to the jury. The plaintiff in error objected to the admission of the oral dying declarations on the ground that where such declarations have been repeated at different times, and at one of which times such statements were reduced to writing, only the written statement is admissible in evidence. The court overruled the objection and the plaintiff in error excepted, and now urges the ruling of the court as error. The rule, as we understand it to be, is, if the dying statements are reduced to writing and signed by the declarant, the writing is the best evidence of the statement made at that time, and must be produced or its absence accounted for, but that the fact that a declaration has been reduced to writing will not preclude evidence of unwritten declarations made on other occasions. Wharton on Grim. Evidence, sec. 295; Bishop on Grim. Proc. sec. 1213; Hochheimer on Crimes, sec. 184; McClain on Grim. Law, sec. 429, and authorities cited in note g.

Nor is the contention of plaintiff in error tenable that the People are restricted to proof of declarations made on one occasion, only. Such statements, if otherwise admissible, may be proven as made from time to time.

When the jury retired to consider of their verdict, the court, over the objections of the plaintiff in error, permitted the jury to take the written dying declarations into the jury room for their consideration, and this action of the court is urged as error. Section 55 of the Practice act, (Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 781,) which provides that papers read in evidence, other than depositions, may be taken by the jury upon their retirement, is applicable only to civil cases. The mode of procedure to be observed in the trial of criminal cases is governed by the provisions of division 13 of the Criminal Code. (Rev. Stat. p. 409.) The eighth section of the division (1 Starr & Curtis’ Stat. 1896, par. 612, p. 1400,) provides that all trials for criminal offenses shall be conducted according to the course of the common law, except when the Criminal Code points out a different mode. Nothing in the said division of the Criminal Code purports to direct what shall be taken by the jury from the bar of the court. The common law rule in criminal cases was, that the jury, when they retired to deliberate on their verdict, should take 'with them such books and papers which had been produced in evidence as the judge presiding should direct. (1 Bishop on Grim. Proc.—3d ed.—sec. 982a; Hochheimer on Crimes, sec. 250.) Whether a writing introduced in evidence in a criminal case should be delivered to the jury to be consulted by them in the jury room, rests in the sound discretion and judgment of the court, and it is therefore not error to permit a jury to take a written statement, unless the reviewing court can-say that such course was prejudicial to the defendant, and ought not; in the exercise of sound discretion and judgment, have been pursued. The written statement in question assimilated so nearly to a deposition, that all of the reasons which have by text writers and courts been advanced in support of the view that ■ depositions should not be taken by a jury in their retire-merit, may well be invoked as reasons why this statement should not have been allowed to go into the jury room.

In Rawson v. Curtiss, 19 Ill. 456, (which was decided prior to the enactment of the section of the Practice act which excludes depositions from the jury when in their retirement) Mr. Justice Breese, after forcibly stating the injustice of allowing written testimony to be taken into the jury room, declared that the practice of permitting depositions to be taken out by the jury, either with or without the direction of the court, was wrong in practice and should be abolished. This remark of the court applies with greater force to dying declarations than to depositions regularly and lawfully taken, because when a deposition is taken, ample opportunity is given the adverse party to appear and cross-examine the witness, and thereby expose any errors, bring out suppressed facts which would weaken or qualify the statement, test the truthfulness, recollection and fairness of the witness and aid to determine as to the truth of his statements, while no such opportunity is permitted when a dying declaration is reduced to writing. In the case at bar, dying declarations of the deceased, made on four occasions other than when the written statement was signed, were reproduced by witnesses for the State before the jury. The written statement was read in their hearing. They heard no evidence on the part of the plaintiff in error except such as was testified to by witnesses in their presence, and the testimony so produced in behalf of the plaintiff in error was in direct conflict with material portions of the dying declarations. To deliver the written statement to the jury so they might have it constantly before them during their deliberations, to operate on their sympathies as well as their memory, tended to give a manifest advantage to the People over the plaintiff in error, whose proof was but oral. No reason is suggested, nor is any perceived, why the one party should have thus been given an advantage over the other.

The circuit court ruled that certain portions of the written statement were not admissible in evidence and not competent for the jury to consider, and ordered these portions to be marked, and orally announced the jury should not consider such marked phrases. It appears from the record these incompetent phrases or words were so marked by being enclosed with brackets. A similar course was pursued with reference to depositions which the court permitted the jury to take with them in their retirement in the case of Rawson v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 N.E. 137, 172 Ill. 582, 1898 Ill. LEXIS 2914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-people-ill-1898.