Keating v. State

93 N.W. 980, 67 Neb. 560, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 452
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1903
DocketNo. 12,997
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 93 N.W. 980 (Keating v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keating v. State, 93 N.W. 980, 67 Neb. 560, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 452 (Neb. 1903).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

The defendant was informed against in the district court for Webster county, tried for, and convicted of the crime of robbery, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a period of seven years. I-Ie brings the record of his trial and conviction to this court for revieAV by proceeding in error.

The petition in error assigns three different grounds or alleged errors as reasons for a reversal of the judgment rendered in the trial court: First, it is contended that the court erred in the giving of one of its instructions to the jury which was requested by the state; second, in admitting the testimony of a witness as to an alleged conversation between him and the defendant regarding a method or plan by which the robbery could be committed on the pen-son whom the defendant was convicted of robbing; and, third, that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict of guilty returned by the jury.

Taking the assignments of error in their order, the instruction complained of will be first noticed. The court, at the request of the state, gave an instruction in which the jury were, in substance, told that the defendant had the right to be sworn and testify in his own behalf, but that in weighing his testimony and in determining the weight which should be given thereto the jury might take into consideration his interest in the result of the trial and his action and demeanor while on the witness stand, and the further fact, if the same was proved (which was admitted by the defendant), that he had been convicted of a felony, and confined in the penitentiary of another state, as affecting his credibility as a witness. It is argued that the instruction is erroneous and prejudicial, because giving undue prominence and weight to the matter touched upon in the instruction, and having the effect of disparaging the standing of the defendant as a witness in his own behalf, and therefore prejudicial. The sixth instruction, given by the court on its own motion, was a general in[563]*563struction as to tbe credibility of all witnesses wbo bad testified, including tbe defendant, unobjectionable in form; and because of this latter instruction it is urged that tbe one given at tbe request of the state was prejudicially erroneous. While tbe general instruction on tbe subject of the credibility of witnesses was probably sufficient, and rendered it unnecessary to give tbe one requested, we are not disposed to tbe view that tbe giving of the requested instruction was error calling for reversal of tbe judgment, nor that its effect was to unduly make prominent the rule enunciated, nor to improperly single out and disparage tbe testimony of tbe defendant, as contended for. Instructions of tbis character have been repeatedly upheld by tbis court. St. Louis v. State, 8 Nebr., 405; Murphy v. State, 15 Nebr., 383; Clark v. State, 32 Nebr., 246; Housh v. State, 43 Nebr., 163; Argabright v. State, 49 Nebr., 760.

Tbe mere fact of repetition is not alone, in every case, reversible error. If the propositions given are correct, and it is clear that the defendant was not prejudiced thereby, nor the- jury unduly influenced in their deliberations in weighing tbe testimony submitted in tbe case, the verdict and judgment will not be disturbed. Hill v. State, 42 Nebr., 503. Tbe instruction complained of can hardly be condemned without overturning the rule heretofore prevailing, and we observe no sufficient reason for such a departure. The instruction excepted to was the only one calling attention directly to tbe defendant as a witness in bis own behalf and announcing a correct rule as to tbe weighing of his testimony by tbe jury. Tbe other instruction announced tbe rule applicable to the testimony of tbe witnesses generally in tbe case who> bad testified, including the defendant. Tbe defendant stood in a peculiar position, and an instruction applicable to bis testimony could be made intelligible only by naming him as a witness to whom tbe rule applied. Tbe instruction in principle is analogous to those which may be given where a witness’s reputation for truth and veracity has been shown [564]*564by the evidence to be bad, in which case it would not be error for the court to name such witness or witnesses in stating the rule applicable to the testimony given by him or them. By the statute, conviction of a felony may always be shown for the purpose of affecting the credibility of a witness, and we apprehend no error was committed by the trial court in advising the jury of the purpose and effect of the evidence showing defendant’s conviction of a felony prior to the time he testified in the case at bar.

The state was permitted to prove, over the defendant’s objection, that in the late winter or early spring prior to the time of the commission of the offense of which he was convicted, which was December 4, 1901, in a conversation with the witness testifying and one other, in which the parties spoke of there being no bank in Rosemont, where the crime was committed, and that the elevator men, the complaining witness and one other, certainly carried quite a sum of money, and it was a wonder they had not been robbed or held up, the defendant had said, in substance, during such conversation, that it would be an easy matter to hold them up and get their money; that, there being no saloon in Rosemont, and they sometimes having a keg or case of beer, a person could get the croAvd keyed up and slip some knock-out drops in the elevator men’s beer, and when they got a few drops of that down them they would be dead to the world for awhile, and it would be an easy matter to get their money; that if that failed a fellow could hold them up and get their money any way; that he could sand-bag them and hold them up. The robbery was committed by the perpetrator calling the complaining witness, one of the elevator men alluded to in the conversation just referred to, to the door of his residence shortly after dark, and under the pretense that the party had a load of grain at his elevator, induced the complaining witness to accompany the party as though going to the elevator, and when a short distance from his home was struck over the head with a bag of sand or shot, knocked down, and dragged a short distance from the road, where, [565]*565by threats to shoot, he was compelled to give up all the money he had on his person. The testimony as to the defendant’s prior statements, we think, must be held to be of some probative value. The statement of the defendant as to how a robbery might be perpetrated, and the perpetration thereof by some person later on in one of the ways spoken of by the defendant, were circumstances having a legitimate bearing on the ultimate fact to be proved, which the jury were entitled to consider in determining the question of the guilt or innocence of the defendant. Standing alone, the statement could be regarded only as creating in the mind a suspicion or conjecture as to the defendant’s guilt; but when considered in connection with other facts and circumstances proved, the prior conversation of the defendant relating to a plan or design for the commission of such an offense has a material bearing on the issues to be tried and determined by the jury. While it is argued that the difference in time between the conversation and the commission of the crime renders it too remote to be of any value, we can not so regard it. It is probable that the evidence would carry greater weight if close in time; yet this fact does not render the evidence inadmissible on the ground of being too remote. As is said by the supreme court of North Carolina in State v. James, 90 N.

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Related

Latham v. State
40 N.W.2d 522 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1949)
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274 N.W. 383 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1937)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 N.W. 980, 67 Neb. 560, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keating-v-state-neb-1903.