Mccann v. State

1 Morr. St. Cas. 486, 13 S. & M. 471
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1 Morr. St. Cas. 486 (Mccann v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mccann v. State, 1 Morr. St. Cas. 486, 13 S. & M. 471 (Mich. 1872).

Opinion

Clayton, J.:

This was an indictment in the circuit court of Lowndes county for murder. The prisoner was convicted upon circumstantial evidence, and has brought his ease to this cburt for revision.

There are but three acts of the circuit court complained of by bill of exceptions; one, the admission of certain testimony; the others, the refusal to give two charges asked by the counsel of the defendant. Upon these we shall remark in conclusion, and shall first consideT the refusal to grant a new trial.

• This point has been pressed with great earnestness, and it has been insisted with much zeal, that the verdict is without any suf[499]*499ficient testimony. The inconclusiveness of circumstantial proof, and the danger to be apprehended from, convictions upon that species of evidence, have been dwelt upon with much force.

It is certainly true, that great care and caution should be used in the investigation of such testimony. This is true also of every other kind. All human testimony may be false. Our own perceptions may be wrong; our own senses may deceive us. Whilst this should teach us caution in the forming of our opinions and deliberations in adopting conclusions, it should not make us carry our doubts too far, because we should thereby be rendered unfit for all the practical duties of life. Such is the state of things which surround us in life, that in all which concerns ourselves and our highest interests, we are compelled to act upon testimony, and often upon that testimony which circumstances afford. The same rule is carried into judicial proceedings. Circumstantial evidence has been received in every ago of the common law, and it may rise so high in the scale of belief, as to generate full conviction. When, after due caution, this result is reached, the law authorizes its ministers to act upon it.

After a careful review of the subject, Starkie lays down the only rule which can be regarded of practical application. “What circumstances will amount to proof,” he says, “can never be matter of general definition ; the legal test is the sufficiency of the evidence to satisfy the understanding and conscience of the jury.” “ On the one hand, absolute metaphysical and demonstrative certainty is not essential to proof by circumstances. It is sufficient if they produce moral certainty, to the exclusion of every reasonable doubt; even direct and positive testimony does not afford grounds of belief of a higher and superior nature.” 1 Stark., 577.

We shall proceed, in connection with this rule, to consider the evidence most material in this cause, without dwelling on some of the facts which have a more remote bearing. It is in proof, that on the day of the murder the deceased went from his residence to the town of Columblis, a distance of twelve miles; that he rode a small horse, and from age stooped forward as he rode; that on his way home he crossed the ferry at Columbus, about an hour before sunset; that, in point of fact, he never reached [500]*500borne alive, but bis body was found the next day in a small clump of bushes, some thirty or forty feet from the road, and rather more than a mile from his house; there was a wound in the back of the neck, occasioned by a ball from a gun or pistol; there was powder in the inner surface of the wound, and the skin around it, as well as a straw or chip hat which he wore, were blackened with smoke and powder; the face, from the eyes down, had been eaten .up by hogs, but no other part of the body had received much injury; the body had been dragged into the bushes thirty or forty feet from the road; there was an impression made by a ball upon a tree near the spot, some six feet from the ground, on the side next the road, and the ball was found at the foot, bruised and: flattened; the skull above the eyes was sound, except that, a part of the bone on the right side was detached; there was a saddlo found oir the spot, with blood upon the right stirrup leather; there were several traces of blood on the ground and the clothes; the murder was committed on a private road leading to the house of the deceased, a little distance from the public road; a report of a gun or pistol was heard by several of the neighbors, about half an hour or an hour after daylight down; the body was found about ten or eleven o’clock the next day; a jury of inquest was held, which terminated its sitting about tea o’clock at night, and up to that time no one was accused of the murder.

It was in proof, that the prisoner lived with his father near the deceased ; that he also went: to Columbus on the day of the murder, starting after the deceased did; that he was seen there on .several occasions during the day, in company with J. F. Toland, a son of the deceased; that they spent a great part of the day together in a billiard room attached to a grocery, in which there was no other person at the time;. that they were not engaged at play, but apparently upon business; that upon being invited to dinner, young Toland at first declined, saying that his father was in town, and that he did not wish to be seen by him, but that ^he afterwards consented to go.

; .That the, prisoner crossed the ferry about two hours before sunset,.consequently about an hour before the deceased; about sunset the prisoner overtook two -witnesses* Sandifer and Biddle, [501]*501some five miles from Columbus, and rode with them three or four miles; he was riding a horse of good size; he conversed freely with the witnesses and told them his name; about seven miles from Columbus they overtook the deceased, who was riding very slowly in the rear of a wagon; at the house of Mills, near by, eight miles from Columbus, they got some water; a short distance from that point, the prisoner said he was going to New-som’s to get supper, and asked Riddle to go with him; Newsom lived about one hundred yards from the road, and there were thick woods between the road and his house; the witness did not go; McCann left them, but whether he went to Newsom’s does not appear from the evidence; about a mile from Newsom’s, near Gilmer’s gate, a man passed these two witnesses at full gallop, whom they did not recognize, but who, from other testimony, is shown to have been J. F. Toland ; after they passed Gilmer’s gate, they were not overtaken by any other person; the road to the residence of old Mr. Toland leaves the Gilmer road a'short distance beyond his gate; the murder was committed on this road, not very far from the Gilmer road, in a wood which extends from Gilmer’s to the spot where the body was found; near this place there is a road leading from the Gilmer road to McCann’s.

There is no direct trace of the prisoner, except in his own declaration, after he left Sandifer and Riddle, until he reached his father’s house some half hour after dark, according to the testimony of his brother. The murder occurred near Cross’ lane, one and a half miles from McCann’s. Some ten, or twenty, or perhaps thirty minutes after the report of the gun Or pistol, Lyon, who lived near the road leading from the Gilmer road to McCann’s, heard a horse galloping, and observed that he left the road and took an unfrequented path, not likely to be known by any except those who lived near, leading through the woods in the direction to old Mr. McCann’s. Nicholas Morgan makes the same statement, with the addition that he-saw a rider ort the horse.

The next day the body was found, and a jury of inquest held, as already stated. : During the same morning J. F, Toland went to the house of old Mr. McCann. Towards two o’clock of the [502]

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Bluebook (online)
1 Morr. St. Cas. 486, 13 S. & M. 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccann-v-state-miss-1872.