Moran v. State

11 Ohio C.C. 464
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio C.C. 464 (Moran v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moran v. State, 11 Ohio C.C. 464 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Hale, J.

The plaintiff in error, Patrick Moran, was tried at the April term of the court of common pleas of this county, upon an indictment containing three counts, charging him with murder in the first degree in causing the death of James Fox. The alleged date of the crime was December 25, 1892. He was convicted of murder in the second degree on the first count of the indictment, and acquitted of all other charges. A motion for a new trial was overruled by the court, and a life sentence imposed.

A bill of exceptions was taken, and the record brought here for review.

The errors insisted on may be classified under three heads: , 1st. Decisions of the court upon objections made to the admission of testimony.

2nd. Errors in the charge of the court to the jury.

3rd. That the verdict is contrary to the evidence.

First — Did the court err in any of the rulings on the admission or exclusion of testimony ?

[467]*467(1) On the night of the homicide and about one hour after the assault, Moran was arrested by two police officers without a warrant, and taken to the house of Theodore Blakeslee, 73 Church street, where the crime was committed. Blakeslee was assaulted and mortally wounded at!he same time the assault was made upon Fox, and undoubtedly by the same person.

At the time Moran was brought io his house, Blakeslee was lying on the floor in a dying condition, and did, in fact, expire a short time thereafter.

Mrs. Blakeslee claimed to have seen the murderer as he left the house after the assault, and was brought into the room for the purpose of determining whether Moran was the man she had seen. Several witnesses were permitted to testify to what occurred while Moran was there and in his presence, including statements made by Mrs. Blakeslee to or about Moran. The introduction of this testimony was resisted on the ground that Moran was at the time under arrest, and not called upon to make answer to charges made against him, and should not be prejudiced by the fact that he remained silent.

When brought into the room, Mrs. Blakeslee said in substance: “Yo.u are the man that killed my husband; you did it;” or ‘‘there is the man that killed my husband; he did it.” It will be conceded that if Moran had made answer to the charge thus made to him or in his hearing, both the statements made to him and his reply would be competent.

It appears from the record that testimony was given tending to establish the fact that Moran did not keep silent, but did speak. One witness says he heard Moran say in a low tone: /‘My God, did I do that?”

If this be true, the testimony was competent. It was not for the court to say that it was untrue, and therefore reject the testimony.

[468]*468Many of the witnesses did not hear the statement of Moran, but that does not affect the competency of the testimony, if there was testimony tending to establish the fact that such statement was made by him and heard by others. Both statements may not be heard or testified to by the same person. Nor does the order in which the testimony goes to the jury affect its competency, if both finally get to the jury. For this reason alone the testimony was properly received.

But even if no statements were made by Moran, the testimony under the circumstances, was, we think, competent. We know that there is some conflict in the' decisions of the different states on this question, and while the precise point has not been determined by the Supreme Court of the state, we think the tendency of the decisions is in favor of the admissibility of this testimony, leaving the weight to be determined by the jury. Murphy v. State, 36 Ohio St. 628.

This testimony is of more or less value,depending upon the particular circumstances surrounding the accused at the time, and should undoubtedly be examined with great care and caution, as the jury were told to do in this case.

(2) During the examination of Mrs. Blakeslee, she was asked the following question:

“Q. I will ask you if you had any conversation with him. (meaning her husband) or heard any that was carried on by signs or otherwise, as to whom it was who assaulted him that night?”

To this question defendant’s counsel objected.

“The Court — He may answer yes’or no.”

“A. Yes, I did.”

“Q. What was that conversation?”

To which question an objection was sustained.

The claim is that the court erred in permitting the first question to be put, or answered at all. It is said that although the question is a preliminary one, the prosecuting [469]*469attorney and the court knew that the subject-matter to which it related was clearly incompetent, and that the tendency was to prejudice the accused, and permit the state indirectly to get the benefit of a statement made by Blakeslee.

We think there is very little to base this claim upon. The court followed a very common practice in first ascertaining whether there was any conversation at all upon the subject to which the question related either way, and then determine its competency. There was nothing whatever disclosed from which the jury could rightfully draw the slightest inference. We can not presume the jury made an improper and unauthorized use of the testimony, and make that the basis of error.

We are not prepared to say that the court acted at all imprudently in allowing the question to be answered.

(3) The court the officer who made the arrest to state to the jury that before starting out to make the arrest Mrs. Blakeslee gave him a description of the man who made the assault, and to state what the description was. This evidence was received against objections of plaintiff in error.

It is shown in the record that counsel for the prisoner had cross-examined this witness at great length, in an attempt to show that the witness in making the arrest acted recklessly and without any reliable information, and apparently in bad faith. The testimony objected to was called out on re-examination, to show what it was that called the attention of the witness to the facts stated by him, and as fixing the information upon which he acted. For this purpose and in explanation of the testimony called out on cross-examination, the testimony was competent.

It was not offered or admitted to prove any facts bearing on the identity of the prisoner. The competency of the testimony is supported to some extent by a case reported in 25 N. J. L. 566. I Green,sec. 101.

(4) The State attempted, against the objection of the [470]*470accused, to show that the wife of the accused visited the room of Fox on one or two occasions, but the attempt was a complete failure. This testimony was incompetent, it is true, unless brought to the knowledge of the prisoner, either by direct proof or by proof of such circumstances as ‘to charge him with knowledge of the fact. The testimony must be both erroneous and prejudicial before a judgment will be reversed because of its introduction to the jury. The testimony as a whole established no fact prejudicial to either the witness or accused. There was nothing in all this testimony that could by any construction have had the least weight with the jury in determining the verdict; it was no benefit to the State, nor injury to the plaintiff in error.

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11 Ohio C.C. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moran-v-state-ohcirctcuyahoga-1896.