Mulkey v. State

1911 OK CR 41, 113 P. 532, 5 Okla. Crim. 75, 1911 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 54
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 6, 1911
DocketNo. A-141.
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 1911 OK CR 41 (Mulkey v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulkey v. State, 1911 OK CR 41, 113 P. 532, 5 Okla. Crim. 75, 1911 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 54 (Okla. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

.DOYLE, Judge

(after stating the facts as aboye.) The petition in error is voluminous, covering 30 printed pages, and alleges 43 assignments of error, Whether the homicide was murder, manslaughter in the first degree, or justifiable in self-defense is, in bur view -of the record, a very close question. The jury by their verdict said it was manslaughter in the first degree, and their determination would not be disturbed without error of law. But the fact that the question of guilt is so close makes it very important that the trial should be free from error of law. TJpon a careful examination of the record, the conclusion of the court is that, for error of law occurring at the trial, the judgment in this case must be reversed, and a new trial granted. We will consider only those assignments of error which upon another trial will - be liable to again arise.

The first.assignment is that:

“The court erred in the admission of the following testimony: Dr. Everett Booth, witness for the state, was asked the following questions: Doctor, I want to get the exact language that Dennis Lawson used when you first went up there, the first thing he said, the exact language. A. He said, “Everett, I am dying/ or he called me-“Doctor/ I don’t know which — I don’iknow which, for sure. Q. Didn’t he say, “He murdered me, Doctor’ ? A. He said that some time during the talk before I went for Thompson.”

This question was objected to because it was leading and calls for thd conclusion of the deceased. The record shows that the statement was made to the first person that he spoke to after he was shot. It was therefore clearly admissible as a part of the res gestae. But the form of the question is objectionable as being leading and suggestive, and for this reason the objection should have been sustained.

*87 The second assignment is that: “The court erred in permitting to be read to the jury certain clauses in the written dying statement of deceased, Dennis Lawson.” Said dying statement is in words and figures as follows:

“Mulkey, Oklahoma, December 4, 1908. I, Dennis Lawson, in my right mind without any malice or hatred in my heart, wish to make this statement in regard to John C. Mulkey shooting me. I was stopping at Mr. Mulkey’s house to spend the night, expecting to buy some cattle from Jim Mulkey next morning. I. and John Mulkey, and B. F. Lambert and some boy I didn’t know was standing up in John Mulkey’s house talking and playing dice. John was drinking some and claimed a little stake we had up and got mad and called me some very ugly names, and I got up and went out doors to avoid having any trouble. The young man went out with me, and after a few minutes I turned and walked back around the house not suspecting anvthing, but just as I went to turn the corner of the house John Mulkey shot me without warning, foully murdered me without warning. I make this statement believing that I cannot live long and only wish to maké such statement in justice to myself and family and the good people 'at large. [Signer!] D. Lawson. Signed in my presence and in the presence of D. W. Dunn, W. H. Hunter, Dr. Booth. T. B. Thompson, J. P.”'

Defendant’s counsel before the reading of this statement objected to the clause, “without any malice or hatred in my heart,” occurring in the first sentence; and also to the clause, “to avoid having any trouble,” occurring in the sentence, “I got up and went out doors to avoid having any trouble”; also to the statement, “John Mulkey shot me without warning, foully murdered me, without warning”; also to the concluding words, “and only wish to make such statement in justice to myself and family and the good people at large.’ The court struck out the words from the dying declaration .“foully murdered me,” and permitted the statement to be read as made with these three words stricken out. It is contended that the clauses and words objected to were mere expressions of opinion and conclusions of the defendant, and the motion to strike out the same should have been sustained.

Dying declarations are statements of material facts concern *88 ing the cause and circumstances of the 'homicide, made by the victim, under the solemn conviction of impending death, and as such axe to be distinguished from other admissible declarations, such as declarations which constitute a part of the res gestae, or declarations made in the presence of the accused. Such declarations are admissible as evidence against the accused because they were admissible at common law. The constitutionality of this rule has been so uniformly affirmed that the question is no longer an open one. They may be oral or in writing; being a substitute for sworn testimony,' they must be such narrative statements as would be admissible had the victim been sworn as a witness. Mere conclusions or matters of opinion or belief, which would not be received if the declarant was a witness, are inadmissible, and, upon^ objection properly, made, such statements or clauses should be rejected. In the absence of a statute, the rule requiring a dying declaration to go in as a whole has no application here.

The rule that dying declarations should be confined to facts concerning the cause and circumstances of the homicide is one that should not be relaxed. It must be remembered that this kind of testimony is classed as hearsay evidence and is admitted under an exception to the general rule from considerations of public necessity. It is not under the sanction of an oath, and there is no opportunity for cross-examination. It overrides the sacred constitutional right of an accused to be confronted with the witness against him. It is also subject to the special objection that .such declarations are usually made when the declarant is- in the last stage of physical exhaustion, with mental powers impaired to a greater or less extent. It leaves entirely out of consideration the fact that passions and prejudices, which in life pervert the perceptive faculties,.do not always lose their power on the deathbed. Such evidence is also liable to be incomplete. The victim may naturally be disposed to give only a partial account of the occurrence, although possibly not influenced by animosity or ill will. All these objections are overcome by the one consideration of public necessity that society may not be deprived of the testimony, such *89 as it is, and whatever it may. be worth. In Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (9th Ed.) par. 294, the rule is thus stated:

“Nothing can be evidence in a declaration m articulo mortis that would not be so if the party were sworn. On this rule,' anything the murdered person, in articulo mortis, says as to the facts, is receivable, but not what he says as matter of opinion or belief. Hence the declaration,‘It was B. W. who shot me, though I did not see him,’ is inadmissible. But where, in making a dying-declaration, the declarant, in speaking of the fatal wound, said it was done without any provocation on his part, it has been held that this declaration is not incompetent it relating to fact, not opinion.”

Under the rule here stated, the first clause objected to is of doubtful admissibility, but was presumably admitted upon the theory that if sworn as a witness it would be competent as to the state of his feelings toward the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK CR 41, 113 P. 532, 5 Okla. Crim. 75, 1911 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulkey-v-state-oklacrimapp-1911.