Murphy v. State

87 A. 811, 120 Md. 229, 1913 Md. LEXIS 125
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 87 A. 811 (Murphy v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. State, 87 A. 811, 120 Md. 229, 1913 Md. LEXIS 125 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Oourt.

The indictment upon which the aq>pellant was tried and convicted in the Circuit Court for Harford County contained two counts, the first charging him with an assault with intent to kill, and the second with an assault and battery upon a certain Anthony Musbaum. The jury found him guilty on the second count, and he was sentenced to pay a fine of $100 and costs and to confinement in the Maryland House of Correction for four months. From that judgment he has appealed.

During the trial the defendant reserved nineteen exceptions to the rulings of the Court on the evidence, but all of them present practically the same legal question.

The State offered the testimony of Anthony Musbaum, the prosecuting witness, and Alethia James, tending to prove the alleged assault, and the testimony of William J ames to facts that occurred after the assault, and then produced the witness, William Hooper, who, after stating what occurred during the assault, testified that after the assault the defendant came back from his house to the bam where the witness and the defendant’s brother, Cornelius Murphy, were: that he heard *231 the defendant say that he was “going to run them all off the place;” that Cornelius and the witness went up the steps leading to the upper part of the bam and that the defendant followed them, and that Cornelius struck the defendant and he fell down the steps. He was then asked by the State’s Attorney, “With what did Cornelius hit him?” and he replied, “I don’t know — I didn’t see Cornelius what he hit him with; I was in the barn inside.” To the question “Were you not on the steps?” he answered, “Ho, sir;” and the State’s Attorney then asked the following question: “Didn’t you tell me in my office there (indicating) you were on the steps and saw Cornelius hit him ?” to which he replied, “Ho, sir; I didn’t say I saw Cornelius hit him.” When asked to state what happened after Cornelius knocked the defendant down the steps, he said he got up and went out. and in reply to the question, “What happened before he got up ?” he replied “Why nothing.” To the question “Didn’t you say Cornelius hit him again in the barn?” he answered, “Ho, sir; I don’t think Cornelius hit him but once; that was on top of the steps; I didn’t see him hit him then.” The State’s Attorney then asked him, “Didn’t you tell me this morning in my office — ” and he replied “Ho, sir.” The question was then completed — “that he beat him with a piece of ax handle?” and he answered, “Ho, sir; I never mentioned ax handle to you; never thought of it.” The State then called Cornelius Murphy, the brother of the defendant, who testified that when he first saw the defendant and Husbaum fighting they were down on the ground and Husbaum was on top; that he didn’t attempt to take Husbaum off but told them to stop fighting; that they didn’t pay any attention to him, and that finally the defendant “turned Husbaum over and struck him in the head with a piece of tin;” that witness then undertook “to pull them apart,” and that Husbaum struck the defendant while the witness had hold of the defendant and “knocked him down and knocked him unconscious ;” that when the defendant recovered consciousness he *232 was in a rage with witness because he had interfered and turned on him, and that witness struck him and injured his hand. The State’s Attorney then said to witness, “How, Mr. Murphy tell the gentlemen of the jury if it isn’t a fact that when you went around there, Husbaum was down and your brother Tom was beating him with a can top?” and he answered, “Ho, sir;; that is not right.” When asked if he did not tell Dr. Famous and Clarence Wilson that night that that was true, he replied, “Ho, six;” and he was then asked the following questions: “Did you tell either Clarence or Dr. Famous that night that you had — if you hadn’t struck Tom and knocked him unconscious, at the time you broke your hand you believed he would have killed Husbaum ?”

“Didn’t you tell him (Clarence Wilson) if you hadn’t taken your brother Tom off you believed he would have killed Husbaum ?”

“Did you on the way over there (defendant’s house) tell him (Dr. Famous) that you were sorry to have used Tom up, but if you hadn’t done it you believed he would have killed Husbaum ?”

“Ho words to that effect?”

“Did you on the evening of this occurrence at Husbaum’s home, have a conversation with Mr. Husbaum, in the presence of Mrs. Husbaum, his wife, and did Husbaum say to you he saw a dogwood club laying on the ground just after he passed the dairy, that he supposed Tom had picked it up and struck him with it, and did you say, cHo, I saw the club,’ and that it was a sassafras ?”

To each of these questions the defendant objected, but the Court overruled the objections, and the witness answered that he did not make the statements referred to. The State then called Mrs. Husbaum, Clarence Wilson and Dr. Famous, who were permitted, against the objection of the defendant, to testify that Cornelius Murphy made the statement referred to in said questions and other statements contradictory of his testimony in chief. These rulings of the Court below *233 .are the errors complained of in the first, second, third, fourth, ¡sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth hills •of exceptions.

The rule in this State in regard to this character of evidence was definitely settled in the case of Smith v. Briscoe, 65 Md. 561, and repeated and re-affirmed, without any qualification, in the very recent case of State v. B. & O. R. R. Co., 117 Md. 282, where it is said: “If the witness has made to -the party who calls him, or to the attorney of such party, a ¡statement totally variant from his sworn testimony, and on the faith of such statement, he has been called, he may be asked if he made such a statement, and if he denies it, we ¡see no objection to the proof of such statement, not for the purpose of impeaching the general character of the witness, but for the protection of the party calling him. If a plaintiff •calls a witness, relying upon statements made to him or his attorney, and when on the stand he proves the defendant’s ■case, we think that the principles of justice require that the -plaintiff should be able to show why he called him. There are objections to either course, but the more objectionable •one would he to hold the party bound by the evidence of such treacherous witness. We restrict such declarations to those made to the party calling him or to his attorney, and made in reference to the ease pending, and do not extend them to ■statements made to others. It is upon the statements so made to the party to the suit or his attorney that the witness is •called. If the witness under such circumstances makes a false statement, he can not complain that his falsehood is •exposed.

“But it is not every statement that may be made even to the party litigant or his attorney, that should be allowed to be contradicted by the party calling the witness. It should be left to the discretion of the judge before whom the case is fried below to allow it to be done. The Court should be .satisfied that the party has been taken by surprise, and that *234

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Bluebook (online)
87 A. 811, 120 Md. 229, 1913 Md. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-state-md-1913.