People v. Biddlecome

3 Utah 208
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 Utah 208 (People v. Biddlecome) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Biddlecome, 3 Utah 208 (Utah 1882).

Opinions

EMERSON, J.:

The defendant was indicted for tbe murder of one Charles Jensen, alleged to have been committed on the twenty-sixth, of November, 1879. ITe was convicted of murder in tbe first degree, and upon the recommendation of the jury, as provided in the statute, was sentenced to be imprisoned at bard labor in the penitentiary for life. He appeals to this court, upon various assignments of error, from tbe judgment and the older denying his motion for a new trial,

[210]*210The deceased was last seen alive by several witnesses on the twenty-sixth day of November, 1879, in company with the defendant. From this time on he was missed from the neighborhood. There seems to have been some talk of and perhaps some search made for him. His body was not found until February, 1881, buried under not over fourteen inches of soil, and not far from where both the defendant and deceased had lived.- One of the witnesses who assisted in exhuming the body from where it was found testified as follows :

“We found the body but slightly buried, not even six inches of soil over the body, and part of the clothing was exposed at the surface; the body had been buried face downward. There was only the skeleton left, but the frame was intact, but separated some by handling when dug up. I did not particularly examine the clothing. The coat was yellow ducking, lined with light colored blanket. Overalls of the same material. The body was taken to Stockton, and there the coroner held an inquest. There was a patch on the knees of the overalls. We found a belt on the body and a knife in the pocket; these have been in my possession ever since. [Produces them before the jury.] I found a bullet-hole on the back part of the skull on the left side, and the skull being removed from the trunk, a bullet considerably battered dropped out, which I kept and here produce. [Produces it, and shows it to the jury.] The body was found in Tooele County, in Utah Territory. I was present at the trial of defendant before a justice of the peace.”

Witness was asked if he knew of any difficulty between defendant and Jensen about a gun and saddle; he replied: “I heard defendant say he had bought the gun of a person whom I did not know.”

The body was identified by the clothing and articles found with it.

There was testimony, on the part of the prosecution, of admissions of the defendant that he had “fixed,” or killed, the deceased. The prosecution attempted to prove by several witnesses that there had been a difficulty between the defendant and the deceased.

The first point urged on behalf of the defendant on this appeal refers to the rulings of the court in connection with [211]*211the testimony of one William Bracken, a witness on the part of the prosecution. The testimony and rulings were as follows :

“I am postmaster at Bush Lake. I know defendant, and I knew Charles Jensen. I saw him on the twenty-sixth day of November, 1879. He had been gone for some time, and he returned to Bush Lake I think on the seventeenth day of November, 1879, or that was the first time I saw him. He went to Frisco between the first and tenth of May of that year. I don’t know as I saw him again after the seventeenth of November, until the twenty-sixth. On that day I saw him and the defendant together.”

On cross-examination, said witness said: “I am nob on friendly terms with the defendant. I saw Jensen and defendant together in front of my store about 10 A. M., talking-together, and saw them together again about the same place about three P. M. I watched them closely.”

Counsel for the defendant asked witness if he had any motive for watching or that led him to notice particularly. Witness said he had; and was about to explain his reason, when he was stopped by the defense. Counsel for the people insisted that the witness having stated that there was a reason why he watched, he had a right to explain what it was, also as it then stood the jury might infer that he had some sinister motive. The question was there asked by the people’s counsel. “ What induced you to notice particularly the circumstance of seeing Jensen and the defendant together on the twenty-sixth day of November, 1879 ?”

The defendant’s counsel objected to said question, because— 1. The people have no right to ask the question to test the witness’ recollection, for that is the privilege solely of the party cross-examining; 2. The question is general, and would leave the witness to state hearsay or other incompetent matter.

The court directed that the witness state any fact or circumstance which existed to impress the circumstance on his mind.

The witness answered: “I knew there was a difficulty betweeen the accused and Jensen, and I expected to see a fight.”

[212]*212Defendant’s counsel then asked witness if he ever saw the parties together having difficulty.

A. No.

, Q.- How did you know they had difficulty except by hearsay ?

A. Jensen told me so.

Defendant’s counsel move to strike out this answer, and also that to last question on the part of the people, because he states a fact not competent, namely, a statement of Jensen.

The attorney for the people objected to the striking out, and the motion was denied. Defendant’s counsel then and there excepted. Whereupon defendant’s counsel asked the court to caution the jury that the witness’ statement that Jensen told him there was a difficulty, was only evidence that witness had that circumstance to induce him to watch them, and was not evidence that there was a difficulty between them, which caution the court refused to give. And to which the defendant’s counsel excepted.

The objection to the question asked by the prosecution should have been sustained. He - was their witness. The fact they sought to establish by him, and for which he was ostensibly called, had been squarely and unequivocally testified to. On the cross-examination, he had stated that he had a motive for watching the parties. What his motive was, beyond the fact that it served'to fasten upon his mind the circumstance about which he had testified, was immaterial. The counsel for the defendant seemed content to leave the matter there, and the prosecution should have been equally so. The answer of the witness to the former question did not' give the prosecution the right to put and have answered the question objected to. It in no sense related to new matter drawn out by the cross-examination. The question itself, had it been otherwise competent, was too general, and left the witness to state, as he did state, hearsay and incompetent matter.

It follows, of course, that after the answers on the redirect examination the defendant’s motion to strike out should have been granted. And failing in this, beyond all question the limitation as to the effect of the testimony, and the caution counsel for the defendant asked to have given to the jury, [213]*213should have been granted. The answer was clearly inadmissible as evidence of any difficulty between the defendant and the deceased. That there had been a difficulty between them, on or about that date, the prosecution seemed anxious to prove, probably to furnish a motive for the alleged crime.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Skeen v. Chambers
86 P. 492 (Utah Supreme Court, 1906)
People v. Scott
37 P. 335 (Utah Supreme Court, 1894)
People v. Swasey
6 Utah 93 (Utah Supreme Court, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Utah 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-biddlecome-utah-1882.