People v. Kimbrough

159 N.W. 533, 193 Mich. 330, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 591
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1916
DocketDocket No. 126
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 159 N.W. 533 (People v. Kimbrough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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. Kimbrough, 159 N.W. 533, 193 Mich. 330, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 591 (Mich. 1916).

Opinion

Bird, J.

Respondent was convicted on a charge of murder in the Saginaw circuit court, and sentenced to life imprisonment. The evidence was circumstantial. It was the claim of the people that respondent murdered Rose Fernier, an eight-year-old girl, and after-wards burned her body in the furnace of the manufacturing plant of the Valley Sweets Company, where he was employed as a porter, when the girl disappeared. Rose Fernier lived with her grandmother on Hamilton street in the city of Saginaw. On Sunday evening, January 3, 1915, Rose was sent by her grandmother to a nearby restaurant on Hamilton street for [332]*332some .articles of food. She went to the restaurant as directed, but not finding what she was ordered to get, started to return to her home. In doing so her way led her past the plant of the Valley Sweets Company. Just before she reached the plant she was observed by an acquaintance going in the direction of her home. Nothing was afterwards seen of her, although a thorough search was made. The following day pieces of human bones were found in the furnace of the Valley Sweets Company, which were shown to be the bones of a child between the ages of seven and nine years. It was claimed that respondent was at the plant at the time the little girl disappeared. Respondent reviews the proceedings of the trial court by writ of error, claiming that serious errors were committed on the trial.

1. Counsel objected seriously to the order of proof which prevailed at the trial. The basis of the objection was the rule that evidence of the corpus delicti shall be first introduced, and he asserts that nearly all of the evidence which tended to connect defendant with the crime was admitted in evidence before the testimony of Dr. McCotter was received, showing that the bones were human bones, and were the bones of a child between the ages of seven and nine years. There appears to be very little, if any, contention between counsel as to the rule in cases of homicide that all the evidence tending to prove the corpus delicti must be first introduced. Neither is there any contention over the rule that where iteiris of evidence tend not only to prove the corpus delicti, but tend to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime, they are admissible at any time, but respondent insists that the trial court abused his discretion in allowing the respondent to be connected with the offense before it was established.

Had the body been found and been susceptible of [333]*333identification, the order of proof which was pursued undoubtedly would have been objectionable. The prosecutor was driven to establish the corpus delicti by circumstances, and the circumstances by which he established it were so interwoven with the testimony tending to establish the respondent’s guilt that it was difficult to show one without incidentally showing the other. It is true there were some items of testimony that might have been segregated from the mass and introduced independently, and the witnesses after-wards recalled to testify to the facts which tended to connect respondent with the crime, but those cases were not numerous, and do not appear to have been harmful to respondent. No error in this regard is apparent.

2. The controversy over the order of proof engendered more or less heat between court and counsel. At one stage of the discussion the court remarked:

“If I could see the least reason for holding it would injure the defendant to introduce expert testimony at this time, instead of waiting until they completed their other evidence, I would hold with you. I cannot see any injury he could possibly suffer. It looks to me like a little attempt to prevent— I will withhold that.
“Mr. Curry: I take an exception to the remark of the judge.”

The controversy ran on for a time when the following occurred:

“Mr. Curry: I took an exception when he went on the stand.
“The Court: Yes, you have your exception.
“Mr. Curry: It is not a-matter of discretion; it is the absolute right this defendant has in this case.
“The Court: There is a Supreme Court at Lansing.
“Mr. Curry: This man hasn’t any money. You are all aware of that fact.
“Mr. Vincent: I submit that this statement that this man has no money is improper after What this man is having done for him.
[334]*334“Mr. Curry: They don’t pay for an appeal.
“Mr. Vincent: I take an exception to that kind of a remark.
“The Court: Yes; I won’t tolerate any more of this.
“Mr. Curry: I want a fair trial for the defendant.
“The Court: You will’have a fair trial. I propose to see that.you don’t take advantage of matters that you don’t have any right to.
' “Mr. Curry: I take an exception.”

Respondent’s counsel urges'that the remarks of the court were improper and prejudicial to the respondent, and tended to discredit counsel in the eyes of the jury. If any harm resulted to respondent from this controversy, it was due to counsel’s persistence in urging his objections after he had the view of the court and his intimation that the court was not fair in his ruling. It could hardly be expected that the court would allow such an intimation to pass without resenting it. But I am of the opinion that it resulted in no harm to the respondent. Such colloquies between court and counsel are not unusual in the trial of causes, and especially in criminal cases, and the average juror knows it and understands it. He does not charge up against the client all the unpleasant things that may be said to counsel. We cannot assume that this disagreement between court and counsel over the rules of evidence would prejudice the jury against the respondent.

3. Dr. Rollo E. McCotter was sworn on behalf of the people and testified that he was professor of anatomy at the medical school at the University of Michigan, and that the particular branch of anatomy to which he gave attention was comparative anatomy. The prosecutor then began his examination, whereupon counsel interrupted and the following took place:

“Mr. Curry: I would like to ask a question as to his competency.
[335]*335“Mr. Vincent: He will have an opportunity to cross-examine.
“The Court: I think we will take judicial notice of the fact that this gentleman, employed in that way, in Ann Arbor, that he is competent to testify on that subject.
“Mr. Curry: I take an exception.
“The Court: You may have your cross-examination”—after which the prosecutor proceeded with his examination.

Counsel assigns the refusal of the court to permit him to examine the witness as error.

The rule is stated in 5 Enc. of Evidence, p. 547, as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 N.W. 533, 193 Mich. 330, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kimbrough-mich-1916.