People v. Simpson

12 N.W. 662, 48 Mich. 474, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 863
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 12 N.W. 662 (People v. Simpson) 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. Simpson, 12 N.W. 662, 48 Mich. 474, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 863 (Mich. 1882).

Opinion

Makston, J.

The respondent was convicted of murder in the first degree. The case comes up on exceptions before sentence. The first exceptions discussed by counsel relate to the admissibility of certain dying declarations, and it is claimed that this evidence was not competent because not made under the solemn belief of impending death.

It is incumbent upon the prosecution, before offering what is claimed to have been dying declarations, to show that they were made under a sense of impending death. It is not necessary to show that the injured party so stated at or about the time, or that any person in his or her presence and hearing said that death must speedily ensue.

The fact may be proved, like any other fact in the case and in the light of the existing an'd surrounding circumstances. The question is from the character and nature of the injury, whether slight, severe* or necessarily mortal; from what was said, if anything, by the injured person, or by the physicians or attendants in her hearing; what evidently was the state of the injured person’s mind at the [478]*478time the declarations were made. If the injured party had no hopes of recovery, and made the declarations under the impression that death was imminent, they are admissible, even though others may have thought differently and so expressed in her hearing, and even though death may not have ensued for some time thereafter. 1 Greenleafis Ev. § 158, and note.

In this case there certainly was evidence from which the court below, under the ruling made, must have been satisfied that the deceased was under the impression that death was impending; and the case would require to be a very strong one to justify this Court, who did not see the witnesses, in arriving at a different conclusion. In this connection we may also refer to the cn-or assigned upon the refusal of the court to instruct the jury that if they did not believe the testimony of Sarah Wiimot, the so-cahed declarations must be rejected.

Where facts and circumstances are testified to by several witnesses, no one witness can be singled out and the jury instructed what conclusion they must arrive at if they do not believe such witness to have testified truly. The real question is, has a particular fact been established, looking at all the testimony touching thereon, and the jury cannot be instructed to take the witnesses one by one and lay them one side or the other. It might be quite difficult to establish facts under the application of such a rule. The testimony of a single witness while standing alone may be highly improbable, and yet in the light of corroborating circumstances, the truthfulness thereof may become clear and convincing. Neither would the prosecution be confined to proving declarations made at one time, if made at more than one, and each otherwise competent, or to' proving what ■was said at one time, because at another the statement was reduced to writing and signed. To so hold would be to compel the prosecutor to act at his peril, as, were all testified to, the jury might believe one and reject the others ; and it would also put it in the power of the prosecuting officer to offer such as were unfavorable to the respondent, and [479]*479suppress, or compel the defendant to offer, those more favorable to him. It must of course appear that each declaration was made m extremis, but each is admissible when shown to have been thus made.

Exceptions were taken to the testimony of Lizzie Short and Anthony Trollope as to declarations made by the deceased at the time and shortly after she received the injury.

Lizzie Short was walking with the deceased at the time she was shot. She testified that “ immediately after the shot was fired deceased exclaimed My Gfod, Simpson, you have shot me,’ and witness saw her turn slowly around and clasp the board next to_ the top one in the fence with her left hand; that witness turned immediately after the shooting, when she saw a short thick-set man dressed in dark clothes distant about forty feet running across the vacant lot.” Trollope testified “ that he lived a block distant from the corner in question on the opposite side of Leib street; that he was in the house when he heard the pistol-shot in question, and ran to the corner in question, whereupon he found a woman leaning against the fence; ” that he went over as quick as he could and said to this woman, “Who shot you, madam?” She said it was John Simpson.

No possible doubt can arise as to the admissibility of the declaration made to Lizzie Short or in her hearing, and it is very evident that the question asked by Trollope and answer thereto, were within a very few minutes after the shooting and while the injured person was still leaning upon the fence as testified to by both these witnesses.

Were these declarations contemporaneous with the shooting, and so connected with injury as to illustrate its character ? The declaration of a person wounded and bleeding, that the defendant had stabbed her, made immediately after the occurrence, though with such an interval of time as to allow her to go up stairs from her room to another room, was held admissible after her death as part of the res gestae. Com. v. M’Pike, 3 Cush. 181. The present case resembles [480]*480very closely Lambert v. People, 20 Mich. 71, where parties-came up within three minutes after a robbery, and the complaint then made was held admissible as a part of the res gestes.

Seventy-nine exceptions were taken in this case. They relate mostly to rulings upon the admissibility of testimony. Most of them require little or no examination at our hands.

The respondent and deceased when living were husband and wife, and it was competent for the prosecution to -show that for a reasonable time previous to this occurrence they did not live peaceably together, and that respondent had threatened to shoot or kill the deceased; and we discover nothing in the form of the questions asked the witness, Ilenry Simpson, as to a statement previously made by him, or to the witness Welch, whether respondent could have at a certain time been in certain rooms she had passed through and she not see him.

The questions asked for the purposes of eliciting testimony tending to show the relations that had existed between the deceased and certain third parties of questionable reputation were properly excluded. There was no pretence that these parties were guilty of the offence, and although such facts, had they been on trial, might have been shown to establish a motive, in the present case they were inadmissible.

The testimony of the Sergeant of Police Berger, giving a conversation had with the accused after his arrest, was admissible. It does not appear that any undue influence was resorted to, in order to obtain evidence from the respondent on the contrary he was cautioned and warned to be careful, as his statements would be used against him.

The questions asked the witness Baxter as to the manner in which the deceased had treated the respondent within two years prec ding the shooting were properly excluded and for the reason given, viz., that witness had not seen them together in five years. And the questions asked Nicholson and Thomas as to the general disposition of the deceased being bitter and vindictive were properly ruled out. The object of such evidence is not apparent; it would not tend [481]*481to show that respondent treated her kindly, or that he had not threatened her, or tend to show that he had no motive for injuring her.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.W. 662, 48 Mich. 474, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-simpson-mich-1882.