People v. Videto

1 Park. Cr. 603
CourtCourt Of Oyer And Terminer New York
DecidedJuly 15, 1825
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Park. Cr. 603 (People v. Videto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court Of Oyer And Terminer New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Videto, 1 Park. Cr. 603 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1825).

Opinion

By the Court,

Walworth, J. —

After stating to the jury that in criminal cases they were judges both of the law and the facts, that the decision of the questions of fact belonged exclusively to them, and that they also had a right to disregard the opinion of the court, in a criminal case, even upon a question of law, if they were fully satisfied that such opinion was wrong, proceeded as follows:

The decision of this case, gentlemen of the jury, depends altogether upon what is called presumptive or circumstantial evidence. This species of evidence is admissible, both in civil and in criminal cases, but more frequently in the latter, because it is adopted the more readily in proportion to the difficulty of establishing facts by positive testimony. In cases of murder and other crimes of the higher grades which are usually committed in secret, it is frequently the only evidence which can be adduced to substantiate the fact of the commission of the crime. Philips, in his excellent treatise on the law of evidence, says that in prosecutions for some of the worst species of crimes, this kind of evidence will often be the most satisfactory [605]*605and convincing that can be produced; and the remarks of this elementary writer have been sanctioned by the opinions of many of the most eminent judges.

There can be no doubt of the truth of this observation in those cases where there are many separate circumstances, proved by several different witnesses, all tending to the same point and necessarily producing the same result. For it is a valuable maxim of the law, notwithstanding what some visionary writers have said to the contrary, that “ circumstances can not lie.” It is true circumstances may be proved by witnesses, and those witnesses may lie. But it is also true that if a corrupt witness intends, by perjury, to convict an innocent man, such witness will be much more likely to' swear positively to the fact of the commission of the crime, than to circumstances which alone may not have the desired effect to convict the object of his malice.

In most cases of conviction upon presumptive proof or circumstantial evidence, there are many different witnesses swearing to several distinct circumstances, all tending to the same result, each of which circumstances is a necessary link in the chain of evidence required to produce a conviction of the accused; and there is therefore the less danger of perjury in such cases in consequence of the number of perjured witnesses which it would be necessary for the prosecution to produce to effect an unjust conviction. For if one perjured witness should swear to a fact forming only one link in a chain of circumstances, the rest of the witnesses being honest he will be in danger of detection from the discrepancy between his testimony and theirs; when he might have sworn positively, but falsely, tc the commission of the crime, by the accused, without the possibility of being contradicted. For this reason, although from the imperfection and uncertainty which must ever exist in all human tribunals, I have no doubt that there have been cases in which innocent persons have been convicted on presumptive proofs, yet from my knowledge of criminal jurisprudence, both from reading and from observation, I have no hesitation in expressing the opinion thai where there has been one unjust conviction [606]*606upon circumstantial evidence alone, there have been three innocent persons condemned upon the positive testimony of perjured witnesses. I speak more particularly in reference to that country from which our laws have mostly been derived. Fortunately for the people of the United States, perjury has seldom, in any shape, connected itself with prosecutions for any of the higher offences in our courts of justice.

Much has been read to you, as law, during this trial, from a treatise called, “ Tbe Theory of Presumptive Proof, or, an Inquiry into the nature of Circumstantial Evidence.’-' This “theory,” which is the production of an anonymous English writer, has been republished in this country, and is found bound up with the first American edition of Philips’s Treatise on the Law of Evidence, and has frequently been confounded with that valuable work. But it is my duty to tell jmu, that the theory of this anonymous writer, which the American editor has published, and had bound up in the same volume with Philips’s treatise, is not considered as law by the courts in this or any other country. It is an attempt, by a theoretical writer, to overturn the decisions of the judges of the superior courts in England, and to set up his individual opinion in opposition to the law as settled in the courts of justice both there and here.

This writer has remarked very freely, and in some instances very justly, upon the case of Captain Donnellan, who though he was probably guilty of the murder of his brother-in-law, was convicted upon very slight circumstantial evidence, if his case is correctly reported. In addition to his “ theory,” the writer, in an appendix to his work, has collected eleven cases, for the purpose of illustrating his ideas, and to show the danger of convicting upon circumstantial evidence. These cases have been seized on with avidity, and are generally read and commented upon by those who are engaged in the defence of criminals, whether the evidence against the accused is positive or only circumstantial.

In most of the cases stated in that appendix, it is said tne accused were unjustly convicted, and that it was afterwards ascertained they were innocent. But, in nearly all of those [607]*607cases, the fact of the innocence of the accused depends altogether upon hearsay, or tradition.

It is but a few years since a story was published in nearly all of the newspapers of the United States, that a man by the name of Hamilton had been condemned and executed in one of the western states, and that his innocence was afterwards clearly established, by the confession of the man who had actually committed the murder. This story, for a time, gained entire credit, and was generally believed wherever it was told. Yet, fortunately for the administration of justice, the report of his innocence was discovered to be a base fabrication, put in circulation by some of his surviving friends for the purpose of removing a stigma from the name of the man who had justly suffered the penalty of the law for a most wicked and aggravated robbery and murder. It is not improbable that some of the cases collected in his appendix, by the anonymous writer, before referred to, are cases of that description. But if they were all supported by well attested facts, they would not in the least diminish the weight which ought to be given to circumstantial evidence. For upon examination, it will be found that most of those cases were convictions upon the positive testimony of mistaken or perjured witnesses.

His honor then adverted particularly to each of the cases stated in that appendix, and observed that they only went to support the opinion he had before expressed, that there were more unjust convictions upon the positive testimony of mistaken or perjured witnesses, than from erroneous conclusions of juries in deciding upon circumstantial evidence.

He then commented upon the nature of presumptic ns, which he told the jury were of three kinds:

1. Violent Presumptions. — Where the facts and circumstances proved would necessarily attend the fact presented.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Park. Cr. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-videto-nyoytermct-1825.