Rea v. State

76 Tenn. 356
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 76 Tenn. 356 (Rea v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rea v. State, 76 Tenn. 356 (Tenn. 1881).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the coart.

The prisoner has appealed in error from the verdict of a jury, and the judgment of the trial court thereon, convicting him of murder in the first degree.

The evidence was circumstantial, and the trial judge, after properly defining the various grades of homicide included in the indictment, and explaining to the jury what it was necessary for the State to prove in order to make out either offense to .their satisfaction “beyond a reasonable doubt,” continued his charge thus: “ A reasonable doubt is difficult to define with any precision. Of course it is not every possible doubt, but it is that doubt engendered by an investigation of the whole proof, and an inability after such investigation to let the mind rest easily upon the certainty of guilt or innocence. In other words, it is an honest misgiving as to the guilt of the accused upon the proof, which the reason entertains and sanctions as a substantial doubt.” Then, after stating the different positions of the State and the defendant in reference to the effect or result of the proof, his Honor said: In order to convict a person of crime on circumstantial evidence, the circumstances must not only be consistent with the guilt of the accused, but must exclude every reasonable hypothesis but that of his guilt. In other words, the proof must exclude the idea that the deceased might have come to his death in a manner inconsistent with the guilt of the deceased. Or, at [359]*359least, the circumstances must be sufficient to convince the mind and conscience of the jury of the guilt of the accused beyond a reasonable doubt.”

His Honor further said: The defendant’s counsel rely upon an alibi, that is that, at the time of the killing, the prisoner was in fact elsewhere, in some other place, that he was in his own house. The defense of an alibi is very conclusive, if clearly, fully and certainly established. It is a defense, however, so liable to abuse when a design exists to practice a fraud upon the State, and even when that design does not exist, by ignorant mistakes as to the particular hour and lapse of time, that it requires great strictness and caution on the part of the jury to avoid being misled by if. The defendant is not required to-prove an alibi beyond a reasonable doubt, but you will take the proof touching the alibi in connection with all the other proof in the cause, and if it produce in your mind a reasonable doubt as to the prisoner’s guilt, your duty is to acquit him.”

The defendant’s counsel asked the judge to charge the following five propositions, which he declined to do upon the ground that he had already charged upon the subject matter of all of them, viz:

“ 1st. This being a case of circumstantial evidence, the circumstances should be of a conclusive nature and tendency. Such evidence is always insufficient, when-assuming all to be proved which the evidence tends to prove, some other hypothesis may still be true. For it is the actual exclusion of every other hypothesis which invests mere circumstances with the force of [360]*360proof. Whenever, therefore, the evidence leaves it indifferent which of several hypotheses is true, or merely establishes some indefinite probability in favor of one hypothesis rather than another, such evidence cannot amount to proof, however great the probability may be, to convict the defendant.
2d. It is essential that the circumstances should be a moral certainty, excluding all hypotheses but the one proposed to be phoved, to-wit, the guilt of the defendant. For, in the language of the law, it is better that ninety-nine guilty, men out of a hundred should escape than that one innocent man should be convicted.
3d. That it is the duty of the jury to enquire with the most scrupulous attention what other hypoth-ecs there may be, which may agree wholly or in part with facts in evidence. And if any other hypothesis •agrees with the evidence, the jury should acquit the defendant. •
4th. In criminal cases, the statement made by the accused is in this point of view, of the most essential importance, and should be carefully considered by the jury.
5th. The jury ought not only to acquit the accused unless the evidence excludes from their minds all reasonable doubts, as .explained to you, of his guilt, but in no case ought the jury to convict a man of a crime, when his life is at stake, where the circumstantial evidence does not satisfy their minds as fully as they would be satisfied from the positive swearing of one credible witness that he saw the defendant fire the gun which took the life of the deceased.”

[361]*361These propositions, it -will be noticed, are not charges upon the particular facts of the case before the court, but merely propositions of law applicable to any case of circumstantial evidence. They undertake to formulate the law on the subject in a shape deemed by the learned counsel most favorable to the accused. But clearly the counsel, of the defendant cannot be permitted to select the words of a charge of the law, nor, of course,, to give the charge in the form of an argument in favor of the accused. All that they can ask is, that the law which regulates, the rights of their client shall be fairly and fully stated, in the form proper to come from an impartial judge. If, therefore, they ask for charges of points of law, which have already been fully and fairly made to the jury, there is clearly no error in refusing the request; and, a fortiori, if the wording of the propositions submitted is that of an advocate, not of a judge.

The burden of the several propositions is that in cases of circumstantial evidence alone the circumstances must be so strong, and so closely connected as to exclude every other reasonable hypothesis except that of the defendant’s guilt. Repeated in different' forms, laying stress now on the evidence necessary to establish the controlling hypothesis, now upon the certainty required to exclude every other hypothesis, and now upon the duty of the jury in weighing the evidence,, this is the sum and substance of the various propositions. But the trial judge has already, in language borrowed from the opinions of this court, expressed the same idea in the form usually adopted in such [362]*362cases. He has said to the jury that the circumstances must not only be consistent with the guilt of the accused, but must exclude every reasonable hypothesis but that of his guilt. And he elsewhere explains to them the law which should govern them in weighing the evidence, and especially in their finding on the defendants hypothesis of an alibi.

It is insisted, however, that the explanatory language of the judge, immediately following- the clause just referred to, qualifies that part of the charge, and makes the whole paragraph amount to no more than the repetition of the charge upon the point of a reasonable doubt. The defendant was entitled to both charges: Lawless v. State, 4 Lea, 173; Turner v. State, 4 Lea, 206. And so bis Honor told the jury. What he meant by the closing words of the clause was, that the circumstances must be sufficient to convince the mind and conscience of the jury of the guilt of the accused beyond a reasonable doubt, to the exclusion of every other idea or hypothesis.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Tenn. 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rea-v-state-tenn-1881.