Robinson v. State

57 Md. 14, 1881 Md. LEXIS 3
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 30, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 57 Md. 14 (Robinson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. State, 57 Md. 14, 1881 Md. LEXIS 3 (Md. 1881).

Opinion

Magruder, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant (a mulatto,) was indicted for forcibly abducting, taking, and carrying away four children of one dames McKee, aged seven, six, five, and three years, lespectively. Another count charged him with persuading and enticing the children away from the father.

[16]*16The hill of exceptions presents the sole point of the propriety of the rejection of certain testimony offered by the appellant.

At the trial the State produced as a witness Joseph McKee, a son of the said James McKee, (not one of the children alleged to have been abducted) who testified that in August, 1880, his mother, Mrs. McKee, was living with the said children in the mountains above Olearspring, in "Washington County, and his father was temporarily absent, in Montgomery County, engaged at work, leaving his family at his house; that during the absence of his father, the prisoner came to the house and brandishing a revolver, said to witness and his mother that 'he was ■going to be boss now for awhile ; that the prisoner then loaded the furniture in the house on a wagon belonging to the father, and harnessed the horse thereto, and against the wishes, and in spite of the remonstrances, tears and crying of the mother, about eleven o’clock at night made her and the children go with him, and drove away the horse and wagon; that his mother said she did not want to go away, but was compelled to do so through fear of the 'prisoner, who was armed with a revolver; that they went down the road, passing several houses named, and came' to Philip Householder’s, where they remained over night; that the wagon broke down on the road, and they walked then to Householder’s ; that on the way the prisoner said he would shoot Mrs. McKee and witness if they tried to go back or run away.

The State also called James McKee, the husband and father, who testified to being away at the time, and' also among other things that he had written to his wife sometimes before, that if she had more pigs than she needed she could sell some.

The prisoner called Ella Schrader, who testified that she was living at the time with Mrs. McKee, as a servant; that two days before Mrs. McKee and the children left home, the prisoner chfne and bargained with Mrs. McKee [17]*17for two pigs and went away, leaving the pigs ; that on the morning Mrs. McKee went away, she and her son Joseph, the witness for the State, about six o’clock in the morning, commenced to load the wagon with furniture and harnessed the horse to the wagon;. that after the wagon was loaded and the horse harnessed to it, the prisoner came along and asked Mrs. McKee about the pigs he had bought, and she told him the pigs were in the wagon, and if he would drive the horse down the mountain for her, the pigs would be hauled in the wagon ; the prisoner then drove the wagon away from the house with Mrs. McKee and the children.

The prisoner then produced Mrs. Mary Householder, and offered to prove by her, that when Mrs. McKee and the children came to her house, about ten miles from McKee’s house, in the evening, Mrs. McKee told witness that she had made up her mind not to live with her husband any longer, and had left home and taken with her her children, and had gotten the prisoner to drive the wagon, and that the prisoner drove it at her request, and also that she declared these things to the witness in the absence of the prisoner; to which offer the State, by its counsel objected, (the said Mrs. McKee being alive and residing in Washington County, within reach of the process of the Court,) which objections the Court sustained, and refused to allow the testimony to go to the jury, to which the defendant •excepted; and this ruling is the point for decision upon this appeal.

Hero was a direct conflict between the witness on the part of the State, and the witness on the part of the prisoner, as to the nature of the occurrence, which was the subject-matter of the indictment; and the prisoner sought to sustain his witness’ version of the affair by proof of declarations of the wife made at a casual stopping place on the journey, and before the project was at an end so far as we can see from the proof, and out of the presence [18]*18and control of the prisoner, going to explain the transaction and her motives and purposes and the agency of the-prisoner, and certainly having an important hearing upon the transaction, if believed by the jury.

Why should the prisoner not have been entitled to-the-benefit of this testimony ? It is objected that it is hearsay. That Mrs. McKee could have been called as a. witness. But is she any better able to testify to what she said than the proposed witness who heard her? And if' the wife has returned to the husband’s control, why should the prisoner take the risk of the testimony of a witness presumably under coercion, and at all events under-a temptation to testify against him to screen herself, and who to testify for him would have to testify to her own. shame and disgrace. What she said at the time characterizes the act, is a part of the res gestee, and can be as well'proved by another witness as by herself.

The ground upon which declarations like these, attending an act and showing its character and purpose, are-admitted, is thus stated in 1 Taylor on Ev., .sec. 521:

“ Certain other declarations and acts are admitted as. original evidence, being distinguished from hearsay by their connection with the principal fact under investigation.
“The affairs of men consist of a complication of circumstances so intimately interwoven as to he hardly separable from each other. Each owes its birth to some preceding circumstance, and in its turn becomes the prolific .parent of others, aud each, during its existence, has its inseparable attributes, and its kindred facts, materially affecting its character, and essential to be known, in order to a right understanding of its nature. These surrounding circumstances may always be shown to the jury along with the principal fact, provided they constitute parts off what are termed the res gestee, and whether they do so or not must in each particular case be determined by the-[19]*19Judge in the exercise of his sound discretion, according to the degree of relationship -which they bear to that fact and then after giving cases in which such proof was admitted, the author goes on to say: “ So also where a person enters upon land in order to take advantage of a forfeiture to foreclose a mortgage, to defeat a disseisin or the like ; or changes his actual residence or domicil, or is upon a journey, or leaves his home, or returns thither, or remains abroad, or secretes himself, or in fine does any other act material to he understood ; his declarations made at the time of the transaction, and, expressive of its character, motive or object arc regarded as {verbal fads,’ indicating a present purpose and intention, and are therefore admitted in proof like any other material facts." See, as illustrating this principle, Aveson vs. Ld. Kennard, 6 East, 188; Thomson and Wife vs. Trevannon, Skinner, 402; Bateman vs. Bailey, 5 T. R., 512; Doe vs. Arkwright, 5 C. & P.. 575; Lord vs. Colvin, 4 Drew, 366; Gorham, vs. Canton, 5 Greenl, 266; Johnson vs. Sherwin, 3 Gray, 374; Snover vs. Blair, 25 N. J. Law, 94; Smith vs. Cramer, 1 Bing. N. C., 585; Thorndike vs. City of Boston, 1

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Bluebook (online)
57 Md. 14, 1881 Md. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-state-md-1881.