Russell v. State

53 Miss. 367
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 53 Miss. 367 (Russell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. State, 53 Miss. 367 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Chalmers, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The principal question discussed at the bar was the one much mooted of late in the American courts, as to what is the proper rule with reference to the burden of proof in criminal cases where the defence relied upon is insanity.

The defendant offered and the court refused to grant three [378]*378instructions, to the effect that the burden of proving the sanity of the accused is devolved by law upon the State, and that if the jury entertain a reasonable doubt of his sanity arising from the whole testimony in the case, they must acquit.

The refusal to grant these instructions, it is urged, was such error as must cause a reversal. It appears, however, upon an examination of the record, that the court below did not refuse these instructions because of the principles of law announced by them, but because those principles had already been announced in other instructions which had been granted.

Thus, by the ninth instruction granted for the defendant, the jury are informed that they must acquit, “ unless they believe from the evidence, and beyond every reasonable doubt arising from the evidence in the case, that the defendant was at the time of the homicide of sound memory and discretion to such an extent as to enable him to know the nature and quality of his act 5 and the burden of proof is upon the State to establish by satisfactory proof the guilt of the defendant, unless the evidence otherwise appears in the cause.”

Again, in the twelfth instruction for the defendant, the jury are informed that they must be satisfied of the prisoner’s sanity beyond every other reasonable hypothesis.

By the fifteenth instruction they are told that they must acquit, if the insanity of the prisoner is established by a preponderance of the testimony in the case.

We know of no theory of the law governing this class of defences which goes farther than these charges. If the State cannot complain of them, certainly the defendant-cannot.

The defendant moved to quash the special venire summoned in the case, on the ground that the jury-box from which it was drawn had not been legally prepared. The motion was sustained ; and thereupon the court ordered the sheriff to summon a special venire, as provided for by § 2759 of the Code, in cases where there is no jury-box. .To this the defendant excepted. The court in its order declared and adjudged that there was no legal jury-box in the county. The facts upon which this judgment was based are not before us, and we must presume that .they were sufficient. At all events, the defendant, who had [379]*379just succeeded in quashing the first venire on1 this ground, cannot be heard to question it.

It is objected that the court of its own motion rejected a member of the venire, who stated that he had conscientious scruples against capital punishment. This was unquestionably correct, as decided in Lewis v. State, 9 S. & M. 115, 118, and other cases. The act of 1872, p. 88, which rendered such persons competent jurors, was repealed by the act of March 4, 1875.

J. T. Russell, the father of and one of the witnesses for the defendant, detailed a portion of-a conversation between himself and the defendant in reference to the deceased, which occurred the day before the killing. This was brought out by the defendant on the examination in chief; and when the witness was returned to him to be re-examined, he sought to bring out the balance of the conversation. This was objected to by the State, and the objection was properly sustained. The whole conversation was inadmissible in evidence on the part of the defendant. If a portion of it had been brought out by the State, the defence might have insisted upon the whole of it being detailed; but having been brought out by the defence, the prosecution might object at any time to any more of it being detailed, or might have excluded the whole.

Dr. R. L. Dunn, a physician of twenty years’ standing, was asked whether in his opinion the defendant was insane at the time of the killing. The objection made by the State was properly sustained. The witness had previously stated that although he had several years before been for a short time the defendant’s physician, he had not seen him for a considerable period before the killing, and had no knowledge of his condition at the time. He also stated that he had never regarded him as insane when he had personal knowledge of him, and did not so regard him at the time of the killing.

Manifestly he was not competent to give an opinion as to his sanity at the date of the homicide.

It was then proposed to put to Dr. Dunn a hypothetical question, embracing, as we suppose (though the question is not set out in the record), certain facts which had been de[380]*380posed to by other witnesses, and to ask him as to his opinion of the defendant’s sanity, on the basis of said facts. To this also objection was sustained by the court, and, we think, rightly. The witness had previously stated that, though a practising physician of twenty years’ standing, he had never made the subject of mental disease a study, was not an expert in such matters, and was not an expert in “ psychological medicine.”

The asking of hypothetical questions upon a presumed state of facts, for the purpose of eliciting the opinion of a witness, can be justified only upon the theory that the witness is so familiar with the general characteristics of the subject under discussion as to be able to form opinions worthy of consideration, even though wholly ignorant of the particular transaction in controversy. Such testimony at best is of an exceedingly unsatisfactory character, and is often as much calculated to mislead as to guide to a correct conclusion. It is only in the exact sciences — and certainly medicine is not one of these — that their professors are able to say with any certainty that a given cause must produce a given effect, or that a particular result must have proceeded from a specific cause. Inasmuch, however, as in all pursuits and occupations there are some facts and principles which may be regarded as indisputable, the law permits persons who are experts in their several callings to express their opinions upon subjects with which their studies and occupations have made them familiar, even though they have no acquaintance with the particular transaction under investigation. But it is essential that the witness should be, or profess to be, ah expert in the general subject under discussion. No acquaintance with cognate pursuits will suffice, unless the matter inquired about is common to both professions.

The witness in the case at bar expressly disclaims being an expert in mental diseases, and said that he had not made such diseases the subject of special study. His twenty years of medical practice had probably been confined to the treatment of the ordinary diseases falling within the range of a country practitioner. Such an experience would not ordinarily qualify [381]*381him to testify as an expert upon a question of insanity, upon hypothetical interrogations as to supposed, facts of which he had no personal knowledge.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Miss. 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-state-miss-1876.