State v. Banister

14 S.E. 678, 35 S.C. 290, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 166
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 16, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 14 S.E. 678 (State v. Banister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Banister, 14 S.E. 678, 35 S.C. 290, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 166 (S.C. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Chiee Justice McIver.

Under an indictment for the murder of Sam Banister, the defendant was convicted of man[294]*294slaughter, and from the judgment rendered on the verdict he appeals on the several grounds set out in the record.

The first four grounds impute error to the Circuit Judge in his rulings as to the admissibility of certain testimony offered as dying declarations of the deceased, the third and fourth grounds being the ones principally relied upon as showing such error. It appears that the deceased was shot on Thursday afternoon, the 24th of December, 1890, and died of the wound on the following' Monday morning. On the evening he was shot he made declarations as to who shot him, which in the first and second grounds of appeal are alleged to have been erroneously admitted. These declarations were made to the witness, Joshua W. Ashley, who testified that deceased said to him, “He was shot in the back of the head, and that a bullet was in his brain and he would be obliged to die; that he was going to die, and was obliged to die”— to which the witness responded, “Oh, may be not.” And in response to an inquiry from the court, repeating what the witness had said, “Did he say anything more?” replied, “Yes, sir; he said that he could not get well; that be was obliged to die.” The witness then was permitted, against the objection of counsel for prisoner, to say, “That Sam Banister told him that his brother John shot him, and that there would have been no trouble but for a little old pistol that his brother John, the defendant, had.” Another witness, Josh. Bigby, in response to an inquiry, “What did Sam Banister say about getting well?” replied, “He said that he was shot in the back of the head, and that he had a bullet in his brain, and that he knew he could never get well; that a man with a bullet in his brain could not get well.”

At this point counsel for prisoner asked to be allowed to introduce testimony showing that no such conversations as those just detailed had occurred, and that deceased expected to recover, and being permitted to do so, called as his first witness Jesse Banister, a brother of the deceased, who testified that on the third dajr after he was shot deceased told him “that he was better, and that he thought he would get well.” The attending physician was then called, who testified that, after making an examination of the wound, “I said, Mr. Banister, the ball has entered your brain, but I cannot locate it, and it is a question of time with [295]*295you as to the period of time the inflammation may set in. He seemed perfectly quiet.” Did you indicate to him that the wound was not necessarily fatal ? “I told him that we had instances on record where persons had been wounded in the head and recovered, but not where a foreign body was imbedded in the brain where they would recover.” In response to an inquii^ from the counsel for the prisoner, whether deceased thought he was going to die, the doctor replied, “I cannot tell you. He did not express himself to me. I was a stranger to him and his family.” And being asked by the court whether he meant deceased to understand that his death would probably result from that wound, he replied, “Yes, sir.” It is stated'in the “Case” that the witness Ashley was there after the doctor. Other witnesses, members of the Banister family, were examined, who testified that they did not hear Sam Banister express any apprehension of dying, and that though they were in the room when Ashley and Bigby were there, they heard nothing of what was testified to by those witnesses. On the contrary, one of them, the wife of the deceased, said that deceased told her that Jim Henry Nelson shot him, but she did not say when he told her so.

1 After hearing this testimony, the court ruled that the dying declarations of the deceased, offered by the State, were admissible ; and this ruling constitutes the basis of the first two grounds of appeal. We think it clear that these two grounds cannot be sustained. The requirements of the rule laid down in State v. Johnson (26 S. C., 152), were fully met. To render these declarations admissible, it was only necessary that the trial judge should be satisfied, 1st. That the death of deceased was imminent at the time the declarations were made. 2nd. That the deceased was so fully aware of this as to be without hope of recovery. 3rd. That the subject of the charge was the death of'the declarant and the circumstances of the death was the subject of the declarations. As to the first pointy the fact that death did ensue a short time afterwards, as expected by the attending physician, was quite sufficient to satisfy the judge that the first requirement of the rule was met. As to the second, the expression of the deceased that he “was obliged to die,” made after the examination of the physician, which informed him of [296]*296the fact that the bullet was lodged in his brain, was abundantly sufficient to show that deceased haS lost all hope of recovery; and as to the third requirement of the rule, there is no question that it'was fully met, as the express terms of the declaration fully show. It is clear, therefore, that there was no error in admitting the dying declarations of the deceased as testified to by the witnesses Ashley and Bigby, and hence there is no foundation for the first ground of appeal.

2 The second ground of appeal is clearly unsustainable. The Circuit Judge must necessarily determine, in the first instance, the questions of fact, whether the deceased was in e.xtremis, and whether he had lost all hope of recovery at the time the declarations were made; for it would not do to stop the case and refer such preliminary questions of fact to the jury for trial, and we know of no precedent or authority for such an anomalous mode of proceeding, even in those States where the courts have been disposed to go much further in excluding dying declarations than the courts of this State have ever shown any disposition to go. As in cases where the confessions of the accused are offered in evidence, the judge must necessarily determine the question of fact whether they were free and voluntary in order to ascertain whether such confessions are competent evidence; but after they are received as competent evidence, the jury may, and in fact must, pass upon their credibility, and in doing so may consider whether in fact they were free and voluntary, or extorted by fear or incited by hope. So, in reference to dying declarations, the judge must first determine whether the dying declarations offered were made under such circumstances as would render them competent evidence under the rules of law; but after they are properly admitted as competent, it is for the jury to pass upon their credibility, and in considering such question, they may consider the question of fact whether the deceased was in extremis, and whether he had lost all hope of recovery.

It is not very clear from the frame of the second ground of appeal whether the intention was to raise the question, whether it was not the duty of the judge to have the questions of fact preliminary to the admissibility of the djing declarations determined by the jury before their competency could be deter[297]*297mined, or whether the intention was to impute error to the judge in not instructing the jury that notwithstanding he had determined these preliminary questions of fact, it was still for them to consider whether in fact the conditions existed which would render them admissible as competent

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 S.E. 678, 35 S.C. 290, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-banister-sc-1892.