State v. Carey

56 A. 632, 76 Conn. 342, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 6, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 56 A. 632 (State v. Carey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Carey, 56 A. 632, 76 Conn. 342, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 2 (Colo. 1904).

Opinion

Hamersley, J.

The main error assigned in the reasons of appeal is found in the exception to that part of the judge’s charge which relates to the credibility of the competent witness, Ida M. Lafferty, who was the victim of the attempted abortion.

In her testimony she admits that moral turpitude belonging to an unmarried woman who, believing herself pregnant, consents to an operation on her body for the purpose of *345 avoiding the consequences which might follow the birth of a bastard child, and that she has committed the statutory crime of attempting to secure her own miscarriage. Her testimony is given under the bias of such interest as is disclosed by the record. In view of this condition and the defendant’s claim that her testimony is worthless unless confirmed by independent evidence, the court substantially instructs the jury as follows : —• •

The State relies upon the testimony of the witnesses Beebe and Lafferty. Beebe is what is known in law as an accomplice. He admits that he was one of the perpetrators of the crime charged against the defendant. You should act upon the testimony of an accomplice with great caution. As a general rule it is unsafe to convict upon such testimony alone. It ought to be corroborated in material facts connecting the prisoner with the crime. The witness Lafferty cannot, technically speaking, be regarded as an accomplice. She is not a perpetrator of the crime charged against the defendant and cannot be convicted of that crime. But in submitting her person to the operation of Beebe she did commit a distinct crime, created by another statute, which provides for a different penalty, and you may consider her confession of this crime as affecting her credibility and the weight of her testimony. You ought not to convict in this case unless the evidence is clear, strong, and convincing, and removes every reasonable doubt from your minds as to the guilt of the accused.

In the absence of any written requests to charge, and in view of the state of evidence so far as disclosed by the record, we cannot say that the trial court did not fairly and properly exercise its discretion in commenting on the credibility of the witness Lafferty, as well as that of the witness Beebe.

Assuming that the witness Lafferty was an accomplice, the defendant claims that the court had no discretion in commenting on the weight of her testimony; that a practice of English judges in commenting on the testimony of accomplices, followed more or less closely in American courts, has *346 become in this State substantially a rule of law directing a judge, whenever an accomplice testifies, to advise the jury that it is not safe to convict on his testimony alone; and that any failure to obey this direction is ground for a new trial.

We cannot accede to this claim. When the testimony of accomplices was first used, it was, under the then settled law of evidence, incompetent, and was admitted, notwithstanding, as an exception to that settled law, justified by necessity. The conditions at that time affecting such testimony were mainly these: a convicted felon was an incompetent witness; an accomplice confessed himself guilty of felony; a person having an interest hi the event of a prosecution was an incompetent witness; the liberty or death of an accomplice, at first absolutely and afterward more or less directly, might depend on the event of the prosecution in which he testified ; the necessity of punishing certain crimes induced the enactment of statutes offering bribes to perpetrators of these crimes who, confessing their commission, might charge the crime upon their associates or furnish the government with evidence that would lead to the arrest and conviction of others. Thus grew up the law of approvement. Under certain circumstances a person arrested and indicted for felony might confess his crime in open court, and appeal others, his accomplices, in its commission. If the court allowed the appeal, the appellees were arrested and tried, and if convicted the accusing accomplice had his liberty, and if not convicted he was hanged. The law of approvement was in force at the close of the eighteenth century, although long obsolete.

In analogy to this law, grew up the practice of admitting persons indicted for crimes as king’s evidence, under an implied assurance of immunity from punishment for the crimes confessed by them. Rex v. Rudd, 1 Cowper, 331, 334; 1 Hale’s Pl. Cr. 303; Hawkins’ Pl. Cr. Bk. 2, Chap. 24, Chap. 37, § 7, Chap. 46. Hawkins defines an accomplice as one who is “ an accomplice in the crime charged against the prisoner.” Lord Mansfield defines an accomplice, in ■giving the main reason why his testimony is untrustworthy: *347 “They (accomplices) are clearly competent witnesses; their single testimony alone is seldom of sufficient weight with a jury to convict the offenders ; it being so strong a temptation to a man to commit perjury, if by accusing another he can escape himself.” Rex v. Rudd, 1 Cowper, 331, 336.

The statutes encouraging informers to buy immunity in crime by accusing others, produced accomplices, as witnesses, in the most odious possible light; the danger of their testimony was enhanced by the condition of the law, which excluded an accused person from the witness-stand. The most reputable persons in the realm might be convicted of crime because they could not be heard in contradiction or explanation of accusations by the most infamous. Instances of such cruel injustice were not wanting in times of high political excitement. Notwithstanding an accomplice was thus admitted as a witness only as an exception to the settled law governing competency, he was nevertheless a competent witness. The weight and credibility of his testimony was subject to the settled rules and regulations of law affecting that of any competent witness. The jury might give him full credit and convict on his testimony alone. The court in commenting on the weight of his testimony had the same discretion exercised in respect to every competent witness. This law was affirmed by the twelve judges in 1788, and was unquestioned. Rex v. Atwood, 1 Leach C. C. 464; Rex v. Jones, 2 Campb. 131, 132; Rex v. Hastings, 7 C. & P. 152.

It was under these conditions and in respect to witnesses known as accomplices, thus defined, that during the latter part of the eighteenth and the earlier part of the nineteenth centuries the statements of English judges, in respect to their own practice in dealing with such witnesses, was made. The undoubted practice of sharply, and often indignantly, denouncing the worthlessness of the unconfirmed testimony of a witness who acknowledged himself a knave and that he was testifying against his comrades in the hope of obtaining by this means a pardon for his own crimes, was natural, lawful and just. And the form, force, and extent of such *348 denunciation was wholly discretionary with the judge, according to the circumstances surrounding each witness.

The practice, so far as it was a general practice, of denouncing accomplices as per ze

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Johnson
179 A.3d 780 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2017)
State v. Jamison
Connecticut Appellate Court, 2014
Jennie McCormack v. Mark Hiedeman
694 F.3d 1004 (Ninth Circuit, 2012)
Bei Bei Shuai v. State of Indiana
Indiana Court of Appeals, 2012
Bei Bei Shuai v. State
966 N.E.2d 619 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2012)
State v. Ouellette
989 A.2d 1048 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2010)
State v. Ashley
701 So. 2d 338 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1997)
State v. Ashley
670 So. 2d 1087 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1996)
State v. Marra
610 A.2d 1113 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1992)
State v. Cascone
487 A.2d 186 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1985)
State v. Haddad
456 A.2d 316 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1983)
State v. Brown
447 A.2d 734 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1982)
People v. Martinez
132 Cal. App. 3d 119 (California Court of Appeal, 1982)
State v. Estep
443 A.2d 483 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1982)
State v. Smith
434 A.2d 368 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1981)
State v. Ferrara
408 A.2d 265 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1979)
State v. Colton
384 A.2d 343 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1977)
Montgomery v. State
300 A.2d 218 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1973)
Abele v. Markle
342 F. Supp. 800 (D. Connecticut, 1972)
Boone v. State
237 A.2d 787 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 A. 632, 76 Conn. 342, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carey-conn-1904.