State v. Ciaccio

112 So. 486, 163 La. 563, 1927 La. LEXIS 1675
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 28, 1927
DocketNo. 28451.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 112 So. 486 (State v. Ciaccio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ciaccio, 112 So. 486, 163 La. 563, 1927 La. LEXIS 1675 (La. 1927).

Opinions

LAND, J.

Defendant was found guilty of manslaughter under an indictment for the murder of Gasparo Laeiura, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a term of not less than 12 nor more than 18 years.

He has appealed and seeks a new trial for alleged errors set forth in numerous bills of exception.

Bills Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7.

Witnesses for defendant were asked, on direct examination, if they were acquainted with his reputation, and stated that they had known defendant a number of years, that he was a good man, but that they had never heard his reputation discussed.

The state objected to the witnesses testifying affirmatively upon this state of facts, whether the reputation of defendant for peace and quiet was good -or bad. This objection was sustained by the court, and the ruling, in our opinion, was correct.

*567 While it is true that the fact that the reputation of one accused has never been discussed in the community, in which he has been living, is evidence of good character, and may go to the jury, yet it is for the jury to draw the inference of good character from that fact, and not for the witness to say what his own inference from it is, although he may be allowed to testify that he has heard no discussion of the reputation of the accused. A witness is not in a position to testify affirmatively to the reputation of the accused unless he has heard it discussed.

As accused was not denied the right to show that his reputation had never been discussed in the community in which he lived, he is without just cause of complaint as to the ruling of the trial judge. State v. Warren, 138 La. 361, 70 So. 326; State v. Blassengame, 132 La. 262, 61 So. 219; Chamberlayne on Ev. § 3312 et seq.; Wigmore on Ev. § 1980 et seq.; People v. Van Gaasbeck, 189 N. Y. 408, 82 N. E. 718, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 650, 12 Ann. Cas. 745.

The witnesses for the defense having answered that they had never heard the reputation of the defendant questioned by any one, counsel for defendant requested the court to charge the jury, then and there, "that the fact that they never heard this man’s reputation discussed is proof, ipso facto, of the good reputation of the defendant.”

The judge a quo properly refused to give the charge requested for two reasons. In the first place, the charge was a comment on the facts, in that it required the court to give its opinion that good reputation had been proven. R. S. 1870, § 991. In the second place, the trial judge instructed the jury in his general charge “that evidence that a man’s reputation was not discussed might be considered as evidence of good reputation.”

A district judge cannot be compelled to deliver his charge by piecemeal and pari passu with the introduction of the evidence in the trial of a criminal case.

Bill No. 8.

Counsel for defendant attempted to prove by several witnesses that the wife of deceased was the first person to reach his body, and that she took a pistol from the body. This evidence was excluded as not forming a part of the res gestae, and as calculated to confuse the issues in the minds of the jury.

Defendant and deceased owned adjoining properties. Deceased was killed in the field at a point where defendant was building a fence on a line, which was in dispute between the respective parties. Defendant, when arrested, stated that he had killed deceased because he was pulling up defendant’s fence post. The evidence of the only two eyewitnesses was that deceased had stooped down with his arms around a post, and was in the act of pulling it out of the ground at the time of the killing. No weapon was found on the body of the deceased. After striking deceased while he was engaged in removing the post, defendant continued his furious attack with a hammer, until he had crushed portions of the skull completely and severed them from the head. When the two eyewitnesses attempted to interfere, defendant threatened them so violently as to drive them away.

Even had a pistol been removed from the body of deceased after the fatal blow had been struck and the difficulty had ended, it could not be seriously argued that such fact constituted a part of the res gestee. Nor can it be successfully contended that the evidence tendered in this case, if not a part of the res gestee, was offered to establish a substantial fact, and that defendant was entitled to its admission.

The evidence excluded does not show that the wife of deceased removed any pistol or other weapon from the body of her husband. *569 None of the witnesses pretend to testify that ' she did so, although she was the first person to reach the body. Taken as a whole and at best, the evidence not admitted merely shows that when the wife of deceased was returning from the scene of the homicide she was observed to have a heavy object concealed under her apron, and that, on arriving at the house of deceased, she deposited this object between the mattresses of a bed in a room adjoining that in which her husband had been placed.

Not one of the witnesses for the defense swears that the concealed object was a pistol, but merely conjectures that it was. No one saw the object after its removal from the apron.

We are not advised in any bill of exception or by any evidence in the case that defendant was assaulted with a pistol by deceased, or that there was any overt act or hostile demonstration upon the part of the deceased at the time of the killing other than the trespass committed by him on the real estate claimed by defendant, who admits that he killed the deceased while in the act of removing a fence post from the disputed line.

Even if defendant had had a pistol concealed on his person at the time of the homicide, this fact would not have justified the slaying of the deceased, under the state of facts disclosed by the record.

The ruling of the trial judge was correct and is approved.

Bills Nos. 9, 12, and 13.

These bills were reserved to the refusal of the court to charge the following special instructions to the jury:

“No. 1. I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, that a man has a right to defend himself, his family, or his property, but he must not use any more force than is necessary for the protection of himself, or his family, or any more force than would appear to him reasonable under the circumstanees, and under the conditions surrounding the difficulty.”
“Charge No. 4.

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Bluebook (online)
112 So. 486, 163 La. 563, 1927 La. LEXIS 1675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ciaccio-la-1927.