State v. Cuevas

488 P.2d 322, 53 Haw. 110, 1971 Haw. LEXIS 83
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 27, 1971
Docket4982
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 488 P.2d 322 (State v. Cuevas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cuevas, 488 P.2d 322, 53 Haw. 110, 1971 Haw. LEXIS 83 (haw 1971).

Opinions

[111]*111OPINION OF THE COURT BY

MARUMOTO, J.

Defendant was tried by a jury in the first circuit court upon an indictment charging him with the commission of first degree murder in violation of HRS § 748-1 for the killing of Sueo Yoshikawa with deliberate premeditated malice aforethought and without authority, justification, or extenuation by law.

The jury returned a verdict of guilty in the second degree. Under HRS § 748-2, second degree murder involves the element of malice aforethought but not the element of deliberate premeditation.

The court entered a judgment in accordance with the verdict, and sentenced defendant to imprisonment for a period not to exceed 40 years. The case is here on appeal from that judgment.

On the appeal, defendant has specified seven errors. Only one has merit. It relates to the giving of the following instruction to the jury:

“When the act of killing another is proved, malice aforethought shall be presumed, and the burden shall rest upon the party who committed the killing to show that it did not exist, or a legal justification or extenuation .therefor.”

The instruction repeated verbatim the language of HRS § 748-3, which will hereafter be referred to as the statute or the statute in question.

At issue is whether the statute is valid. The statute is discussed in a number of prior decisions of this court, but in none is there a discussion of its validity.

The statute was enacted by the House of Nobles and Representatives of the Hawaiian Islands assembled in Legislative Council, on June 21, 1850, as a part of the Penal Code of [112]*1121850, being section 4, of chapter VII, of that code. It has remained unchanged to this date, although in the intervening 121 years, the concept with regard to the rights of persons charged with criminal offenses has undergone material changes. Goldstein, The State and the Accused: Balance of Advantage in Criminal Procedure, 69 Yale L.J. 1149, 1153 (1960).

The Penal Code of 1850 was drafted by Chief Justice Lee. In submitting the draft to the Legislative Council, Lee stated: “In this chrysalis state of the nation, I have thought it proper to keep an eye to the future as well as to the present. Accordingly, while I have studied, as far as is consonant with justice, to conform to the ancient laws and usages of the kingdom, I have in the main, adopted the principles of the English common law, as the foundation of a code best adapted to the present and approaching wants and condition of the nation.”

In Lee’s time, based upon a statement in Sir Michael Foster’s Crown Law, p. 255 (1762), the common law was generally understood as imposing upon the person accused of murder the burden of establishing the absence of malice aforethought, once the killing by him was proved.

Foster’s statement was as follows: “In every charge of murder, the fact of killing being first proved, all the circumstances of accident, necessity, or infirmity are to be satisfactorily proved by the prisoner, unless they arise out of the evidence produced against him; for the law presumeth the fact to have been founded in malice, until the contrary appeareth.”

Blackstone cited Foster in stating that “all homicide is presumed to be malicious until the contrary appeareth upon evidence.” 4 Blackstone’s Commentaries 201.

Thus, it is obvious that in the statute. in question, Lee stated a proposition which he considered to be an established principle of the common law.

Under the language of the statute, the burden imposed upon the accused is not merely a. burden of going forward [113]*113with the evidence or of raising a reasonable doubt, but is a burden of persuasion of the nonexistence of an essential element of the crime of murder.

This court so construed the statute in Territory v. Fukunaga, 30 Haw. 697, 724 (1929), where it stated that upon proof of the fact of killing, “it was the duty of the jury and of the court to presume malice aforethought and the burden rested upon the defendant to show that malice did not exist or a legal justification or extenuation therefor.”

Earlier, in Territory v. Buick, 27 Haw. 28, 57 (1923), this court stated that, under the statute, “it was compulsory upon'the jury, if it believed that the defendant did the shooting, to find that the killing was with malice aforethought and that the offense was murder.”

The statements quoted above correctly construed the intent and meaning of the statute. But they were made on the assumption that the statute was valid. In our opinion, that assumption was wrong.

We hold that the statute is invalid. Under our legal system, the burden is always upon the prosecution to establish every element of crime by proof beyond a reasonable doubt, never upon the accused to disprove the existence of any necessary element.

Thus, it is stated in Davis v. United States, 160 U.S. 469, 487 (1895), that “the burden of proof, as those words are understood in criminal law, is never upon the accused to establish his innocence or to disprove the facts necessary to establish the crime for which he is indicted. It is on the prosecution from the beginning to the end of the trial and applies to every element necessary to constitute the crime.” A similar statement appears in Christoffel v. United States, 338 U.S. 84, 89 (1949).

The same principle holds true in England. In Woolmington v. The Director of Public Prosecutions, [1935] A.C. 462, 481 (H.L.), it is stated that “while the prosecution must prove the guilt of the prisoner, there is no such burden laid on the prisoner to prove his innocence and it is sufficient for [114]*114him to raise a doubt as to his guilt; he is not bound to satisfy the jury, of his innocence.” The opinion in the case was written by Viscount Sankey, L.C., who, upon an exhaustive review of history and precedents, construed Foster’s statement to mean merely that “if it is proved that the conscious act of the prisoner killed a man and nothing else appears in the case, there is evidence upon which the jury may, not must, find him guilty of murder,” and further stated:

“* * * It must be remembered that Sir Michael Foster, although a distinguished judge, is for this purpose to be regarded as a text-book writer, for he did not lay down the doctrine in any case before him, but in an article which is described as the ‘Introduction to the Discourse of Homicide.’ * * *
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
488 P.2d 322, 53 Haw. 110, 1971 Haw. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cuevas-haw-1971.