State v. Fine

164 A. 433, 110 N.J.L. 67, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 431
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 31, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 164 A. 433 (State v. Fine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fine, 164 A. 433, 110 N.J.L. 67, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 431 (N.J. 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Paekek, J.

The plaintiff in error was convicted of murder in the first degree. The deceased was a Mrs. Schaaf, in whose house the defendant below had roomed for several months before her death. The defense was insanity. The proof that defendant had done the killing was not seriously controverted, and the defendant was not sworn in his own behalf. It becomes unnecessary therefore to go into any detail touching the proof bearing on the commission of the act, except as incidental to the points of law argued. They may be grouped under three heads: 1. Admission of certain photographs in evidence. 2. Attacks on the judge’s charge. 3. Weight of evidence on the issue of insanity.

The evidence showed that the body of the woman was found in a small trunk which was inside of a big trunk, which has been shipped by express from Atlantic City to Philadelphia. The body was absolutely identified, and it was undenied that death had been caused by strangulation, the rope used being around the neck of the victim. A series of photographs showing the trunks and the body was put in evidence over objection and the introduction of these pictures is attacked in several specifications.

An examination of the stenographic transcript, however, shows that the objections to them are not well founded. When the first was offered, counsel said: “I object. I cannot see the purpose. The testimony is that there was a white *69 woman in there, and they have testimony, I suppose, to identify her. This is simply a gruesome picture that will answer no purpose.”

The fact that counsel could not see the purpose naturally does not make the photograph incompetent. We think it was both relevant and competent, as a question of identification and part of the evidence to establish the corpus delicti. It is true that there was other testimony as to whose body it was and how death had been caused, but the fact that this evidence was cumulative does not render it incompetent, nor does the fact that it happens to be gruesome and injects an element of horror into the case. State v. Aeschbach, 107 N. J. L. 433, 435. It is now argued that the photographs were incompetent because “not the best evidence,” and from the case of Goldsboro v. Central Railroad Co., 60 Id. 49, a Supreme Court case, counsel quotes the casual observation, that photographs “are never admitted but as secondary evidence.” They are not so treated in Wigm. Ev., but are classed under what he calls “non-verbal testimony” like maps or diagrams. Sections 789 et seq. It is true, of course, that they must be verified by testimony as correctly depicting the originals that they portray, but it is not suggested that such verification was lacking. Furthermore, and finally, the “best evidence” objection was not made at the trial. Several similar photographs were admitted over the “same objection” and the further objection that they were irrelevant and immaterial. We think they were both relevant and material; and that they were properly admitted.

2. We pass to the attacks on the charge, which are based on the seventeenth and eighteenth assignments of error and causes for reversal. Technically these are utterly futile as specifying any particular part of the charge claimed to be erroneous, and but for the fact that this is a capital case and that we deem it proper, though in nowise obligatory on us, to deal with them in favorem vita, they would not be considered for a moment. State v. Blaine, 104 N. J. L. 325.

The seventeenth assignment and specification (so we are *70 informed by the brief) are directed to a passage in the charge which reads as follows:

“And we are dealing in this case, gentlemen, only with the mental state of this defendant at the time this act was committed by him, if it was committed by him, and what his condition was theretofore or his condition has been since, what it may be hereafter, is a matter in which yon are not now presently concerned. The law of this state provides for every exigency. If this man was insane and nnable to go to trial, the law provides for his protection in that event. If he be rendered insane subsequent to the commission of a crime, the law provides for that event. And if, even after conviction, a man be adjudged insane, it is neither the policy of the law nor the practice of this state to condemn insane persons. The duty is placed squarely, by the policy as established by the legislature, upon the court to see that no insane person shall be put to death.”

The claim made by counsel is, in substance, that although evidence had been received by the court, and properly, to show that the defendant had been insane both before and after the commission of the murder, yet this instruction forbade them to consider such evidence at all, and eliminated it even as bearing on the question of his insanity at the time of the killing. But we do not so understand the instruction, and fail to see how the jury could reasonably have so understood it. The point stressed was that only legal insanity at the time of the act, and not'insanity before or after it, relieved the perpetrator of responsibility. This is apparent from the context of the charge on this subject. The court began by quoting from the celebrated charge of Chief Justice Hornblower, reported in 21 N. J. L. (at p. 200), and beginning : “I now come to that part of the cause which constitutes the main part of the defense in this case, namely, insanity.” Continuing the quotation, he asked: “Was, then, the prisoner at the bar insane at the time of committing the homicide?” And again (top of page 201) : “The simple question for you to decide, gentlemen, is whether the accused at the time of doing the act was cons.cious that it was an act which he ought *71 not to do.” And again: “If it is your opinion that at the time of the act he was nneonscions that he ought not to do it,” &c. All this in the precise language of a charge which since 1846 has been a landmark in our criminal law. The trial judge went on to remark that the burden of proving insanity was on the accused: followed this with the passage now challenged as quoted above, and proceeded to a fuller discussion of the burden of proof.

We agree with counsel that evidence of the existence of insanity before and after the crime is relevant to the question of insanity at the time. But no such evidence was excluded, nor did the judge charge that it should be ignored. What he did charge was that on a defense of insanity the test of legal innocence or guilt was the existence or non-existence of insanity at the time of the act, and that insanity at any other time was no defense. The charge may be criticised, perhaps, as omitting to tell the jury that they were at liberty to consider evidence of prior insanity as indicative of insanity at the time. But that relates to matters of evidence, and not to the test of guilt, and therefore was not an essential part of the instructions that were actually given.

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170 A. 843 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 A. 433, 110 N.J.L. 67, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fine-nj-1933.