State v. Fletcher

53 So. 877, 127 La. 602, 1910 La. LEXIS 871
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 12, 1910
DocketNo. 18,528
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 53 So. 877 (State v. Fletcher) 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. Fletcher, 53 So. 877, 127 La. 602, 1910 La. LEXIS 871 (La. 1910).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

The defendant appealed from a verdict and sentence condemning him to suffer the death penalty.

The grand jury of the parish of East Baton Rouge on the 3d day of October, 1910, found a true bill against the defendant, [606]*606charging him with having taken the life of Thomas Millican in that parish on the 1st day of June in the year 1910.

He was arraigned on the 4th day of October, 1910, and pleaded not guilty.

He was tried, but the jury failed to reach a verdict, and a mistrial was ordered by the court.

The case was then reassigned for trial, and ou the day fixed it was called and tried.

1. The defendant, through counsel, before going to trial, filed a motion to quash the indictment on the ground that it was not drawn in the language of the statute.

The motion was overruled.

The grounds of the motion were, that in the indictment the word “with” was substituted for the words “of his”; that is, the indictment charges that defendant “feloniously, willfully, and xoith malice aforethought killed and murdered one Thomas Millican.” (Italics ours.)

The argument on the part of the defense is that in an indictment the words of the statute should be used, and that there should not be the least change.

The word used, as before mentioned, expresses personal malice as much as the word omitted.

The charge is that he committed the act with “his” malice aforethought. It would not have been more forcibly expressed had the words “his malice” aforethought been used. The only malice charged, and the only malice which is expressed, is that by which it is stated the accused was influenced.

There is a definition in Wharton in his work on Criminal Law (2d Ed.) p. 356, which sustains the position here.

In a recent edition (the 7th Russell) Law on Crimes, in describing the offense of murder, on page 820, vol. 2, it is said that it is always necessary to state the act by which the death was occasioned, and that it was done feloniously and of his malice aforethought, but in his marginal note reference is made back to page 656 of the same volume, where the crime is defined as the unlawful killing, “with malice aforethought.”

The word “with” is used as an equivalent of “his.”

If the words clearly convey the meaning of the statute, and the constituent elements of the offense are sufficiently definite to apprise the accused of the charge he has to answer, it has been held repeatedly that it is sufficient. State v. Humphries, 35 La. Ann. 966; State v. Mosely & Anthony, 42 La. Ann. 975, 8 South. 470.

See, also, State v. Scott, 38 La. Ann. 387.

Under our view of the law we cannot say the judge of the district court erred in overruling the motion to quash.

2. During the trial the defendant, through counsel, reserved nine bills of exceptions.

-In the first bill it is stated counsel for accused propounded a question to the physician as an expert as follows, to wit:

“Prom the nature and character of that wound, don’t you consider that, if the patient had remained at the sanitarium during the entire time of his illness, that he would have stood a better chance for his recovery.”

The objection of the district attorney was that the question was hypothetical in form, and not predicated on anything which had been proven, as no evidence had been offered upon the subject.

The district attorney further stated that no objection to the question was raised when propounded in hypothetical form, that the question first propounded was changed by the counsel for the defense, and that in its changed form it was answered by the witness.

The court in its addenda said that the facts were correctly stated by the district attorney.

Prom the foregoing it cannot be inferred that the defendant was prejudiced in any way.

[608]*608The information sought must have been given by the expert. No other inference can be drawn from the ruling and the statement in support of the ruling.

But defendant, through counsel, complains of the district attorney’s statement incorporated in the bill, which the trial judge chose to accept as correct.

The better practice is for the officer representing the state to have his own statement incorporated in the bill and then the addenda of the judge follow, giving his account of the point taken, or of objection urged.

Ordinarily, when the question is not complicated, the trial judge may accept the statement of the district attorney.

It is always advisable for him to write his own addenda, but, if he does not, it affords no good ground to set aside the verdict.

In this instance, except for the importance and gravity of the cause, which justifies the raising of nice technical points, it does not occur to us that the point has any merit at all.

3. The next point raised by the defendant through counsel is that Cy Jett, a witness for the defendant, testified on his. direct examination to having had two conversations with Howard Jettson in the presence of counsel for the accused. The district attorney on cross-examination asked the witness what was the relationship between him and the accused.

Defendant’s counsel objected on the ground that the cross-examination must be restrict ed to the facts and circumstances stated in his direct examination; that the question was not connected with the direct examination.

The objection does not fall within the class of questions subject to review on appeal. It comes within the discretion vested in the trial judge to decide. The rulings of the trial judge upon that subject are not reversible for error. 3 Jones on Criminal Law, p. 811.

We have none the less given it some consideration, and have arrived at the conclusion that it was properly overruled by the trial judge. The relation of parties may be proven originally on cross-examination without'regard to whether the subject was brought up on the examination in chief or not.

The only purpose of the question propounded by the district attorney was to prove relationship of the parties.

But upon further examination of this point we find that there is actually nothing in it by reason of the fact that the same Howard Jettson, as witness for the defendant, admitted his relationship while testifying on his examination in chief.

4. This brings us to a consideration of bill of exceptions No. 3, in which defendant urged that he should have been permitted in the manner proposed by him to impeach one of the witnesses for the state (Laura Williams), and, furthermore, that he should have been permitted to impeach another witness, and that witness his own witness.

As to the former, the defense proposed to impeach her (Laura Williams) by asking Howard Jettson what this witness for the state had said.

The trial court properly ruled that the question was not permissible. A witness cannot be impeached by hearsay testimony. The record does not disclose that any foundation was laid to impeach the witness, the said Laura Williams. She was never placed on her guard regarding any attempt' which would be made to prove that she had made other statements or testified to other facts.

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Bluebook (online)
53 So. 877, 127 La. 602, 1910 La. LEXIS 871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fletcher-la-1910.