State v. Foret

200 So. 1, 196 La. 675, 1941 La. LEXIS 974
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 6, 1941
DocketNo. 36007.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 200 So. 1 (State v. Foret) 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. Foret, 200 So. 1, 196 La. 675, 1941 La. LEXIS 974 (La. 1941).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

The appellant was convicted of the crime of cattle stealing and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for not less than twenty months nor more than five years. The indictment charged, specifically, that he stole a steer belonging to one Hilaire Templet. The appeal is based upon a bill of exceptions which was reserved near the end of the trial. When the prosecuting attorney had finished offering his evidence for the State, and announced that he rested the case, subject to the right to offer rebuttal evidence, and the attorneys for the defendant finished offering their evidence, the prosecuting attorney requested the judge to allow the jury to go out and inspect the steer which the defendant was accused of having stolen. The judge asked where the steer was, and the prosecuting attorney replied that Hilaire Templet had brought the steer to town in a truck which he would park near the courthouse. No objection being made by the defendant or his attorneys,, the judge granted the request of the prosecuting attorney; and, on the instructions of the judge, the sheriff ordered all outsiders away from the truck, and allowed the members of the jury to inspect the steer in the presence only of the judge and attending officers of the court, and the defendant and his attorneys and the prosecuting attorney. All parties then returned to the court room, and the taking of testimony was completed by the State’s offering the testimony of Hilaire Templet in rebuttal of certain testimony which had been offered for the defendant. But there was no testimony offered for the purpose of proving that the steer which the jurors had seen in the truck-was the same steer that was alleged to'have been stolen from Hilaire Templet. Therefore, the attorneys for the defendant requested that the jury should retire from the court room, and when that was done the attorneys requested the judge to instruct the jurors to disregard any impression that they might have received from their inspection of the steer, because there was no evidence to identify him as the steer which was alleged to have been stolen. The judge refused to so instruct the jury and the attorneys for the defendant reserved their bill of exception.

There were in fact two steers in the ■ truck, one of which was supposed to be the one which the sheriff took from the defendant’s pasture and delivered to Templet. The other steer in the truck had nothing to do with the case. No explanation was given as. to why Templet brought two steers to court instead of bringing only the steer which was supposed to have been stolen. The judge, in the statement per *679 curiam attached to the bill of exception, says that both of the steers in the truck were of a red color; and the judge seems to have assumed that .Templet's purpose in bringing the unidentified steer, in the truck with the one which was supposed to have been stolen, was to test the ability of the jury to recognize the steer which Templet had described in his testimony as the one which was found in the defendant’s pasture and which was taken by the sheriff and delivered to Templet. The judge says that the jurors made a careful inspection of the two steers thus exhibited to them, and had an opportunity to determine whether they saw in the truck a steer bearing the description which Templet had given of the steer which he said was found in the defendant’s pasture, and to determine whether the steer which the jurors so recognized — if they did so recognize him — might have been the one which the defendant testified he had bought from a man named Folse. The judge says that Folse testified as a witness for the State that he had inspected the steer which was taken by the sheriff from the defendant’s pasture and delivered to Templet, and that that steer did not answer the description of the one which he had sold to the defendant. It seems, therefore, that the only question which the jury had to decide was whether the steer which was found in the defendant’s pasture, and which was taken by the sheriff and delivered to Templet, was proved to be the same steer that was missing from Temp-let’s pasture, or might have been the one that the defendant bought from the witness named Folse.

The failure of the attorneys for the defendant to make their objection at the time when the prosecuting attorney proposed to introduce the steer in evidence, that the steer which was about to be introduced had not been identified by testimonial proof, or “authenticated”, as the writers on the law of evidence express it, is a matter of no importance, because the attorneys had the right to assume that the prosecuting attorney would make the necessary proof before closing the case for the State; and, if the attorneys had made such an objection at any time before the prosecuting attorney closed his case, the objection would have been met with the answer that the attorneys for the defendant could not control the prosecuting attorney in the order of presenting his evidence.

The judge, according to his per curiam, rested his ruling largely upon the fact that Templet, in his testimony, gave a detailed description of the steer which he said was missing from his pasture and was found several months afterwards in the neighboring pasture of the defendant, and was taken by the sheriff and delivered to Templet. But that testimony did not supply the omission of the prosecuting attorney to offer testimonial proof that the steer which was in the truck, and which was inspected by the jury, was the same steer that was taken from the defendant’s pasture by the sheriff and delivered to Templet. Without some such proof of the identity of the steer in the truck he was not admissible in evidence; and the judge should have complied with the request of the attorneys for the defendant *681 to instruct the jurors to disregard any impression that they might have received from their inspection of the steer in the truck.

Professor Wigmore, in his work on Evidence, deals with this subject, — of allowing the judge or jury to view a thing or a place that is proved to have a direct connection with the crime charged, — under the title of Autoptic Proference, or Real Evidence. In the Third Edition, Vol. IV, Sec. 1157, p. 251, the author refers to the objection that this character of evidence, called Autoptic Proference, is liable to cause an “Undue Prejudice” against an accused person, and on page 254, states the first reason for the danger of such “Undue Prejudice”, thus:

“First, there is a natural tendency to infer from the mere production of any material object, and without further evidence, the truth of all that is predicated of it.”

In Volume VII of the same work, in Section 2129, on p. 564, the author declares that the rule which requires that a chattel must be identified, or authenticated, by testimonial proof in order to be admissible in evidence is founded upon the same principle that requires that a document must be authenticated in order to be admissible in evidence. And in this connection the author says:

“In short, when a claim or offer involves impliedly or expressly any element of personal connection with a corporal object, that connection must be made to appear, like the other elements, else the whole fails in effect.”

In the same section, on page 565, the author says:

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

Related

State v. Hughes
258 So. 3d 179 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2017)
State of Louisiana v. Brian Michael Hughes
Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2017
State v. Green
493 So. 2d 1178 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1986)
State v. Francis
345 So. 2d 1120 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1977)
State v. Davis
336 So. 2d 805 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1976)
State v. Prickett
305 So. 2d 509 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1974)
State v. Howard
283 So. 2d 199 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1973)
State v. Neal
275 So. 2d 765 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1973)
State v. Dobard
263 So. 2d 16 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1972)
State v. Anderson
259 So. 2d 310 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1972)
State v. Bland
255 So. 2d 723 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1971)
State v. Dillon
255 So. 2d 745 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1971)
State v. Dotson
256 So. 2d 594 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1971)
Pearce v. Gunter
238 So. 2d 534 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1970)
State v. Coleman
223 So. 2d 402 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1969)
State v. Williams
6 So. 2d 333 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 So. 1, 196 La. 675, 1941 La. LEXIS 974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-foret-la-1941.