State v. Gallivan

53 A. 731, 75 Conn. 326, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 53
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 5, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 53 A. 731 (State v. Gallivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gallivan, 53 A. 731, 75 Conn. 326, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 53 (Colo. 1902).

Opinion

*328 Baldwin, J.

The indictment charges the defendant in one count with murder committed in the course of an attempt to rob Shumway, the murdered man, and in another with murder committed while actually robbing him. Wormsley, who was indicted with him, was a witness for the State, and testified that both he- and the defendant made á murderous assault upon Shumway for the purpose of robbery, and actually robbed him of a considerable sum in bank bills before he died; that one of them, for 120, he soon afterwards had changed at the store of one Sherman; and that most of the rest was taken by the defendant to hide in the cellar of his father’s house. It appeared, on Wormsley’s cross-examination, and by other witnesses, that he had made previous statements, some of them under oath, before the coroner, which were flatly contradictory to his present testimony, and were to the effect that the defendant had nothing to do with either the robbery or the murder. Wormsley was a colored lad of eighteen, who worked for his board on a milk farm belonging to the defendant’s father, with whom the defendant also lived.

In order to corroborate the evidence which he had given, Sherman was produced as a witness by the State and testified that he had changed a 120 bank bill for Wormsley soon after the murder. Evidence had been given by one Yars, that Shumway had a number of 120 bank bills in a bag in his inside vest pocket a few weeks before his death.

This testimony from Sherman was .properly admitted. It tended, in connection with that given by Vars, to show that Wormsley, soon after the murder, had a bill in his possession of a kind similar to bills which shortly before that event had been in the possession of Shumway. It was important for the State to produce some evidence from an independent source to corroborate Wormsley, since he occupied the position of a self-confessed accomplice. State v. Williamson, 42 Conn. 261. Such corroboration was not necessarily to be confined to points directly connecting the defendant with the crime. State v. Maney, 54 Conn. 178, 192.

For similar reasons, testimony was rightly received that *329 |460 in bank bills was found, in the cellar where Wormsley had testified that the .defendant said he intended to conceal the fruits of the robbery.

The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that in determining whether he was guilty they need consider only such circumstances as necessarily tended to prove his guilt; that every circumstance relied upon by the State must, as a separate issue by itself, be proved beyond a reasonable doubt; and that the circumstances so proved must establish to a moral certainty the particular hypothesis to prove which they were offered, and be inconsistent with any other hypothesis.

These instructions were properly refused. The jury were to consider the whole evidence bearing on the question of his guilt, taken together, and were not bound to dissect it into unconnected fragments for a separate microscopic examination of each, regardless of its relations to the rest. That only must, as matter of law, be proved beyond a reasonable doubt, on which the guilt of the accused essentially depends. Such proof, for instance, in this case was requisite in respect to the death of Shumway. That was an essential ingredient in the crime. A lower degree of proof might suffice as to circumstances which, while they might be of some and even of material importance in leading up to a verdict of guilty, would not be essential to support it. Bressler v. People, 117 Ill. 422, 8 Northeastern Rep. 62; Acker v. State, 52 N. J. L. 259,19 Atl. Rep. 258.

Nor, in the application of evidence, could the jury be restricted by any particular hypothesis suggested by the State, as bearing on which such evidence might have been offered. They were to consider all that had been proved as bearing upon all that had been charged in the indictment, and were at liberty to adopt any hypothesis as to the defendant’s guilty connection with the crime which to their minds was established beyond a reasonable doubt.

Nor was it necessary to instruct them that such hypothesis must be established to a moral certainty, by circumstances proved beyond a reasonable doubt which were inconsistent *330 with any other hypothesis. As to this, the jury were properly and sufficiently instructed that “in order to establish the guilt of the accused beyond a reasonable doubt the proof ought to exclude every reasonable presumption or hypothesis of innocence in the mind of each juror, and all the essential elements of the crime charged ought to be established beyond a reasonable doubt.” It was not necessary to exclude an unreasonable hypothesis. Nor is the phrase “ moral certainty ” one the use of which is likely to be of benefit to a jury. It is an artificial form of words having no precise and definite meaning. As explained in one dictionary (the Century) it signifies “a probability sufficiently strong to justify action upon it; ” in another (Webster’s International), the first definition given is “ a very high degree of probability, although not demonstrable as a certainty.” It has been also used as indicating a conclusion of the mind established beyond a reasonable doubt. Commonwealth v. Costley, 118 Mass. 1, 24. The nature of a reasonable doubt was fully stated to the jury by the trial judge, in a manner to which no exception has been taken.

The defendant’s counsel claimed in argument that some of the circumstances which the State claimed to have proved (such as the finding of the bank bills in the cellar, and certain conduct and statements of the defendant after the murder), were consistent with a reasonable hypothesis of his innocence of the crime charged, namely, the hypothesis that W'ormsley committed it alone, and then told him of it and perhaps gave him some of the money, after which Gallivan hid the money and concealed the knowledge thus acquired. They then asked the court to instruct the jury that if all the circumstances proved beyond a reasonable doubt tending to establish the defendant’s guilt were in their opinion “ consist-tent with this theory,” then they were not to give them any weight as tending to establish his guilt under the indictment for murder. The court gave this instruction with the following qualification: “ except and unless the facts referred to tend to corroborate Wormsley’s statement, for which purpose they cannot be discarded.”

*331 The instruction thus given was too favorable to the accused. It gave some countenance to the claim of his counsel that the circumstances proved beyond a reasonable doubt were to be classed and considered by themselves, without any reference whatever to the existence of other circumstances as to which the evidence might be less convincing. The jury had a right to take into account, for some purposes, in coming to a final decision of the cause, any incriminating testimony which, in their opinion, was probably true, though they might not deem the facts which it went to establish proved beyond a reasonable^ doubt.

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Bluebook (online)
53 A. 731, 75 Conn. 326, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gallivan-conn-1902.