State v. Geyer

3 Ohio N.P. 242

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. 242 (State v. Geyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Geyer, 3 Ohio N.P. 242 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

[243]*243 CHARGE OF THE COURT.

Gentlemen of the Jury :

The defendant, John L. Geyer, was indicted by the grand jury. The indictment charges that while he was a member of the Legislature, he committed the crime of soliciting a bribe. To that indictment he has pleaded not guilty, and thus the charge in the indictment, with his plea thereon, presents for your determination, under the rules of law, the issue now on trial.

Your duty is to decide the questions of fact, including the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be attached to their testimony. The principal question, as you can see, is whether the defendant is innocent or guilty of the crime charged against him.

It is my duty to decide, and instruct you upon, all the questions of law, and the instructions on those points it is your duty to obey without dissent or reservation.

In the performance of that duty I will have to inform you what the crime is that is charged, what facts had to be proved to make the defendant guilty, to eliminate and present the true points of inquiry, and to advise you briefly how you may weigh the testimony.

The burden of proving the defendant’s guilt rested upon the state.

The prima facie presumption is that he is innocent, and that presumption holds good till his guilt is established. To authorize you to return a verdict against him, his guilt, including every fact necessary to constitute that guilt, had tobe proved by evidence which excludes from your minds every reasonable doubt.

A greater degree of mental conviction is required in criminal cases than in civil cases.

If you have a reasonable doubt of his guilt, he is entitled to the benefit of that doubt, and an acquittal. But this rule does not signify that the degree of satisfaction and certainty of his guilt which you are required to have to authorize you to convict, must be absolute conviction or certainty. The law only requires that you shall be reasonably and morally satisfied of his guilt. By a reasonable doubt is not meant a strained or whimsical conjecture, but an actual mental hesitation caused either by insufficient or unsatisfactory evidence. A doubt, to justify the defendant’s acquittal, must be reasonable, just as the law says; and it must arise from a candid and impartial investigation of all the evidence. It does not mean, as one of the counsel argued, any doubt. I repeat that it means a reasonable doubt.

You have no right to go beyond the evidence to hunt up doubts.

A doubt produced by undue sensibility in your minds and caused by viewing the consequences of a verdict of guilty is not a reasonable doubt.

If, after considering all the evidence, you can say that you have an abiding conviction of the defendant’s guilt, you are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt; but, if you do not have such a conviction, then you have a leasonable doubt.

Now, what is the offense charged against the defendant? It is charged that he solicited from William F. Burdell a valuable thiag, money._ The amount named in the indictment, is $400.00. But the exact amount is not material or important. He was then a member of the legislature, of the Senate, and it is charged that in soliciting the money of Burdell he was actuated by the corrupt intent that it should influence his official action, vote, opinion and judgment as a member of the legislature concerning a certain bill then pending in the Senate, the design of which was to authorize the Probate Court to appoint Trust and Safe Deposit Companies, adminitrators and guar dians.

For the^purpose of this case it is unnecessary to give any further explanation of the bill.

The law of the State of Ohio makes it a crime for a member of the legislature to solicit from any person any valuable or beneficial thing to influence him with respect to his official duty, or to influence his action, vote, opinion or judgment, in any matter pending or that might legally come before him. The defendant is accused of violating that law ; and whether he is guilty or innocent is the question for you to decide.

To make out the truth of the charge in the indictment, the state was not obliged to prove that even a cent of money was paid to him by, or that he accepted or received a cent of money from, Burdell.

The payment of the money is not an element of the crime that is charged against him.

The question is, Did he solicit money, Did he ask for money? Did he invite Bur-d°H At give him money?

The question is not whether the money was paid to him.

It is also true, an it is the law, Gentlemen of the Jury, that the State was not required to prove that the defendant either desired or solicited it, or asked for it, or invited Burdell to give or pay him money; the fact that it does not appear that he wanted it for his own use, or intended to use it for his own purposes, is a matter of no importance whatever.

If he solicited it, or asked for it, or invited Burdell to give or pay it to him then the question is_, Was it intended by him that it should influence him with respect to his official duty, or to influence bis action, vote,opinion or judgment,as a senator, concerning said bill?

Again, I charge you that it was not incumbent upon the State, in making out its case, to prove that the solicitation, invitation, or asking for the money, if that is proved, was the only consideration that was to influence him with respect to his official duty, or his action, vote, opinion or judgment relative to the bill.

[244]*244He may have been influenced by his own convictions concerning the bill to support it; but, if it has been proved, beyond a rea sonable doubt, that he solicited, or asked for money from Burdell, or that he invited Burdell to give or pay him money, with the view of influencing himself in the discharge of his cfficial duty, or to influence his action, vote, opinion or judgment in relation to the bill, the fact that he had been, or was to be, influenced also by his convictions or sentiments concerning the bill constitutes no defense. The law did not demand from the State proof that the solicitation, request or invitation for the money was the sole inducement to any action that the defendant adopted, or was about to adopt, or any vote that he had cast or was about to cast, or any opinion or judgment that he had formed or expressed, or was about to form or express, concerning the bill. Another question of law is, what do the terms “official duty” and action-terms used by the law — mean? What do they include? The term “vote,” “opinion” and “judgment,” terms also used by the statute, are plain and need no explanation.

But forming or expressing an opinion or judgment in favor of or against this bill, and voting for or against the bill, were net all the acts that the defendant, as a member of the Senate, could officially do, or refrain from doing, in relation to if. As a member of the legislature it was competent for him to ask, to induce, other memers to vote for it, and to collect facts and reasons and present them to other members for the purpose of inducing them to vote for or against the bill. That would be official action, official duty.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-geyer-ohctcomplfrankl-1896.