State v. Jones

18 So. 515, 47 La. Ann. 1524, 1895 La. LEXIS 679
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 18, 1895
DocketNo. 11,874
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 18 So. 515 (State v. Jones) 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. Jones, 18 So. 515, 47 La. Ann. 1524, 1895 La. LEXIS 679 (La. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

From an unqualified verdict, on an indictment for murder, and sentence of death, the two defendants — John Jones and Henry Simmons — prosecute this appeal, relying on several bills of exceptions which they reserved during the progress of the trial.

I.

As it is officially stated by the trial judge in his assignment of reasons for his rulings, that bills of exception one to six, inclusive, being reserved by counsel representing the defendant John Jones, and not by counsel representing Henry Simmons, the testimony adduced and about which controversy arose — the dying declarations of James K. Bond, deceased — had no application to the last named person; and that the subjects matter of same were germane, and therefore considered them together, we will follow the precedent and do likewise.

In bill number one the statement is made that objection was urged to the admissibility of the testimony of a State’s witness introduced for the purpose of laying the basis for the introduction of the dying declarations of James K. Bond, who is designated in the indictment as the party who was murdered by the defendants; and the judge was requested to allow the defendant to have same reduced to writing, and reserved objection to his refusal to do so.

The remaining five of the same series are of the same tenor.

The judge says:

“ It will be noticed that these bills, two, four and six, contain the facts quoted by counsel themselves, and that portion of the evidence relating to the basis is embraced within quotation marks (“-”) made by counsel.

“This is as true and authentic evidence as the court can require, upon the question of proper foundation. The court is therefore in possession of the facts quoad these bills, and the simple question re[1526]*1526mains as to whether the court acted properly in admitting the dying declaration.”

He further says in relation to bills one, three and five:

'“ If I understand correctly the doctrine established in 41 An. 143, it is only when there exists a disagreement between counsel and the court as to what the evidence is, that the court should have it trans-scribed by the clerk. When there exists no such disagreement as in the present case, it is a vain and useless consumption of time, which the court should not require.

“ Doubtless counsel took the evidence down as it fell from the lips of the witnesses, as the evidence which he transcribes in his bills of exception is identical with that appearing upon the notes which I kept of the testimony.”

And as if to more fully show that he acted upon the evidence of those witnesses, he says further, that it, “ in connection with the physical facts and circumstances which surrounded the case, satisfied me that the dying declaration of the deceased was made while he was in the full possession of his mental faculties, and under consciousness that he had but a very short time to live.” ■

We have examined with care the case cited by the court, and the decision upon which counsel for the defendant, Jones, evidently relies, State vs. Seiley, 41 An. 143, and find that it substantially bears out the conclusion of the trial judge, for it says:

“We have, on the partof defendant, a demand that the testimony of witnesses on this collateral issue be reduced to writing as detailed to them, for the express purpose of bringing it up for review on appeal, in order to have a question of law determined.

“We have, on the part of the trial judge, a distinct and emphatic refusal of the defendant’s request, because his counsel had enjoyed the opportunity of having them incorporated in a bill of exceptions .

“The judge did not rest his conclusions on the adequacy of that statement, but at once proceeded to make a different version of the facts, and rested his conclusions upon it. In so doing he clearly demonstrated the fact that, if the defendant’s counsel did have ample opportunity to incorporate the facts in a bill of exceptions, it was, at the same time, rendered invaluable to him by his own, possessing as it does the weight of his authoritative sanction.

“ Under this state of facts the accused appears in this court, prac[1527]*1527tically deprived of the evidence on which he solely depends, and is necessitated to rely upon that to which the judge has certified.”

But how widely differentia the situation of this case. The defendant’s counsel embodies in his bill of exceptions the testimony of which he makes complaint; and the judge accepts his statement, and says it corresponds exactly with the notes of evidence he made during the progress of the trial. State vs. McCarthy, 44 An. 323; State vs. Nash and Barnett, 46 An. 194.

It is quite impossible to see in what manner the defendant has been injured by the judge’s declination to permit the evidence to be reduced to writing and incorporated in the transcripts. He has had, and will have, the full benefit of it in this court.

But, as we understand counsel’s argument, he complains that at the time the objection was urged and the ruling was made no evidence had been introduced, and that, under the decision, in the Seiley case, he had a legal right to have the evidence reduced to writing, and that we must take up the bills of exception seriatim and decide them in their order; and that proceeding in that order, we must hold the judge’s ruling erroneous.

But we must take the case as we find it, and we find all the bills of exception occurring in rotation, with but one answer of the judge to all of them.

Presumably all of them^were filed at the same time, and examined by the judge and decided at the same time. Indeed, they all bear the same date of filing, June 3, 1895, and that date is contemporaneous with the judge’s ruling.

Conceding counsel’s right to have had the bills signed and the judge’s reasons assigned, at the dates of his rulings, yet we can not doubt the judge’s authority to act as he did under the circumstances related; and, considering them, we feel it to be our duty to decide accordingly.

As the defendant has had the full benefit of the testimony he relied upon, we are not justified in vacating his ruling’.

II.

The substance of the testimony which appertains to the admissibility of the dying declarations, as shown by the defendant’s bills of exceptions two, four and six, is that an offer was made to send for a doctor, and the deceased’replied that “ There is no use; I’ll [1528]*1528be dead before he gets here;” and that he soon after died — that is to say, within an hour.

The question is, therefore, whether statements made by the deceased concerning defendant Jones’ complicity in his homicide, at the time, is competent evidence against him.

In State vs. Keenan, 38 An. 660, this court said: “Dying declarations are those made under a consciousness of impending death, which, however, the defendant need not express in direct terms. His bodily condition and appearance, his conduct and language, as well as statements made to him by his attendants, may be considered, and his consciousness thence inferred. State vs. Scott, 12 An. 274.

“We do not conceive it to have been necessary that the deceased should have said that he believed he would die immediately,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 So. 515, 47 La. Ann. 1524, 1895 La. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jones-la-1895.