State v. Kindle

47 Ohio St. (N.S.) 358
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 47 Ohio St. (N.S.) 358 (State v. Kindle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Kindle, 47 Ohio St. (N.S.) 358 (Ohio 1890).

Opinion

Spear, J.

The question presented by the bill of exceptions is: did the court err in the admission as evidence of the written statement purporting to be a dying declaration ?

While some of the statements of the bill respecting the preliminary proof are not couched in the clearest and most positive language, yet it is fairly to be understood that the testimony of the witnesses satisfied the judge that the statement was prepared by one of the witnesses called, under the direction of the deceased; that it was, by one of the witnesses, read over to him, and was actually signed by him, and that, at the time, he was under a sense of impending death, and had no hope of recovery. The paper itself shows that it is a recital of the circumstances immediately attending the assault which resulted in Butt’s death.

It is not questioned that the words used by the defendant, or the substance of them, might have been testified to orally by those who heard them, if they were able to recall them, but it is insisted by counsel for defendant that to admit the written statement of the deceased is to make him a witness in the case, and is a violation of that clause of the constitution of the United States, which provides that every person on trial charged with crime shall have the right “ to be confronted with the witnesses against him,” and of the like clause in our own constitution which provides that in any such trial the party accused shall be allowed “ to meet the witnesses face to face.” It being conceded that what the deceased said is the substantive matter to be given to the jury, the only question is as to the proper mode of communicating from the declarant to the jury.

Dying declarations have been received in evidence on the ground of necessity, there often being no other evidence of the facts attainable, and sometimes on the further ground that the solemn circumstances surrounding the wounded person, in view of impending death, will create an obligation to utter the truth equal, in its influence, to the obligation of [361]*361an oath, though it is difficult to see why, if the latter is a substantive ground, the declarations should be limited to the facts immediately connected with the killing. Mr. Roscoe, in his work on “ Criminal Evidence,” observes that “ the concurrence of both these reasons led to the admission of this species of evidence.” Such declarations are in the nature of hearsay, and their admission is an exception to the general rule of evidence. It follows from this that the person making them is not, but the person by whom they are proven, is, the witness. Hence, the witness by whom the accused has the right to be confronted, is the one called to lay the foundation for proof of the declaration, and by whom the making of the declaration is established. The object is to give the accused the opportunity to see and hear the witness, and for cross-examination. If these objects are secured the guaranty of the constitution is maintained. Applying these conclusions to the case at bar, how can it be said that the accused was deprived of any right ? In order to intelligently prepare the paper signed by the declarant, it was necessaiy for the witness to first talk with him, or at least, hear his verbal statement. Then, having reduced the statement to writing, he read it to the declarant, and it was then signed by him. All this must have been shown by the witness before the court could have been satisfied of the necessary facts preliminary to the admission of the paper. Being thus testified to, the whole transaction, and every detail, was the subject of cross-examination. The accused could inquire as to just what the declarant actually said; just how much care was taken in writing out the statement; how carefully and distinctly the paper was read to the declarant, and, in short, as to all that was said and done, the order of it, and the manner of it. Whether the accused availed himself of this opportunity or not, the opportunity was present. It is clear that, in this case, the constitutional requirement was complied with, and every constitutional right was preserved to the accused. Where this appears, the only question is, which is the preferable evidence of the actual declarations, the memory of witnesses and their ability to reproduce the words used, or the [362]*362substance of them, or the paper, reduced to writing at the time and signed by the party making the statement ? Or, to present the exact question in this case, is there such preference to be given the former method as to render the latter improper? We think not. The common judgment of mankind, formed upon observation and experience, is that the attempt to repeat the language of others is always attended with uncertainty. It is in recognition of this fact that the custom has obtained at trials for the judge to caution the jury in weighing and considering testimony of this kind. The witness may not have fully understood the declarant; he may not recollect accurately the words, or their substance; or, having understood and remembering, he may not be able to fully and clearly express himself in their reproduction. At least the written statement, approved and signed by the declarant, is not, ordinarily, open to these objections. Nor can it be said that the paper, so prepared and verified, has not a legitimate tendency to prove the facts sought to be proven; that is, to show what the dying man said.

But if we had doubts as to this conclusion, on principle, we would be impelled to the same result upon authority. The admissibility of dying declarations in cases of homicide, has been recognized by the courts for more than a century, and the question of the form in which such declarations shall be given to the jury has often been under consideration.

In King v. Ely, tried before Chief Justice King, at Old Baily, in 1720, (12 Miner’s Abr. 118,) it was held that “in the case of murder, what the deceased declared after the wound given, may be given in evidence,” and in Trowter’s case, (same authority, 119,) “the court would not admit the declaration of the deceased, which had been reduced into writing, to be given in evidence without producing the writing.” To like effect is Rex v. Woodcock, 1 Leach 500, decided in 1789.

In Rex v. Gray, 7 Car. & P. 230, it was declared that if a declaration in articulo mortis be taken down in writing, and signed by the party making it, the judge will neither receive a copy of the paper in evidence, nor will he receive parol evi[363]*363dence of the “ declaration,” and Coleridge, J., refused to receive the parol evidence offered.

Under the head of “form of declaration,” Mr. Philips, in his. work on evidence, vol. 1, p. 240, uses the following language: ‘‘With regard to the manner in which a dying declaration may become the subject of legal evidence, it may be observed, that an examination taken on oath by a magistrate, and signed by the deceased and by the magistrate, has been received in evidence as of the same effect, in point of admissibility, as declarations not made with the same solemnity.” And in a note to page 241, occurs this : “Where the statement of the deceased is taken down in writing, it is of course more reliable, more accurate, than the memory of most men; but it is of no higher grade than unwritten testimony.”

Professor Greenleaf, in his work on evidence, section 161, gives the rule that “if the statement of the deceased was committed to writing and signed by Mm, at the time it was made, it has been held essential that the writing should be produced, if existing.”

Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Ohio St. (N.S.) 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kindle-ohio-1890.