State v. MacFarland

83 A. 993, 83 N.J.L. 474, 54 Vroom 474, 1912 N.J. LEXIS 162
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 20, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 83 A. 993 (State v. MacFarland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. MacFarland, 83 A. 993, 83 N.J.L. 474, 54 Vroom 474, 1912 N.J. LEXIS 162 (N.J. 1912).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Garrison, J.

The letters were properly admitted in evidence. They were found in the possession of the defendant; they proved that the. declarations they contained had been communicated to him; they were sent to and received by him at different places, which shows intercommunication; they expressed the passionate love of the writer for the defendant, and her urgent desire to become his lawful wife. The defendant himself told a witness, who testified for the state, that the writer of these letters was a young lady in Philadelphia who lived next door to him while he was in that city, and whom he had taken into his office, in order to become better acquainted with her, and that they had become intimate. He also imparted to this witness the secret meaning of certain characters used in the letters, the signification of which, as explained by him, denoted the greatest degree of intimacy possible between a man and a woman.

We entertain no doubt that the letters were admissible in evidence for the purpose claimed by the state, viz.: “To repel the presumption arising in favor of the prisoner from the fact that the deceased was his wife and to show a motive for the commission of the crime.”

When we pass, however, to the question whether the letters were competent evidence to prove the truth of their contents we come to a totally different and far more difficult question. The transition marks not only the difference between the proof of a communication and the proof that it was true; but also the difference between the proof of a motive for a crime and the proof of a substantive fact in the chain of [479]*479incriminating circumstances that connects the defendant with the commission of the crime.

The knowledge that the writer of the letters intensely desired and confidently expected to become his wife, as soon as by a divorce he was free to marry her, may have operated upon the defendant’s mind as a motive to the commission of the crime of which he was convicted; as also may the urgency of the writer that such divorce be obtained quickly as something that the defendant had promised to do and to do soon; while the mere fact of an intimacy that permitted of such communications was of itself evidence to rebut the presumption arising from the matrimonial relation. But to say that these letters, because preserved by the defendant, proved that he had said that he would in a short time be free to marry the writer and that he would soon get rid of his wife by a divorce is an assumption of a totally different character, involving the broad proposition that letters addressed to a party and found in his r possession are evidence that he had in fact done or said the things that the writer of the letters stated that he had done or said. That this evidential force was accorded to these letters at the trial appears from the instructions under which the claim made by the state was submitted to the jury.

The claim made by the state was put before the jury in the following language of the charge:

“The state claims to have proved that the death of this woman was brought about, not by the criminal carelessness of the defendant, but by his intentional act. And it claims that the circumstances which have been laid before you demonstrate to a moral certainty that the purpose of the defendant in doing what he did, in bringing this cyanide to his home after his wife had come back to live with him, and so shortly after that occurrence; that his placing it in the bottle which contained medicine which Ms wife used with more or less frequency, and leaving that bottle in the position which it occupied when his wife was using it, and putting the bromide in another place, coupled -with the fact that at that time he was carrying on a liaison with a woman in Philadelphia, who, [480]*480from the letters which have been exhibited in this ease, would seem to have become thoroughly persuaded that in the near future the situation would be such that he would be fre.e to marry her, leaves no escape from the conclusion that the death of this woman was intended to be, and was, accomplished by this man for the purpose of clearing the way for the putting into execution of the promises which the state claims these letters show he had made to this woman in Philadelphia. These letters, as I have already intimated before, I think, are, as the state claims, the keystone of the case which it has sought to make against the defendant. The state claims that they not only show a motive existing in the mind of the defendant for taking his wife’s life, but a motive which is fully adequate; that motive being complex; the desire to continue his relations with this girl in the future as they had existed in the past, and the continuance of which it would seem, from one of the last of the letters which she wrote to him, was threatened by her to be terminated. I speak of the letter in which she was arranging to meet him in New York, and said that that was the last occasion upon which there would be any ‘stolen fruit’ to be enjoyed by them. The desire, I say, for a continuance of those relations, and a belief that, unless his wife was put out of the way, those relations would be terminated; and, further, the desire to redeem, to some extent, the promise made by him to this girl in Philadelphia that in the near future she should be his wife.

“It is for you to say whether, in view of these facts toi which I-have referred, the state has sustained the burden which, as I pointed out to you in'the beginning of my charge, the law imposes upon it.”

The use of the letters by the jury as- evidence to sustain these claims of the state was treated in the charge as follows: “Most if nót all of her letters to him refer apparently to things thát he has said or’written to her, and the contention of the state is — and it is' for you to say how far it is justified —that it is to be inferred that the things which those letters state have been said or written' by him' to her, were said or written by him.”

[481]*481That this was an instruction to the jury to use the letters as evidence to determine whether the state had proved what it claimed is rendered clear by the concrete illustration that followed.: “That is, that the declaration that he had promised to divorce his wife and that in the days not long before his wife’s death he had promised that the divorce should be obtained soon and that he would soon be in a position to make this girl his wife must be inferred from the statements in those letters from her to him which lie apparently treasured and kept under lock and key. It is for yon to say * * * how far you are forced to the conclusion that he did make these promises which arc asserted in these letters from this girl to him.”

This instruction is not modified by the general language, “After a consideration of all the evidence and giving every fact its whole significance, it is for you to determine whether the state has made out the case which it claims to have made out, that is, a case of murder of the first degree.”

The jury was therefore instructed that they could find from the letters' themselves that the assertions contained in them were true. This was clearly erroneous unless letters written to a person are, by the mere fact of their possession, proof of the truth of their contents, which is not the law.

The fault of this instruction is twofold — first, that it did not leave to the jury the question of the defendant’s assent to the truth of the statements made in the letters, and second,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 A. 993, 83 N.J.L. 474, 54 Vroom 474, 1912 N.J. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-macfarland-nj-1912.