State v. Moon

117 P. 757, 20 Idaho 202, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 89
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 117 P. 757 (State v. Moon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho 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. Moon, 117 P. 757, 20 Idaho 202, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 89 (Idaho 1911).

Opinion

WALTERS, District J.

The defendant, Louie Moon, was charged jointly with two others by an indictment returned by the grand jury of Ada county of an assault with intent to commit murder, on or about the 16th day of January, 1910, in Boise City, upon the person of one Fong Sue. Upon trial the defendant Louie Moon; was convicted of an assault with a deadly weapon, and from a judgment of the court thereon he prosecutes this appeal.

It appears that said assault was committed between the hours of 6 and 7 in the morning of January 16, 1910, and by some person or persons who had secreted themselves in the home of said Fong Sue. The prosecuting witness testified that he had been absent during the night at a lodge meeting with certain of his countrymen, and upon returning to his residence at about the hour indicated, upon entering his home he was attacked and assaulted. He ran from the building to the police station and from there was taken to a local hospital for treatment. The defendant, under his plea of not guilty, offered testimony tending to prove an alibi and to account for his whereabouts other than at or in the proximity of the residence of the prosecuting witness at the time it is alleged the assault was committed.

Such other testimony as is necessary to an understanding of this decision is set forth hereinafter.

[207]*2071. Defendant sought to show that there had been dissension and a division in a local Chinese colony, a Chinese woman being the promoting cause, said to be the wife of one Wong Gow, who appeared to have difficulty in maintaining possession of his wife, and that by reason of the interest and act of the prosecuting witness taken against Wong Gow, he had incurred his bitter enmity. Certain questions were propounded to the prosecuting witness under cross-examination by counsel for defendant, aiming to show such a state of facts, and objections were made by the state and the objections sustained, and defendant assigns such rulings as error. This matter was resolved into but one phase, however, when counsel for defendant made the following offer of proof, while the prosecuting witness was under cross-examination:

“In order to make the record, we now offer to prove that something like two weeks prior to the alleged assault, this witness received from San Francisco, California, letters in which he was warned that parties there had left or were about to leave San Francisco for Boise, Idaho, with the avowed purpose of taking his life, and that these parties were friends and associates of Wong Gow.”

The court sustained an objection to such proffered proof and error is predicated on such ruling. It will be noticed that the offer is made to prove threats against the life of the prosecuting witness. Who the threatening parties were is not named, or whether they had left San Francisco and had arrived in Boise or not, or whether they were in the proximity of the locus of the assault at the time of its commission, nor was it claimed by the offer that defendant purposed showing that such unnamed parties actually took part in the commission of the crime or were so situated that they might reasonably have done so. The ruling of the trial court in rejecting the proffered testimony of the nature indicated was manifestly correct and is hardly open to controversy. To have permitted the defendant to introduce such testimony would have been a violation of one of the basic rules of evidence as to the inadmissibility of certain collateral facts, expressed by Greenleaf in his work on Evidence in section 52, as follows:

[208]*208“This rule excludes all evidence of collateral facts, or those which are incapable of affording any reasonable presumption or inference as to the principal fact or matter in dispute; and the reason is, that such evidence tends to draw away the minds of the jurors from the point in issue, and to excite prejudice and mislead them; and moreover, the adverse party having had no notice of such a course of evidence is not prepared to rebut it.”

In discussing an assignment of error similar to the one here under consideration, it is said in Greenfield v. People, 85 N. Y. 76, 39 Am. Rep. 636, that:

“While evidence tending to show that another party might have committed the crime would be admissible, before such testimony can be received, there must be such proof of connection with it, such a train of facts or circumstances, as tend clearly to point out someone besides the prisoner as the guilty party. Eemote acts, disconnected, and outside of the crime itself, cannot be separately proved for such a purpose.”

It is said in State v. Fletcher, 34 Or. 295, 33 Pac. 575, in considering a like assignment of error, that:

“Indeed, there seems to be an absolute unanimity in the decisions, in holding that it is going far enough in favor of the accused to allow him to exculpate himself by showing the fact of another’s guilt by some appropriate evidence, directly connecting that person with the corpus delicti; and, in criminal cases, mere evidence of confession of guilt by a third person, or of threats made by such person against deceased 'is clearly inadmissible.”

Such evidence affords no reasonable presumption or inference as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, and is res inter alios acta, and the merest hearsay.

In Carlton v. People, 150 Ill. 181, 41 Am. St. 346, 37 N. E. 244, the court said:

‘ ‘ Threats of a third person other than the prisoner on trial, against the victim of the crime charged, are mere hearsay, and are inadmissible. Evidence of this character tends to draw away the minds of the jury from the point in issue, which is the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, and to excite their [209]*209prejudices and mislead them.” (State v. McLain, 43 Wash. 267, 86 Pac. 390.)

It is held in Alexander v. United States, 138 U. S. 353, 11 Sup. Ct. 350, 34 L. ed. 954, that mere threats of a third person, unaccompanied by an action of a threatening nature, are irrelevant to the question of defendant’s guilt. This same subject has received a most comprehensive consideration in the case of Horn v. State, 12 Wyo. 80, 73 Pac. 705, and an extensive résumé of authorities made, and it is therein said:

“And evidence of mere threats against the life of the deceased, without more, is not generally held to be competent, for the reason that it has no legal tendency to establish the innocence of the defendant on trial.”

We do not understand that an orderly and unbiased judicial inquiry as to the guilt or innocence of a defendant on trial contemplates that such defendant should be permitted by way of defense to indulge in conjectural inferences that some other person might have committed the offense for which he is on trial, or by fanciful analogy to say to the jury that some one other than he is more probably guilty. We are fearful that the proffered testimony was of this sort.

2. The trial court, over the objection of counsel for defendant, permitted one Frank M.

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Bluebook (online)
117 P. 757, 20 Idaho 202, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-moon-idaho-1911.