State v. Rhodes

15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 117

This text of 15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 117 (State v. Rhodes) 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. Rhodes, 15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 117 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

The case was an indictment for bribery. It was sought by the state to prove its cause by various acts and declárations alleged to have been done and made in pursuance of a conspiracy to defraud the city of Columbus in respect to a certain paving contract.

No direct evidence could be produced of the alleged act of bribery, the corpus delicti, it being necessary for the state to rely upon the acts performed, and declarations made, in pursuance of the alleged conspiracy. The defense protested against such rule.

The proof offered, to which objection was made, and which was the immediate cause of the discussion which eoyered a period [118]*118of two days, related to one step alleged to have been taken by the defendant in the alleged conspiracy, said to have been the cause of the crime charged in the indictment. This suggested the question of the order of proof, which must of necessity be determined by the court, within its discretion. Much benefit was derived from the discussion, sufficient, perhaps, to enable the court to readily pass on all questions that may arise touching the admissibility of evidence promptly and without further consumption of time in argument.

It may be remarked that a controlling principle which led to the conclusion reached is that all rules of evidence are designed for the ascertainment and development of truth, and that courts must not build up a body of technical rules, or apply rules so rigidly, or in such a technical manner, as to make it impossible to demonstrate the truth.

In criminal procedure absolute certainty is not always possible, the law being satisfied with producing a certainty passing a reasonable doubt.

I think if the origin, purpose and history of the rule of evidence pertaining to the corpus delicti is kept in mind, and by disregarding mere technical barriers trial courts will have no difficulty in exercising its powers respecting the admission of testimony in such way as to develop the truth, and at the same time properly perform its duty and function in submitting the case to the jury.

The lengthy argument was had so that we could be fully advised of the claims of both sides, and an intelligent conclusion reached as to proper exercise of the order of proof, which is concededly within the province of the court. The court did not wish to be in haste about it, nor to make an order which would in the least degree prejudice either the state or the defendant.

It was readily apparent that this case, so far as pertained to the proof, was quite unlike the previous cases which have been tried growing Gout of the same subject-matter, and I did not propose to so exercise the discretion, as requested by the prosecuting attorney, unless I was clearly satisfied that absolute justice demanded it.

[119]*119Nor did I propose to exercise this discretion and consume a great deal of time, as in the previous cases, until I was convinced that I would be justified in the public expense, nor until I was reasonably satisfied that the entire case to be presented would justify it.

I had made up my mind that if, upon the statements of counsel for the state, there would probably be nothing to finally present to the jury, I would make short work of the case.

I had only two doubts in the matter. One as to .the claim of the state regarding the alleged general conspiracy to defraud the city by procuring the award of the contract to pave East Broad street, out of which the several bribery charges grew.

Following the rule of the Haymarket case, 122 111., 1, and having solved that question in favor of the contention of the state, I then was ready to exercise the proper discretion by permitting proof of the alleged conspiracy by particular acts and declarations without first putting the state to proof of the general conspiracy, provided I thought there was enough proof as to the corpus delicti to warrant the final submission of the ease to the jury.

I am frank to say, that, if I had reached tbe conclusion that there was not sufficient proof of the corpus delicti to warrant its submission to the jury, it was not my purpose to force the prosecutor to present that part of his case first, because I thought if the prosecutor had not sufficient evidence to warrant this course, that the fair and just way to the defendant and to the public treasury was to first test out the proof of the crime before proof of the alleged conspiracy.

The origin of the rule of evidence, its original purpose, and the extent to which it has been carried in this country, will more completely and satisfactorily demonstrate its utility under modern law.

The rule had its origin in English.law in cases of murder.

“If after a man had been convicted of murder and hung, and those who clamored for his blood have found chronic happiness in contemplating the justice of the law, the infallibility of the tribunals and the unswerving decision of judicial evidence, the supposed murdered person appears, the situation is not pleasant. To avoid such exposure, the judges long ago in[120]*120vented the doctrine'of the corpus delicti, by which says Starkie, ‘the accused shall not be convicted unless the death be first distinctly proved, either by direct evidence of the fact or by inspection of the body’; a rule warranted by melancholy experience of the conviction and execution of supposed offenders, charged with the murder of persons who survive their alleged murderers.”

Bishop, in his Criminal Procedure, Section 1056, says:

“This doctrine requiring a special directness and clearness in the' proofs of there having been a crime, was extended to larcenies from unknown persons and to some, and possibly all, other indictable delinquencies.”

And the learned Bishop adds:

“Later, it has been regarded rather of caution than of absolute law. It is perceived that the only service it could ever he was to cover up those blunderings of justice which were apt to come to the public gaze; for if one was wrongly convicted through a blunder in any other part of the ease than the corpus delicti, it would seldom become known, hence the like rule was not applied to such a ease.”

Bishop explodes the old idea that the corpus delicti can be proved only by direct evidence by an apt illustration of a man going into the-London Docks sober, without means ..of getting drunk, and comes out of the cellars very drunk. It was reasonable evidence that the man must have stolen some of the wine in the cellar, though you could not prove that any wine was stolen or that any wine was missed.

So the rule has been established in this country with but little dissent that extra judicial confessions or admissions of guilt, alone and uncontroverted, are deemed inadequate to establish the corpus delicti,. though the courts are satisfied with slight corroboration. 1 Bishop Cr. Pro., Section 1059.

I am much impressed with the statement made by the learned Bishop that the rule of corpus delicti is one of caution rather than of absolute law, and from the very nature of things and because of the well established lines marking off the regular functions of court and jury, that to warrant the court in acting [121]*121there must be a total failure of proof of the corpus delicti;

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Related

Curran v. State
76 P. 577 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1904)
State v. Westcott
130 Iowa 1 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1905)
State v. Knowles
83 S.W. 1083 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rhodes-ohctcomplfrankl-1909.