State v. Robertson

63 So. 363, 133 La. 806, 1913 La. LEXIS 2105
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 20, 1913
DocketNo. 19,931
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 63 So. 363 (State v. Robertson) 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. Robertson, 63 So. 363, 133 La. 806, 1913 La. LEXIS 2105 (La. 1913).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

An indictment, charging him with murder for having taken the life of Jos. L. Young, was found against the defendant and returned in court on the 9th day of December, 1912, by the grand jury of the parish of East Baton Rouge.

The jury not having agreed to a verdict in the first trial, the court had a mistrial entered. At the second trial defendant was found guilty of manslaughter and recommended to the extreme mercy of the court. He was sentenced to serve ten years in the penitentiary.

The defendant and the deceased were on friendly terms on the day of the homicide. The families of each of these young men were well known. The father of the defendant had been a well-known member of Congress; also his grandfather. The father of the deceased was sheriff of the parish of East Baton Rouge. The father of the defendant at the date of the tragedy was the superintendent of the State Institute for Deaf and Dumb. He testified on the first trial, and his evidence was read to the jury at the second trial. He departed this life between the date of the first and the second trials.

The deceased and the defendant were much together on the day preceding the night of the killing and indulged freely in intoxicants. The defendant was more under its influence than the deceased. At one of the bars of one of the saloons where they drank during the day, defendant offered to divide all that he had with his companion, the deceased.' On their way to the institute, to which the deceased was taking the defendant (he needed a .helping hand on account of his inebriated condition, which was freely extended to him by the late J. L. Young), they trudged along arm in arm until they arrived at the foot of the steps leading to the third floor of the building, where the defendant and his wife had their room and where the tragedy occurred. 'They stepped up the stairs together without the least manifestation of unfriendly feeling. They spoke to each other in a good humored way and even joked the one with the other.

Defendant’s father and mother occupied rooms on the second floor of the institute; also an adopted daughter and the little daughter of the defendant.

After the deceased and the defendant entered defendant’s room on the third floor, all was quiet for a short time. At about 10 o’clock p. m., the mother of the defendant testified that she heard a heavy thud as of some one jumping out of bed, and immediately afterward a shot, and then a scream. She said that she heard a sharp click sound of contact between the heels of her daughter-in-law’s shoes and the floor (a sound she had often heard). That it was possible for one [815]*815to hear the walking of persons on the floor above. The father of the defendant from his bed of illness inquired of the mother if it was a pistol shot he had heard, and she answered, “Yes,” and started for the room of her son. A little prior to this time, ■ the father asked the mother if the son had been drinking, and she replied that he had been drinking. She testified that on her way to the room she met her daughter-in-law, who exclaimed, “Oh! Oh! something terrible has happened.” On entering the room, she saw her son standing erect in a dazed condition, in a trance or state of somnambulism. She shook him and waked him up and said, “Ed., you have killed your father.” “Is he dead?” was the only reply that he made. The deceased, who had just been shot, was on the floor. She immediately went over to the phone and called physicians and notified members of the family of the deceased. The latter’s wife came within a few minutes with his father. She further stated that she found a pistol on the floor; that ordinarily the pistol was kept on the table or on the mantel. Neither the deceased nor 'the defendant had arms on their persons. The accused was a fertilizing inspector. On his trips away from home he would take the pistol and on his return he would take it from his grip and put it down anywhere. The defendant and the deceased were employes in the same department of the government.

[1] The first objection of defendant before us for decision relates to the position of the district attorney in the alleged attempt to impeach the testimony of the mother of the defendant.

It will be remembered that the mother of the defendant testified in chief for the defendant on the first trial. It does not appear by the stenographer’s notes of her testimony on the first trial that she testified that her son said, in answer to the inquiry of the wife of the deceased, “Yes, it was an accident.”

On the second trial she was called as a witness by the state and not by the defendant. No question was asked her by the state touching the statement of the son just before mentioned, but on cross-examination, in answer to question propounded by counsel, she stated in substance that her son said that the killing was the result of an accident, in answer of the inquiry of the wife of the deceased a few minutes after the homicide. On redirect examination of the mother of the defendant, the district attorney asked her whether she had testified on the first trial, and, when he was about to read a portion of her testimony to remind her of that to which she had testified on the first trial, the counsel for the defendant objected on the ground that it was an attempt by the state to impeach the witness, who was, as before stated, a witness for the state.

We will not quote in full the testimony of the mother of the defendant. We have before us an appreciation of her testimony by the trial judge, which makes it evident, if that appreciation be true (and we have no reason to believe that it is not), there was no ground for impeaching her testimony on this particular point. She is corroborated by statement of the highest order: That of the trial judge, who said that on the first trial her testimony, to quote literally, “was identical with the testimony that she gave to-day regarding her son’s reply to the question of the wife of the deceased.” The learned judge adds, as to her testimony on other matters, especially with reference to the noises above (that is, the creaking of the heels of shoes against the floor above), “I do not recall whether they were testified to on the other trial, but she has explained that the record in the other trial contains omissions and inaccuracies and incorrect statements,” which is possible, but the trial judge [817]*817was positive that the witness in the first trial had testified, “Yes, it was an accident.”

Addressing the district attorney, the trial judge added further:

“It was on that theory you had a right to call a witness to testify to other facts. The court overruled the objection and ruled that you could do so rather than on the question of impeachment.”

That is, he could inquire regarding facts and if necessary contradict the witness by showing error of statement but did not have that right upon the question of attempted impeachment.

Counsel for défendant, Mr. Beale, then said, “The court does not rule, then, that it can be used for the purpose of impeaching the testimony,” to which the judge replied, “I think he has the right to introduce the witness for the purpose stated.”

To this ruling, counsel for defendant reserved a bill of exceptions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 So. 363, 133 La. 806, 1913 La. LEXIS 2105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robertson-la-1913.