State v. Roby

74 A. 638, 83 Vt. 121, 1909 Vt. LEXIS 234
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedDecember 7, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 74 A. 638 (State v. Roby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Roby, 74 A. 638, 83 Vt. 121, 1909 Vt. LEXIS 234 (Vt. 1909).

Opinion

Rowell, C. J.

This is -an information for a breach of the peace by assaulting and beating one Anna DuBois.

[124]*124Immediately after the jury were impaneled but before they were sworn, the presiding judge left the bench and the courtroom for a few minutes, the assistant judges remaining on the bench. While the presiding judge was gone, the State’s attorney had brought into the courtroom a sack containing a piece of stovewood and an assortment of old iron, and placed it on the floor near and in sight of the jury, where a portion of the contents of the sack was taken out and laid on the floor before the presiding judge returned. This was done in the presence of the respondent and his counsel, and that the articles might be handy when wanted by the State to offer in evidence. When the presiding judge returned, the jury were sworn and then the respondent objected to what had been done, and was allowed an exception thereto. No objection was made to swearing the jury nor to their trying the case. Later in the trial the State offered some of said articles in evidence, and to show that they were thrown at the house in which Mrs. DuBois was, about the time of the assault, by persons in company with the respondent. The evidence was excluded, and the respondent excepted to the production of the articles before the jury. The court charged the jury to give no consideration to the fact that the sack and its contents were brought to their view in the manner stated.

Mr. Taylor says that though evidence addressed to the senses, if judiciously employed, is obviously entitled to the greatest weight, care must be taken not to press it beyond its legitimate extent. 1 Taylor, Bv. 10th ed., §557. Mr. Wig-more says that the objection to such evidence seems to be twofold; (1) that there is a natural tendency to infer from the mere production of a material object, and without further evidence, the truth of all that is predicated of it; and (2) that the sight of deadly weapons or of cruel injuries tends to overwhelm reason and associate the accused with the atrocity without sufficient evidence; that the objection in its first phase may be at least partly overcome by requiring that the object be properly authenticated before or after production; but that the objection in its second phase cannot be entirely overcome even by express instructions by the court; but that it is doubtful whether the necessity of thus demonstrating the methods and results of crime should give way to this possibility of undue prejudice; that no doubt such an effect may occasionally in an [125]*125extreme case be produced, and no doubt tbe trial court has a discretion to prevent an abuse of tbe process, but tbat in tbe vast majority of instances in which sucb objections are made they are frivolous, as there is no reason for apprehension, and accordingly tbat sucb objections have almost invariably been repudiated by tbe courts. 2 Wig. Ev. §1157.

Applying this doctrine, we think it clear tbat there is no reason for apprehending tbat tbe respondent was harmed by what took place.

During tbe examination of Mrs. DuBois, tbe State’s attorney produced a piece of an eaves spout, and asked her whether, in going around to tbe front of tbe bouse, as she said she did, she saw tbe respondent do anything to tbe spout. Tbe question was excluded, and tbe respondent excepted to tbe act of tbe State’s attorney in producing tbe spout before tbe jury before it was offered in evidence and tbe offer ruled upon. This objection may well be classed with tbe “vast majority of instances” tbat Mr. Wigmore says are frivolous because they afford no reason for apprehension.

Mrs. DuBois was allowed to testify tbat when she was in the front part of tbe bouse she recognized another person out in front of it. This was excepted to, and is now urged as error because tbe thing testified to was not in issue nor relevant to the issue. But irrelevancy alone does not vitiate if it can be said tbat tbe testimony did not barm tbe excepting party, and tbe testimony complained of was so entirely without significance that it could not have harmed tbe respondent. State v. Bean, 77 Vt. 384, 60 Atl. 807; State v. Plant, 67 Vt. 454, 32 Atl. 237, 48 Am. Rep. 821.

Tbe State’s evidence tended to show tbat tbe bouse of Fred Contin, where tbe alleged assault was made, was about forty rods from Thomas Lapoint’s bouse, from wbicb tbe respondent and three other men came on tbat occasion; tbat early in tbe evening of that day, Mrs. DuBois was standing in tbe back door of tbe Contin bouse, where she lived, watching her two little brothers put tbe bens into tbe barn some distance away, when she saw four men leave tbe vicinity of the- Lapoint bouse and in company approach tbe Contin bouse; tbat tbe respondent was one of tbe men, and was dressed in woman’s clothes, and tbat when near tbe Contin bouse be left bis companions in [126]*126the road and came to the back porch of the Contin house, climbed the porch steps, struck Mrs. DuBois in the chest and pushed her back against the door frame, hurting her arm and frightening her, and at the same time said: “Clear the road you damned bitch”; that thereupon she called to the boys, who came running and met the respondent as he was retreating down the porch steps; that the respondent started after the boys, who circled around him and entered the front door of the house; that Mrs. DuBois ran through the house to the front door and threw hot water at the respondent who was in the front yard swinging his arms in a threatening manner, whereupon she went back into the house.

The respondent’s counsel, in his opening statement to the jury before any evidence was received, said that the respondent’s purpose in going to the Contin house dressed in woman’s clothes was to call on Mr. Contin in a spirit of fun, with the intention of doing no harm whatever, but to see what the result would be between Contin and his wife, who was extremely jealous of her husband.

The State called one of the boys as a witness, who was examined through an interpreter, who was asked to have the witness describe what the respondent did when he met the boys as they came from the barn. The respondent objected that the question called for evidence of an assault on the boys, which was not charged in the information. But the court overruled the objection, for that the evidence called for was a circumstance surrounding the immediate act charged, and on that ground, and not to show an assault on the boys, the witness was told to answer, and said, “He tried to-hit them.” The State’s attorney said the answer might be stricken out, but the court allowed it to stand, and allowed the respondent an exception. But the answer, if not admissible for the purpose for which it was received, was admissible as tending to disprove that the respondent went there in a spirit of fun, with the intention of doing no harm whatever, as he claimed, for it tended to render that claim improbable.

During the examination of the same witness the interpreter was asked to have him show just how the respondent tried to catch hold of his sister as he said. The interpreter then spoke to the witness, who made some reply, which he illustrated with [127]*127his arms and hands, and then the interpreter gave his answer thus: “He said he tried to catch her like that” — illustrating with his arms and hands — “and his sister ran away and he tried to catch her.” The respondent objected to “that characterization.” But the court allowed it to stand, and the respondent excepted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A. 638, 83 Vt. 121, 1909 Vt. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-roby-vt-1909.