State v. Silverio

76 A. 1069, 79 N.J.L. 482, 50 Vroom 482, 1910 N.J. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 20, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 76 A. 1069 (State v. Silverio) 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. Silverio, 76 A. 1069, 79 N.J.L. 482, 50 Vroom 482, 1910 N.J. LEXIS 177 (N.J. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Pitney, Chancellor.

The plaintiff in error, having been found guilty by the verdict of a jury of the crime of murder iti the first degree and thereupon sentenced to death, brings the record of his conviction before this court for review. There are bills of exception taken and sealed pursuant to section 135 of the Criminal Procedure act (Pamph. L. 1898, p. 914), but no certificate of “the entire record of the proceedings had upon the trial” for review under section 136.

The first contention raised in behalf of the plaintiff in error is that he was not properly before the Court of Oyer aud Terminer for trial, the indictment having been returned into the Court of Quarter Sessions, and it being alleged that no order liad been made bringing the indictment into the oyer. Section 1 of the Criminal Procedure act (Pamph. L. 1898, p. 866), after shortly defining the power and jurisdiction of the Court of Quarter Sessions in and for the several counties, contains a proviso that indictments for treason and murder, although found in that court, shall be tried in the Supreme Court or Court of Oyer and Terminer, and for that purpose the Court of Quarter Sessions shall cause such indictments to he delivered to the Supreme Court or the Court of Oyer and Terminer. Section 3 of the same act prescribes the constitution, powers and jurisdiction of the Court of Oyer and Terminer in each county, and among other things provides that no session of this court shall be held without the presence of [484]*484a justice of the Supreme Court except in counties having three hundred thousand inhabitants, in which counties, in the absence of a justice of the Supreme Court, the judge of the Court of Common Pleas, sitting alone, is permitted to hold the- Court of Oyer and Terminer. Section 6 provides that in any county in which the judge of the Court of Common Pleas sitting alone cannot, in the absence of the justice of the Supreme Court, hold the Court of Oyer and Terminer (Passaic county is such a county), if a justice of the Supreme Court shall not be present when the grand jury desires to present an indictment, the Court of Quarter Sessions may receive such indictment, and may discharge the grand jury the same as the Court of Oyer and Terminer might do if the justice of the Supreme Court were personally present; “and all indictments so received which are not triable in the Courts of Quarter Sessions shall be delivered by said courts to the Courts of Oyer and Terminer in their respective counties.”

The record before us sets forth that at a Court of Quarter Sessions held at Paterson, in and for the county of Passaic, on October 1st, 1909, being the day on which the grand jury desired to present bills, no justice of the Supreme Court being present, the grand- jury presented the indictment in question to the Court of Quarter Sessions; that this court received the indictment, and did thereupon order that the same should be delivered to the Court of Oyer and Terminer for trial. The record further shows that all subsequent proceedings were in the oyer; that the accused was brought to the bar of that court and there pleaded to the indictment, and afterwards was there put on trial, convicted and sentenced. Nothing to the contrary appears in the bill of exceptions.

The contention of counsel that “there is no record of any such order having been made” — referring to the order transferring the indictment to the oyer — is thus shown to be contradicted by the record itself,-which clearly shows that such' an order was made, and that it was complied with.

The next point urged is that the trial court erred in admitting in evidence a confession made by the prisoner to the prosecutor’s detective. At the time of this confession the [485]*485prisoner was tinder arrest on a charge of assault, the victim of the assault being at that time still alive. It is argued that “the prisoner having been arrested on a charge of assault, statements made by Mm were not admissible on his trial for murder.” ISlo reason is given for this insistment, and we believe it to be unsupported either by reason or authority.

The next point relates to the definition of “reasonable doubt” employed by the trial justice in his instructions to the jury. The learned justice, having stated that the law presumes the killing of a Iranian being to he murder in the second degree unless the state by evidence satisfies the jury that it is murder in the first degree, and that therefore the state is required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant took a human life willfully, with premeditation and deliberation, and that if this was not so proved the benefit of the doubt must be given to the defendant, and he could only be found guilty of murder in the second degree, or of manslaughter, thereupon employed the phrase that is the subject of the present criticism, stating: “If you have a doubt in

your minds upon this evidence so presented, a reasonable doubt as the law expresses it, a doubt which by some of our law writers has been described as the want of an abiding conviction of his guilt, a conviction which shall rest with you all the days of your.life, however long you may live, then you have a reasonable doubt, and if you have a reasonable doubt the benefit of it must be given under the tender mercies of the law to the defendant, and lie cannot he convicted of murder in the first degree.”

The term “reasonable doubt” has not in this state been authoritatively defined as “the want of an abiding conviction of guilt.” That phrase was employed by Chief Justice Shaw in his charge to the jury in the Webster Case, 5 Cush. 295, 320. This court has not as yet approved, and it is not at present called upon to approve, the use of this — indeed, of any — paraphrase of the term “reasonable doubt.” Uor are we prepared to approve of a definition of “abiding conviction” as a “conviction which shall rest with you all the days of your life, however long you may live.” “Abiding conviction,” as used by [486]*486Chief Justice Shaw, means no more than settled conviction. But we are entirely clear — and we need go no further for the decision of the present case — that whatever criticism may be brought against the charge of the trial justice in this regard merely tends to show that the instruction was more favorable to- the defendant than he was entitled to expect. There is no ground for reversal here.

The next objections raised by counsel for the plaintiff in error have reference to certain comments by the trial justice upon the evidence, and furnish no ground for reversal, or even of reasonable criticism from the standpoint of the defendant.

Next it is argued that the trial justice erred in charging the jury: “That when the defendant took that loaded rifle he intended to do bodily harm to somebody.” The following extract from the charge as delivered contains the phrase to which this criticism is directed: “When a man takes into his possession a loaded rifle, or a loaded pistol, and aims it at another, particularly when he is in close proximity to the other, the law presumes that he knows what he is doing; the law presumes that he is conscious of the probable results of his own acts. In other words, the law 'charges him with the possession of common sense, and the law will suppose in this case that when he took that loaded rifle and pursued those people up the road with it, that he intended to do bodily harm to somebody. Whether he intended to kill these people is a question for you to determine.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 A. 1069, 79 N.J.L. 482, 50 Vroom 482, 1910 N.J. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-silverio-nj-1910.