State v. Staley

14 Minn. 105
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 14 Minn. 105 (State v. Staley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Staley, 14 Minn. 105 (Mich. 1869).

Opinions

By the Court.

Wilson, Ch. J.

The defendant having been convicted in the District Court of Olmsted County of [108]*108the murder of Frederick Ableitner, made a motion for a new trial, which was denied, and from the order of denial he appealed to this Court. ¥e shall examine the several grounds on which he claims to be entitled to a new trial, in the order in which they were stated by his counsel.

The wife of the deceased having been called as a witness ' for the State testified, that three men came to the house after dark, and having called her husband out, knocked him down and shot at him; that he fell inside the door and tried to shut it, but they would not let him. The prosecution then asked the witness the question, “Did any of the shot hit the door? ” To'which she answered: • “The shot went through the door. ” The prosecution then asked the following question: “Did you see any signs of blood?” to which an affirmative answer was given. The defendant objected to each of these questions as leading, and excepted to the ruling of the Court admitting the answers. It is'a matter of discretion with the Court to permit leading questions to be put by a party to his own witness. 1 Greenleaf Ev., Sec. 435; Moody vs. Rowell, 17 Rick., 499; Budlong vs. Van Nostrand, 24 Barb., 25; 2 Phillips Ev., (4th Ed.) 891-2, and note; York vs. Pease, 2 Gray, 282 ; State vs. Lull, 37 Maine, 240; Barton vs. Kane, 17 Wis., 37. And though this is perhaps a legal discretion which may be reviewed, this Court will not interfere except in a clear case of abuse or prejudice. Passmore vs. Brighton, 34 Maine, 240; Steen vs. Aylesworth, 19 Conn., 244. Abuse of discretion, or prejudice to the defendant, cannot be pretended in this case. The witness was examined through an interpreter, and, as the testimony shows, was not very intelligent, or quick of apprehension. For this reason it was not improper for the Court to permit the questions to be framed so as to call her attention directly to the subject of inquiry.

[109]*109■ The second objection urged is based on the ruling of the Court in receiving the testimony of Thomas Stephenson, a witness called by the State. He testified: “ Last fall I resided in the town of Dover, in this County, and was a Justice of the Peace. I knew the defendant. He was examined before me on charge of murder of Ableitner; the examination was at Ableitner’s house. ” * * The State asked the witness this question: “Did Ableitner make any request of you in regard to making his will, or in regard to the examination of Staley?” to which .the defendant objected “ as immaterial, and that there was no proof that Ab-leitner was then at the point of death, and so believed. ” The Court overruled the objection and the defendant excepted. The witness answered, “ yes. ”

The State asked the witness this question: “ State what • he said upon the subject of dying? ” To which the defendant made the same objection as before, and the Court overruled the objection and the defendant excepted. The witness answered: “1 don’t know as he said anything about his dying. ”

The State asked the witness this question : “ What was his condition at the time?” The defendant objected that the witness was incompetent and the question immaterial. The Court overruled the objection and the defendant excepted. The witness answered: “I was called therein the evening of October 30th,. by J ohn Frazier. I got there about two o’clock at night.. I found Ableitner on the bed.

I examined the wound. He was groaning terribly and apparently suffering great pain. His abdomen was very much swollen. His attendants were administering injections, once in fifteen minutes, to produce evacuation. of the bowels. There was no doctor there. The medicine was given by prescription of Dr. Wright. The wound was in the region [110]*110of the nave], on the left side. He wanted me to make his • will, and told me why. ”

The State asked the witness this question : What did lie say about it ? ” to which the defendant objected, that no foundation was laid, and it was irrelevant. The Court overruled the objection, and the defendant excepted, and the witness answered: He said he had been shot, and he wanted- to make a disposition of his property in case he should die from his wound. That was all he said on the subject. I thought best to take his affidavit, so that it could be used in case he died. Staley’s examination was the same day in the afternoon. Ableitner was present in bed at the time. John Coole acted as Staley’s attorney, and cross-examined Ableitner. ”

Though part of this evidence at least seems to be immaterial, manifestly none of it was prejudicial to the defendant. From the answers to the first two questions, no infer ■ ence could be drawn as to his guilt or innocence, and the answers to the third and fourth, only tended to establish a fact otherwise proven by indubitable and uncontradicted evidence. If incompetent — which we admit only for the . purpose of this argument — -it was merely immaterial, and not ground for a new trial.

The defendant made a confession, oral and written, to the admission of which in evidence he objected on the ground that it was not voluntary. The rule seems well settled, that if any advantage is held out, or harm threatened, of'a temporal or worldly nature, by a .person in authority, the confession induced thereby must be excluded. Reg. vs. Baldey 12 E. L. & Eq. 590; State vs. Grant, 22 Maine, 171; Com. vs. Moony, 1 Gray, 461-3. Page, the officer who made the arrest, and by whom the inducements are alleged to have been held out, is within the rule, a person in authority. If [111]*111proof of tbe confession is objected to on tbe allegation that it was improperly obtained, tbe Judge is to determine as a preliminary question whether the allegation is true in point of fact, and bis decision of tbe question is, we think, subject to be reviewed by this Court. But tbe rule is well settled, that this Court will in no case reverse tbe decision of a lower court on a question of fact, unless. it is manifestly against the weight of evidence. (Tbe same rule obtains in respect to tbe finding of facts by a court, that does to tbe verdict of a jury ; it must be clearly erroneous before it is set aside.) See 2 Ohio State Rep., 583; Humphrey vs. Havens, 12 Minn., 30J and cases there cited.

We are not called upon to determine whether tbe burden is on tbe State to show affirmatively that tbe confession was voluntary, or to negative any inducement to make it, for tbe Attórney G-eneral seems to have conceded that; and the evidence on the affirmative and negative of this preliminary question was all offered before its determination by tbe Court. Tbe Court having received tbe confession, must have determined, as a matter of fact, that it was voluntary, and tbe question presented to us is, did it clearly err in this determination ? Page was called as a witness and testified: “ I told him if he was going to say any thing be must say the truth. * * I think we all told him everything depended on Edwards being caught, as we believed him the most guilty; ” and denied that beyond what is expressed or implied by these words, there was any inducement offered.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Minn. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-staley-minn-1869.