State v. Weil

56 Ohio Law. Abs. 136
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1950
DocketNo. 21501
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 56 Ohio Law. Abs. 136 (State v. Weil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Weil, 56 Ohio Law. Abs. 136 (Ohio Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

OPINION

By DOYLE, J.

Theodore E. Weil, Thomas L. Murray and Forrest Gale Johnson were named in an indictment charging them with [138]*138kidnapping and raping Rosaleen O’Donnell, a twenty-four-year-old Cleveland woman. Pursuant to a joint trial by jury, Weil and Murray were found guilty on the count of rape, and Johnson was found to be not guilty. All were acquitted on the count of kidnapping.

Weil and Murray are now before this court on appeal on questions of law from the judgment of conviction of rape entered upon the verdict of the jury in the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County.

There are six assignments of error urged as grounds for reversal of the judgment. They are in brief:

1. The overruling of motions for separate trials.

2. The refusal of the trial court to allow in evidence the original affidavit filed in the Justice of the Peace Court upon which was based the commitment of the accused to the grand jury.

3. The introduction into the evidence of hospital records “containing the statements made by the prosecuting witness, in the absence of the appellants, not part of the res gestae, as to the cause of her alleged injuries.”

4. The court’s charge to the jury that the “statements or confessions of one codefendant (Johnson) could be used, against the others in the event they found there was a conspiracy.”

5. Misconduct of the bailiff of the court in communicating with the jury during its deliberations.

6. The refusal of the court, upon request of the jury, to read to it certain testimony given during the trial.

As we examine the record before us, we find that the circumstances which were established by evidence-entirety competent, were so conclusive of the guilt of the appellants that no honest jury could have refused to convict them of the crime of rape.

However, finding as we do that no reasonable person could come to any other conclusion than that the appellants are-guilty of rape, we are called upon to examine various errors, which occurred during the trial, and to determine whether a new trial must be granted because of them. (The appellants make no complaint as to the weight of the evidence.)

We first start with the principles that these defendants, are entitled to a fair trial before a jury; that they shall not be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law, nor denied the equal protection of the laws. The observance of these rights are ends in themselves, not merely means to an end, because they are guaranteed by the constitution and by a common sense of justice inherent in our American way of life.

[139]*139It is quite another thing, however, to think of rules of evidence, rules for the conduct of trials in a court of justice, and .rules of strict trial procedure, as ends in and of themselves, for these rules are but the instruments employed for an investigation of the true facts, and for the orderly and fair presentation of the evidence to a disciplined jury, to the end •that it may without improper influence arrive at the ultimate facts.

Throüghout the years, students of jurisprudence in this .country and abroad have argued whether the strict rules of evidence and trial procedure, or conduct of the jury or conduct of the attaches of a court, must be considered as ■ ends in and of themselves, so independent of justice and so .superior to truth, that such ends must be attained even at the cost of truth and justice, or whether they may be con- , sidered the means to an end — the end being a just determination of a particular controversy before a court of justice.

In respect to the admission or nonadmission of evidence, Professor Wigmore, in brief, observes that, under the old ■Orthodox English rule, an erroneous admission or rejection . of a piece of evidence was not a sufficient ground for setting aside a verdict and ordering a new trial, unless, upon all the evidence, it appeared to the judges that the truth had thereby not been reached. Such was the rule in the King’s Bench in -criminal cases. This lasted to the decade of 1830.

There then came into being a rule which in spirit and in later interpretation signified that an error of ruling created per se for the defeated party a right to a new trial. This is ■ commonly known as the “Exchequer rule.” It found recognition in the United States, in its most extreme form, in a vast .•number of decisions. There were, however, some courts in this country which refused to adopt the change. They rule that, although the reception of illegal evidence, or the refusal to admit proper evidence, is presumptively injurious to the .accused, when that presumption is repelled, and it clearly ■ appears from the whole record, beyond the possibility of rational doubt, that the result would have been the same, if the objectionable evidence had been rejected, or the compe'tent evidence admitted, the error of its admission or refusal furnishes no ground for reversal.

In recent years, through the influence of a disgusted public, ■which had seen time and time again the scales of justice heavily weighted in the interest of the criminal and untold numbers of guilty persons set free through technicalities ■.and rigid procedure, the American Bar Association and the [140]*140legislatures of various states have undertaken the problem of doing away with the pernicious rule of the Exchequer, as well as other rules of strict procedure and conduct, to the end that matters of pure procedure or the admission or nonadmission of evidence should not be given the sanctity of an absolute right precedent to conviction, and should not usurp the administration of justice as if their observance were the ends to be attained.

In line with this thought, the legislature of Ohio has enacted the following statute (§13449-5 GC):

“No motion for a new trial shall be granted or verdict set aside, nor shall any judgment of conviction be reversed in any court in case of any inaccuracy or imperfection in the indictment, information or warrant, provided that the charge be sufficient to fairly and reasonably inform the accused of the nature and cause of the accusation against him; nor for any variance between the allegations and the proof thereof unless the accused is misled or prejudiced thereby; nor for the admission or rejection of any evidence offered against or for the accused unless it affirmatively appears on the record that the accused was or may have been prejudiced thereby; nor for any misdirection of the jury unless the accused was or may have been prejudiced thereby; nor for any other cause whatsoever unless it shall affirmatively appear from the record that the accused was prejudiced thereby or was prevented from having a fair trial.”

This statute pronounces the law of Ohio, and it now becomes the duty of this court to determine its applicability to the facts before us.

1. It is asserted that the court erred in overruling motions for separate trials.

The claim was made, before trial, that one of the defendants, Johnson, had made a written confession in the absence of the others, which implicated them in the charged crime.

Under §13442-11 GC, we encounter the following rule of procedure:

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Related

State v. Bridgeman
366 N.E.2d 1378 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1977)
People v. Queen
290 N.E.2d 631 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1972)
State v. Dingus
269 N.E.2d 923 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1970)
State v. Jessop
131 N.E.2d 689 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 Ohio Law. Abs. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-weil-ohioctapp-1950.