State v. West

13 So. 173, 45 La. Ann. 928
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1893
DocketNo. 11,274
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 13 So. 173 (State v. West) 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. West, 13 So. 173, 45 La. Ann. 928 (La. 1893).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, O. J.

The defendant was indicted for the murder of Thomas Lyall at the September term, in 1892, of the District Court for Lafourche. He was tried, found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to the penitentiary for one year.

He appealed to this court. On appeal the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court thereon were set aside and the ease remanded. State vs. West, ante, page 15.

He was tried a second time and again sentenced to hard labor in the State penitentiary at Baton Rouge for the term of one year.

Prom this judgment he has appealed, relying upon objections urged in three bills of exception, a motion in arrest of judgment and an assignment of error. The first two bills cover the same ground, and are to the refusal of the district judge to allow certain testimony to be taken, the object of which the bills declare was to show that one James Baptiste had been suspected of killing Thomas Lyall; that he had been arrested upon a warrant issued on an affidavit made against him; that he had resisted arrest, saying he would not be arrested and sent to the penitentiary for the said killing, and other things admitting the killing; that in resisting arrest the said Baptiste was shot and afterward died from the wounds so received and that it was only after the death of the said Baptiste that the defendant West was arrested for the murder of said Lyall. The objection [930]*930urged, by the State and sustained by the court to the introduction of this testimony was that it was irrelevant and hearsay.

Testimony of this character was by this court declared to be inadmissible when the case was first before us, as being hearsay. Defendant on the last trial offered it as rem ipsam. In his brief it is said: “The object of it was not to prove the truth of the statements made by Baptiste, but to prove the fact of his having made them to show the jury his belief and opinion as to the party who fired the shot that killed Lyall, and consequently to raise and substantiate any doubts in their minds as to the guilt of the defendant.”

We think the ruling of the court was correct. The testimony was irrelevant.

In Welsh vs. State, an Alabama case reported in 11 Southern Reporter, p. 451, the court said: “ The proposed testimony of the witness, Warren Lancaster, to the effect or which would have tended to show that one Lee Lancaster had admitted or confessed to the witness that he (Lee Lancaster) killed Will Welsh, for whose murder defendant was being tried, was the merest hearsay, wholly irrelevant and incompetent, and the court properly excluded it from the jury. 3 Brick Dig., p. ‘¿87, Sec. 592; State vs. Duncan, 6 Ired. 236; State vs. Haynes, 71 N. C. 79.

In People vs. Hall (Cal.), 30 Pacific, 7, defendant and one Kings-bury were arrested for an alleged burglary at the same time and place and by the same persons, and while under arrest they attempted to escape and were fired upon by their captors.

A physician was sent for to treat their wounds and Kingsbury died from the effects of- his wounds before any complaint was filed against either of the parties. In his own behalf defendant offered to prove that Kingsbury’s wounds were necessarily fatal, and that he so informed him at the time; that Kingsbury admitted to the physician that he fully realized he was mortally wounded, was on the point of death and had given up all hope of getting well.

That he was conscious of death, and that thus having a sense of impending death and without hope of reward he made a full, free and complete confession to said physician in relation to this alleged crime, stating that he himself had planned the entire scheme, and that Hall had nothing to do with it and was not connected with the guilt and was in all respects innocent of any criminal act or intent in the matter.

[931]*931This evidence was objected to and excluded. Reciting these facts the Supreme Court said: “The rule is settled beyond controversy

that in a prosecution for crime the declaration of another person that he committed the crime is not admissible. Proof of such declaration is mere hearsay evidence and is always excluded whether the person making them be dead or not.” Citing Wharton Orim. Ev. (9th Ed.), Sec. 225; Greenfield vs. People, 85 N. Y. 75; Snow vs. State, 58 Ala. 372; Lyon vs. State, 22 Ga. 400; Kelly vs. State, 82 Ga. 444; 9 S. E. 171.

Stephen in his Digest of the Law of Evidence, Art. 22, refers to Gray’s Case, Irish Circuit Reports, page 76, as sustaining the same position, and that such evidence was irrelevant.

The third bill is to the action of the court in overruling a motion for a new trial made by the defendant — on the ground “ that the verdict of the jury was contrary to the law and the evidence, and that it was rendered in opposition to the law in such cases made and provided, and in opposition to the charge as to the law laid down by the judge, and that a continuance applied for by the district attorney and granted by the court was unadvisably and illegally granted for certain reasons.

“ The statement of the court appended to this bill is that the new trial was refused because it was of opinion that there was no error in the order granting the continuance, and because even if there had been error no exception was taken at the time to the ruling of the court, but on the contrary the accused, through his counsel, consented to go to trial and did go to trial under an agreement to use the testimony of the absent witnesses of the State taken before the committing magistrate in the presence of the accused. The court considered that the verdict of the jury was responsive to the charge of the court — the court having distinctly instructed them that the accused was on his trial and could only be tried for manslaughter— that that was the only charge against him and that the only verdict they could find against him was one of guilty or not guilty as the case might be.”

Where, during the progress of a trial under the rules of practice, objections are to be raised and bills of exception reserved as occurrences take place by which a party conceives himself to be aggrieved, and he fails to make such objections and reserve such bills, he can not after verdict for the first time raise such objections and through [932]*932bills of exception then taken hold the position which he would have done originally — the lost ground can not be regained.

The record bears the court out in its statements — and his ruling was correct. Defendant moved to arrest the judgment for the reason that the verdict is illegal on the face of the record and is in nowise responsive to the matters at issue herein, in that the verdict is written upon an indictment for murder and finds respondent “ guilty at the mercy of the court,” When in truth and in fact your respondent was simply on trial on a charge of manslaughter, he having been hitherto acquitted of the charge of murder found and contained in the indictment found against him and on which the present verdict is written. The court overruled this motion and sentenced defendant to one year’s imprisonment, as has been seated.

Defendant says of this motion, it is based on the ground that the verdict of guilty, with the mercy of the court, is the verdict found against the accused on the last trial and that this verdict is written upon an indictment for murder, thus appearing

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 So. 173, 45 La. Ann. 928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-west-la-1893.