Stringfellow v. State

26 Miss. 157
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 26 Miss. 157 (Stringfellow v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stringfellow v. State, 26 Miss. 157 (Mich. 1853).

Opinion

Mr. Chief-Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error was indicted and tried in the circuit court of Issaquena, and convicted of the murder of Decatur Whitley. The bill of exceptions filed to the decision of the court overruling the motion for a new trial, embodies the whole of the evidence submitted to the jury. Several exceptions were taken to the ruling of the court in reference to the admission of evidence on the trial. The charges of the court, and its refusal to instruct the jury as requested by the counsel for the plaintiff in error, are made the grounds of exception. The bills of exception filed to these various acts of the court, present the questions which it becomes our duty to examine and decide. The questions arising upon the introduction of evidence, naturally present themselves first for our consideration.

During the examination in chief of a witness called on the part of the prosecution, the following question was propounded by the prosecuting attorney, Did you ever receive a letter purporting to be from Decatur Whitley, and if so, at what place was it written and dated, where postmarked, and when did you receive it? To which the prisoner’s counsel objected, without stating the ground of objection. The court disallowed the exception, and permitted the witness to answer. The witness answered as follows, to'wit: that he had received a.letter purporting to have been written by Whitley. It was postmarked at Ashton, and was dated on the inside from the island of Bunch’s Bend Cut-off. That he did not remember the date of the letter. It was received by him about three weeks before he came to Mississippi, in the latter part of October or the first of November. The answer was excepted to, but the objection was overruled, and it was permitted to go to the jury.

It is now insisted that the question was a leading one, and the answer thereto illegal and incompetent evidence.

A leading question has been defined to be one which directly suggests the answer which is desired, or which embodies a material fact and admits of an answer by a simple negative or [160]*160affirmative, though neither the one nor the other be directly suggested. 2 Phil. Ev. 401; 1 Greenl. Ev. 553. But in the examination of a witness, if the object be to direct his mind, with the more expedition, to what is material; and if the question propounded relate merely to introductory matter, it should not be objected to, although in form it be leading. Hence it is not unfrequently a matter of great difficulty to distinguish between those questions which are not to be tolerated because they are leading, and those which are such in form, but in effect are only calculated to lead the mind of the witness to the subject of inquiry. So in the case under consideration, if the question be determined by the test above laid down, it is, at least, very doubtful whether it should be held objectionable on the ground that it is leading; but if tried by the principle recognized in Turney v. The State, 8 S. & M. 104, it would seem clearly to be exceptionable on that account. In that case, after a witness, who had previously testified that about the first of December, 1844, the defendant had committed a rape upon her, was asked, on her examination in chief, by the district attorney, If defendant then, or at any subsequent time, said any thing to you in relation to this matter to dissuade you from disclosing it? State when, and where, and what he said.” Again. “ If defendant, in any of his antecedent conversations, offered property or any other advancement to you, in order to attach .you to him, say so.” And again the witness was asked, “ If any time subsequent to this transaction, defendant said any thing about what punishment the laws of Mississippi would inflict on him or you or both ? State all.” These questions were, after mature deliberation, held by a majority of this court to be leading; and because they were permitted to be propounded to the witness, the judgment of the circuit court was reversed. It is obvious that if these were leading questions, the one under consideration was improper.

The following questions, set out in the second and fourth bills of exceptions, are objected to on the same ground, to wit: 1. “ If he (witness) was induced to leave Alabama and go to Mississippi by reason of a letter received from Decatur Whitley ? ” 2. Did you carry property from Bunch’s Bend [161]*161in Issaquena county, as the property of Decatur Whitley, deceased ? ” The answers to these questions are set out in the bills of exception, and were objected to as illegal and incompetent testimony.

It is obvious that the latter question was illegal. No direct evidence had been adduced to prove that a homicide had been committed upon the person of Decatur Whitley, or that the killing occurred within the county of Issaquena. If the prosecution failed to establish either of these facts, the acquittal of the prisoner would necessarily ensue. It was therefore indispensable to prove, not only that Whitley was dead, but that he had been killed in the county of Issaquena. If it could be proved that Whitley had been murdered, and that about the alleged time of the murder he was in the county of Issaquena, the jury might infer that the deed was there perpetrated. If the fact that the witness had carried property, as the property of the deceased, from that place to Alabama,. conduced to prove that he was at the time alleged in that county, the question was clearly leading; and it was particularly objectionable because it assumed a fact not proven, that is, the death of Whitley.

Another and a more serious objection to the first and last questions which we have been considering, arises when they are looked at in a different point of view. The matter intended to be extracted by these questions was irrelevant, and therefore incompetent evidence in the cause. By the first question, the witness is asked if he had ever received a letter purporting to be from Decatur Whitley ? if so, at what place was it dated, and where postmarked ? Supposing the witness to state, as in fact he did, that he had received a letter purporting to be from Whitley, and that it was dated at the place and near the time when the alleged homicide occurred.; it will certainly not be contended that such an answer was competent evidence. If it were admitted to have been competent to give parol evidence of the contents of the letter, without first proving that it was in the handwriting of Whitley, or accounting for its non-production, the answer of the witness would not ascend upon the roll of testimony even to the dignity of hearsay evidence. But let [162]*162-it be assumed that the letter was proved to be in the handwriting of Whitley, and that it was dated from the island of Bunch’s Bend Cut-off. Upon such admission, a. fact would be established from which the jury might legitimately have, drawn the conclusion that the letter was in point of fact written by Whitley whilst upon the island; but it could certainly not warrant the presumption that he was there at any other point of time, and more especially at the date of the alleged murder. If the fact had been conclusively proved, by direct evidence, that Whitley was, within some short time before the alleged homicide, upon the island, the presumption might have been feebly indulged, that he remained there until its occurrence.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Miss. 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stringfellow-v-state-miss-1853.