Summons v. State

5 Ohio St. 325
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 5 Ohio St. 325 (Summons v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Summons v. State, 5 Ohio St. 325 (Ohio 1856).

Opinions

Bartley, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The assignments of error in this case, present the following questions for determination:

[340]*3401st. Whether the district court erred, by admitting evidence on behalf of the State, to prove the statements of a witness (since deceased), given as evidence at a former trial on the same indictment.

And if not:

2d. Whether it be essential to the competency of such evidence, that it be given in the identical words of the deceased witness.

3d. Whether the court erred in refusing to exclude from the consideration of the jury the testimony of Logan, on the alleged ground that he had failed to narrate the statements of the deceased witness on the former trial, in all its material parts.

4th. Whether the district court erred in charging the jury that, if they were satisfied that the witness Logan had not given the substance of all the statements of the deceased witness on the former trial, they were not for that reason to exclude it from their consideration, provided, that, taking the testimony of Logan in connection with the testimony of other witnesses, they were satisfied that they had before them the substance of all the statements given by the deceased witness as evidence on the former trial.

Of these, in their order-^-

Í. It is claimed, that the admission of testimony against the accused in a criminal case, to prove the statements given as evidence on a former trial of the cause, by a witness since deceased, contravenes the provision of the tenth section of the bill of rights, which provides that, “ In any trial, in any court, the party accused shall he allowed [among other things] to meet the witnesses face to face.” This, like numerous other provisions in the bill of rights, is a constitutional guaranty of one of the great fundamental principles well established, and long recognized at common law, both in England and in this country. The scope and operation of it are clearly defined and well understood, in the common law recognition of it; and the assertion of it in the fundamental law of the State, was designed neither to enlarge nor curtail it in its operation, but to give it permanency, and secure it against the power of change or innovation.

The object of this provision manifestly is to exclude testimony [341]*341by depositions, by requiring it to be given orally, in the presence of the accused, on the trial. The admission of testimony by depositions against the accused in a criminal cause, would often afford the prosecutor great advantages over him, as well as furnish, at times, opportunities for abuses beyond the reach of detection by the defendant. Deprived of this right, the accused would often be without the opportunity of cross-examination, without the means of seeing, hearing, or knowing the persons who testify against him, and without the advantage of an oral examination of the witnesses before the jury which is to decide upon his case. But important as this right is, as established at common law, and secured by the constitution, it has application to the matter of the personal presence of the witness on the trial, and not to the subject matter or competency of the testimony to be given. The requirement that the accused shall be confronted, on his trial, by the witnesses against him, has sole reference to the personal presence of the witnesses, and it in no wise affects the question of the competency of the testimony to which he may depose. When the accused has been allowed to confront, or meet face to face, all the witnesses called to testify against him on the trial, the constitutional requirement has been complied with. This was done on the trial of the case before us, in the district court. Mary Clinch was not a witness on that trial. Being dead, it was an impossibility that she could be a witness on that trial. Logan, however, who was a witness, and did testify, did meet the accused face to face on the trial. The provision in the bill of rights was complied with. And the true question is, not whether the constitutional right of the accused was violated, but whether the testimony given by Logan on the trial was competent or not.

There are several well established exceptions to the rule that hearsay is not evidence. But if the right secured by the bill of rights applies to the subject matter of the evidence, instead of the witness, it would exclude, in criminal cases, all narration of statements or declarations made by other persons, heretofore received as competent evidence. The construction insisted on for the plaintiff in error, treats the person whose statements or declarations are narrated, as the witness, rather than the person who [342]*342testifies on the trial. This construction would exclude all declarations in articulo mortis, by confounding the identity of the dying man with that of the witness called upon in court to testify to such declarations. Precisely the same objection would exclude all declarations by co-conspirators — statements made in the presence of the accused in a criminal case, and not denied by him ; and the statements by the prosecutrix in prosecutions for rape, made immediately after the commission of the offense. And, by a parity of reasoning, the admissions or confessions of the accused, and, in prosecutions for perjury, the very testimony of the accused on which the perjury may be assigned, would be excluded by the provision in the bill of rights forbidding that any person shall be compelled, in any criminal case, to be a witness against himself.

The constitutional objection has been, on several occasions, urged against the admissibility of dying declarations. And there would seem to be even more reason for the exclusion of this, than evidence of the statements of a deceased witness on a former trial. For the latter would seem to be, now, confined to cases where opportunity for cross-examination had been afforded, and, therefore, to cases where the accused had been confronted by the deceased witness when the testimony was given on the former trial. But the competency of the testimony of dying declarations in cases of homicide, appears to have been so well settled by adjudications, that it will scarcely be questioned hereafter. Commonwealth v. Hill, 2 Grat. 594 ; Campbell v. State, 11 Georgia 353 ; Woodside v. State, 2 How. (Miss.) 655 ; Penn v. Stoops, Addison R. 381; State v. Arnold, 13 Iredell 184; McLean v. State, 16 Alabama R. 672; State v. Cameron, 2 Chand. (Wis.) 172; Greene v. State, 13 (Miss.) R. 382; State v. Shawley, 4 Harr. (Del.) 562 ; Commonwealth v. McPike, 3 Cush. 181; Montgomery v. State of Ohio, 11 Ohio Rep. 424.

Testimony of the statements of deceased witnesses given on a former trial, between the same parties, touching the same subject matter, has been admitted among the exceptions to the rule excluding hearsay evidence, from a very early period, and has been sanctioned by an unbroken current of decisions, both in England [343]*343and in this country. It has been received ex necessitate, and under proper precaution, as secondary evidence, being the best evidence the circumstances of the case admit of.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio St. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summons-v-state-ohio-1856.