Territory of Hawaii v. Young

37 Haw. 150
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 1945
DocketNo. 2544.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 37 Haw. 150 (Territory of Hawaii v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory of Hawaii v. Young, 37 Haw. 150 (haw 1945).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PETERS, J.

This is a writ of error to review a judgment of conviction upon verdict of a jury of the crime of abortion. The following errors have been specified:

1. Error in instructing the jury, in defining a reasonable doubt, that such a doubt was one for which a reason could be given;

2. Error in permitting the prosecution, when defendant admitted having been convicted of a certain offense, to question him further over objection, with respect to said offense;

*151 3. Error in refusing to instruct the jury at defendant’s request that our criminal statute relating to abortion does not apply to acts to procure the miscarriage of a woman having a dead fetus in her womb.

The errors specified will be considered seriatim;

1. The language to which objection is made is but a part of the instruction given by the court upon burden of proof, presumption of innocence and reasonable doubt. The instruction in full reads as follows: “I further instruct you that the burden of proof is upon the Territory and the law presumes the defendant to be innocent, and this presumption continues and attends him at every stage of the case until it has been overcome by evidence which proved him guilty to your satisfaction and beyond a reasonable doubt. And in this connection, I instruct you that the doubt which will entitle the defendant to an acquittal must be a reasonable doubt, not a conjured-up doubt, such a doubt as you might conjure up to acquit a friend, but a doubt that you could give a reason for.

“A reasonable doubt is not a slight doubt, not a probable doubt, not a possible doubt, not a conjectural doubt, not an imaginary doubt, not a doubt of the absolute certainty of the guilt of the accused, because everything relating to human affairs and depending upon mortal evidence is open to conjectural or imaginary doubt, and because absolute certainty is not required by law. The real question is whether. after hearing the evidence and from the evidence you have or have not an abiding belief, amounting to a moral certainty that the defendant is guilty and if you have such belief so formed, it is your duty to convict and if you have not such belief so formed it is your duty to acquit.”

The cases are in conflict upon the subject. The expression “a doubt for which a reason can be given,” in more or less varying form, is found in instructions upon reasonable *152 doubt given by trial judges in federal courts. 1 In the cases cited in note one the propriety of the instruction was not questioned. In some jurisdictions similar instructions have been sustained. 2 In others they were held to constitute prejudicial error. 3 And in still others, though criticized, the error, if any, was considered harmless. 4

*153 In thé Michigan case the court made the following comment: “Conceding, in this case, that the exposition of the phrase by the circuit judge was not strictly accurate, yet it is apparent that it could have produced no practical consequence in this case.” The Ohio court observed: “This objection does not impress us as of the highest consequence.” The Oregon court said in conclusion: “The particular language in question may be, and no doubt is, subject to the criticism that it does not define, but needs defining, but we do not think it could have misled or perplexed the jury when considered in connection with the remainder of the instruction. If every criminal case is to be reversed for some technical inaccuracy in the definition of a reasonable doubt, then indeed the ‘administration of justice becomes impracticable.’ ”

The question involved arises from the difficulty encountered by trial judges in presenting to juries in criminal cases instructions for their guidance in applying the rule of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. The degree of proof necessary to convict is complimentary to the presumption of innocence and unless understood the presumption of innocence is of little protection to the accused. To instruct a jury merely that the defendant is presumed innocent until he is proved guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, while sufficient in itself to accord to him his substantial rights, has been thought by many courts, including those of Hawaii, to be insufficient as a guide to juries in arriving at their ultimate conclusions and they have attempted to define the term. These instructions have taken the form of a definition of the adjective “reasonable,” the inclusion *154 of instructions of what are not reasonable doubts and the time-honored test enunciated by Chief Justice Shaw in Commonwealth v. Webster reported in 5 Cush. (Mass.) 295, 320.

The instruction in controversy is of this type. From long continued use and uniform approval by this court when before it for review, it has assumed the dignity of a stock instruction. It came before this court in substantially the same form in 1889 in the case of The King v. Ahop, 7 Haw. 556, 560, and was approved, the author of the opinion eruditely observing that the instruction was taken from the notes to Commonwealth v. McKie, 1 Leading Crim. Cases, pages 320, 321. It was also before this court in Territory v. Robello, 20 Haw. 7, decided in 1910, and in Ter. v. Buick, 27 Haw. 28, decided in 1923, when again it was approved. While it does not appear that in any of those cases the particular error herein specified was advanced or discussed, the language giving rise to the present objection as an integral part of the definition of reasonable doubt was necessarily considered. It has also been subject to the judicial scrutiny of this court upon writ of error in three capital cases since the effective date of Laws of 1931, chapter 42, section 2, making it obligatory in case of a sentence of death to review the evidence to determine if the interests of justice require a new trial, whether the insufficiency of the evidence is assigned as error or not. 5

To the legal mind it is difficult to formulate a satisfactory definition of the term “reasonable doubt.” The difficulty seems to stem from the futile attempt to define the obvious. But instructions are addressed to the lay and not the legal mind. And measured by the purposes *155 sought to he attained, the instruction complained of is, as a whole, as good as can be devised to convey to the lay mind the ordinarily accepted definition of reasonable doubt.

“Burden of proof” is a term employed to indicate upon Avhom rests the duty of persuasion by proof. To persuade another is to convince such other that a thing is so. If convinced, such other possesses a settled belief that the thing is so.

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Related

State v. Stuart
466 P.2d 444 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1970)
Young v. Territory of Hawaii
160 F.2d 289 (Ninth Circuit, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
37 Haw. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-hawaii-v-young-haw-1945.