Territory of New Mexico v. Edie

7 N.M. 183
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 17, 1893
DocketNo. 482
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 N.M. 183 (Territory of New Mexico v. Edie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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 New Mexico v. Edie, 7 N.M. 183 (N.M. 1893).

Opinions

O’Brien, C. J.

rape: m¡sconduct of jury. At the last term the defendant moved for and obtained a rehearing in this cause. He then insisted, as he now insists, that the rule adopted by us in deciding it, as to the effect of the misconduct of the trial jury (see opinion 30 Pac. Rep. 851), is at variance with the doctrine enunciated in the federal supreme court in the case of Mattox v. U. S., 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 50, 146 U. S. 140. It is, perhaps, at least in a partial sense, to be regretted that this judgment must be affirmed. The evidence, we are free to admit, is not overwhelmingly convincing. But it is legally sufficient to warrant the verdict. In such case we are not at liberty to interfere with the finding of the jury. From the very nature of the crime, it would be unreasonable to expect superabundant evidence of guilt. Men of loose morals, intent alike upon the gratification of their inordinate desires and the ruin of female purity, almost invariably seek seclusion as most opportune for the gratification of their reckless passions. The victim of this defendant’s lust was almost a child, a stranger in a strange city, without a friend, except a father, to vindicate her honor. The jury heard the narrative of the transaction, as detailed by her, as well as by the defendant. Her version was believed. His, at least so far as it was inconsistent with hers, was discredited. We have as little reason as we have right to criticise the result. The testimony of the defendant, whether believed by the jury or not, as disclosed by the record, exhibits him as a man of low instincts and •depraved morals. It shows that he had planned the girl’s defilement, and used the most insidious means for its accomplishment. If not, why did he invite the :girl, almost a stranger to him, into his buggy? why ■did he keep her out all the afternoon? why did he dose her with wine? why did he not return before dark? why did he take her to his private room? why did he lock the door and detain her there? — if he did not intend, when he first saw her on the sidewalk, to make her the victim of his lust? He was a man of mature years. She was a comparative child. In a case of this character, nothing short of error prejudicial to the defendant’s rights would justify us in setting aside the verdict of Ms guilt, and awarding him a new trial. At the time this case was first heard the opinion of the supreme court in the Mattox case had not been published, and the opinion of this court was prepared jn accordance with what we believed to be the prevailing doctrine in this country. The defendant in the Mattox case, charged with the murder of one John Mullen in apart of the Indian Territory embraced within the judicial district of the state of Kansas, was tried and convicted in the district court of the United States at Wichita. Sentence of death was pronounced upon the accused, and he took the case to the supreme court of the United States upon a writ of error, where the judgment was reversed upon various alleged grounds of error. In that case the defendant, in support of his motion for a new trial, offered in the court below the affidavits of two of the trial jurors to the effect that the bailiff who had charge of the jury, after the cause had been heard_and submitted, and while they were deliberating upon their verdict, in the presence and hearing of the jurors, or a part of them, speaking of the case, said: “After you fellows get through with this case, it will be tried again down there. Thompson has poison in a bottle that them fellows tried to give him.” And at another time, in the presence and hearing of the jury, or a part of them, referring to the defendant, Clyde Mattox, he said: “This is the third fellow he has killed.” The affidavit of another juror to the same effect, in respect of the remark of the bailiff as to Thompson, was also offered, and in addition, the affidavits of eight of the jurors, including the three just mentioned, “that after said cause had been submitted to the jury, and while the jury was deliberating of their verdict, and before they had agreed upon a verdict in the case, a certain newspaper, printed and published in the city of Wichita, Kansas, known as the Wichita Daily Eagle, of the date of Thursday morning, October 8, 1891, was introduced into the jury room; that said paper contained a comment upon the case under consideration by said jury, and that said comment upon said case so under consideration by said jury was read to the jury, in their presence and hearing; that the comment so read to said jury is found upon the fifth page of said paper, and in the third column of said page, and is - as'follows: ‘The Mattox Case. — The Jury retired at Noon Yesterday, and is Still Out. — The destiny of Clyde Mattox is now in the hands of the twelve citizens of Kansas comprising the jury in this case. If he is not found guilty of murder, he is a lucky man, for the evidence against him was very strong, or at least appeared to be to an outsider. The ease was given to the jury at noon yesterday, and it was expected that their deliberations would not last an hour before they would return a verdict,’ ” etc. The bill of exceptions states that these affidavits and a copy of the newspaper were offered in the trial court by the defendant in support of his motion for a new trial, and by the court excluded.

Chief Justice Fuller, in delivering the opinion of the supreme court, says: “Private communications, possibly prejudicial, between jurors and third persons,, or witnesses, or the officer in charge, are absolutely forbidden, and invalidate the verdict, at least unless-their harmlessness is made to appear.” The chief justice continues: “The jury in -the ease before us retired to consider of their verdict on the seventh of October, and had not agreed on the morning of the-eighth, when the newspaper article was read to them. It is not open to reasonable doubt that the tendency of that article was injurious to the defendant. Statements that the defendant had been tried for his life-once before, that the evidence against him was claimed to be very strong by those who had heard all the testimony, that the argument for the prosecution was such that the defendant’s friends gave up all hope of any result but conviction, and that it was expected that the deliberations of the jury would not last an hour before they would return a verdict, could have no other tendency. Nor can it be legitimately contended that the misconduct of the bailiff could have been otherwise than prejudicial. Information that this was the third person Clyde Mattox had killed, coming from the officer in charge, precludes any other conclusion. We should, therefore, be compelled to reverse the judgment because the affidavits were not received and considered by the court; but another ground exists, upon which we must not only do this, but direct a new trial to be granted.” It will be apparent, upon comparing the affidavits set out in the opinion in this case with the affidavits in the Mattox case, that there are few, if any, points of similarity. The bill of exceptions in the case at bar contains another affidavit, made by officer Hubbell, and which was considered by the court upon hearing the motion for a new trial, which unmistakably shows that we are not in conflict with the doctrine found in the case cited, in deciding this case as we did. That affidavit is as follows: “Thomas S.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.M. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-new-mexico-v-edie-nm-1893.