Thompson v. Missouri

171 U.S. 380, 18 S. Ct. 922, 43 L. Ed. 204, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1611
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 31, 1898
Docket623
StatusPublished
Cited by248 cases

This text of 171 U.S. 380 (Thompson v. Missouri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Missouri, 171 U.S. 380, 18 S. Ct. 922, 43 L. Ed. 204, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1611 (1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record suggests many questions of law, but the only one that may be considered by this court is whether the proceedings against the plaintiff in error were consistent with the provision in the Constitution of the United States forbidding the States from passing ex post facto laws.

Thompson was indicted in the St. Louis Criminal Court at its November term 1894 for the murder, in the first degree, of one Joseph M. Cunningham, a sexton at one of the churches in the city of St. Louis. Having been tried and convicted of the offence charged, he prosecuted an appeal to the Supreme Court of Missouri, and by that court the judgment was reversed and a new trial was ordered. State v. Thompson, 132 Missouri, 301. At the second trial the accused was again convicted ; and a new trial having been denied, he prosecuted another appeal to the Supreme Court of the State. That court affirmed the last judgment, and the present appeal *381 brings that judgment before us for reexamination. State v. Thompson, 42 S. W. Rep. (Missouri) 949.

The evidence against the accused was entirely circumstantial in its nature. One of the issues of fact was as to the authorship of a certain prescription for strychnine, and of a certain letter addressed to the organist of the church containing threatening language about the sexton. The theory of the prosecution was that the accused had obtained the strychniné specified in the prescription and put it into food that he delivered or caused to be delivered to the deceased with intent to destroy his life. The accused denied that he wrote either the prescription or the letter to the organist, or that he had any connection with either of those writings. At the first trial certain letters written by him to his wife were admitted •in evidence for the purpose of comparing them with the writing in the prescription and with the letter to the organist. The Supreme Court of the State, upon the first appeal, held that it was error to admit in evidence for purposes of comparison the letters written by Thompson to his wife, and for that error the first judgment was reversed and a new trial ordered. 132 Missouri, 301, 324.

Subsequently, the general assembly of Missouri passed an act which became operative in July, 1895, providing that “ comparison of a disputed writing with any writing proved-to the satisfaction of the judge to be genuine shall be permitted to be made by witnesses, and such writings and tho evidence of witnesses respecting the same may be submitted to the court and jury as evidence of the genuineness or otherwise of the writing in dispute.” Laws Missouri, April 8, 1895, p. 284.

This statute is in the very words of .section 27 of the English Common Law Procedure Act of 1854,17 & 18 Vict. c. 125. And by the 28 Vict. c. 18, §§ 1, 8, the provisions of that act were extended to criminal cases.

At the second trial, which occurred in 1896, the letters written by the accused to his wife were again admitted in evidence, over his objection, for the purpose of comparing them with the order for strychnine and the letter to-the *382 organist. This action of the trial court was based upon the above statute of 1895.

The contention of the accused is that as the letters to his wife were not, at the time of the commission of the alleged offence, admissible in evidence for the purpose of comparing them with other writings charged to be in his handwriting, the subsequent statute of Missouri changing this rule of evidence was ex postfacto when applied to his case.

It is not to be denied that the position of the accused finds apparent support in the general language used in some opinions.

Mr. Justice Chase, in his classification of ex post facto laws in Calder v. Bull, 3 Dall. 386, 390, includes “ every law that alters the legal rules of evidence, and receives less or different testimony than the law required at the time of the commission of the offence in order to convict the offender.”

In Kring v. Missouri, 107 U. S. 221, 228, 232, 235, the question arose as to the validity of a statute of Missouri under which the .accused was found guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree and sentenced to be hung. That case was tried several times, and-was three times in the:Supreme Court of the State. At the trial immediately preceding the last one Kring was allowed to plead guilty of murder in the second degree.' The plea was accepted, and he was sentenced to im-prisonment in the penitentiary for the term of twenty-five years. Having understood that, upon this plea, he was to be sentenced to imprisonment for only ten years, he prosecuted an appeal, which resulted in a reversal of the judgment. At the last trial the court set aside the plea of guilty of murder in the second degree — the accused having refused to withdraw it ■— and, against his objection, ordered a plea of not guilty to be entered in his behalf. Under the latter plea he was tried, convicted and sentenced to be hanged. By the law of Missouri at the time of the commission of Kring’s offence, his conviction and sentence under the plea of guilty of murder in the second degree was an absolute acquittal of the charge of murder in the first degree. But that law having been changed before the final trial occurred, Kring contended that the last *383 statute, if applied to his case, would be within the prohibition of ex post facto laws. And that view was sustained by this court, four of its members dissenting.

In the opinion of the court in Kring’s ease reference was made to the opinion of Mr. Justice Chase in Calder v. Bull, and also to the charge of the court to the jury in United States v. Hall, 2 Wash. C. C. 366, 373. In.the latter case Mr. Justice Washington said: “ An ex post facto law is one which, in its operation, makes that criminal or penal which was not so at the time the action was performed; or which increases the punishment; or, in short, which, in relation to- the offence or its consequences, alters the situation of a party to his disadvantage.” He added: “ If the enforcing law applies to this case, there can be no doubt that, so far as it takes away or impairs the defence which the law had provided the defendant at the time when the condition of this bond became forfeited, it is ex post facto and inoperative.” Considering the suggestion that the Missouri statute under which Kring was convicted only regulated procedure, Mr. Justice Miller, speaking for this court, said: “ Can any substantial right which the law gave the defendant at the time to which his guilt relates be taken away from him by ex post facto

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Bluebook (online)
171 U.S. 380, 18 S. Ct. 922, 43 L. Ed. 204, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-missouri-scotus-1898.