United States v. Hudson

26 F. Cas. 406, 1 Hask. 527
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedApril 15, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 26 F. Cas. 406 (United States v. Hudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Hudson, 26 F. Cas. 406, 1 Hask. 527 (D. Me. 1874).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge.

The defendant, an attorney at law, resident at Guilford in the county of Piscataquis, having been found guilty of obstructing, resisting, and oppressing one H. A. Head, as a deputy marshal in the service of an execution from the district court against one Joña. H. Hall, now moves for a new trial and also in arrest of judgment.

Mr. Head was called by the government as a. witness, and testified that two executions were placed in his hands for collection by Henry D. Mitchell, the creditor, one being against said J. II. Hall and the other against liis brother Asher Hall, both of whom resided in tin* same house at Sawyerville, about six .miles from Guilford; that his instructions were, to collect the executions or bring the debtors to Bangor, the jail there being used for the detention of prisoners residen! in Piscataquis county, in which no jail is provided; that on 14tli of January, he went to the Halls', saw Asher and informed him of his business; that Asher wished to consul! with the. defendant who was his attorney, and the Halls went that evening to Guilford and saw defendant; that afterwards the same evening he came to the public house where the Halls then were; that defendant then notified him the Halls had real estate which must be taken upon the executions and sufficient to satisfy the same, and that he was bound to levy upon real estate and could not arrest the debtors on the executions in sucli a case: that a written protest to this effect was drawn up by defendant [407]*407a.mi signed by the Halls and given to him, Head; that defendant then threatened to sue and arrest Head if he should insist on holding the persons of the Halls upon the executions and taking them to Bangor, and thereupon he stated that he should insist on his rights, but would go to Bangor tor aa-vioe; that he did so and again returned to Sawyerville on the evening of January 10, and told the Halls they must go with him to Guilford, which they did; that thereupon a complaint and warrant was procured by Hudson for the false arrest and imprisonment of the Halls by Head, which was returnable the next day before one Martin, the father-in-law of Hudson, who appeared as counsel against Head; that he was convicted and sentenced to pay a fine of $10 and costs, which not being paid a. mittimus was issued for his committal to the jail at Bangor, to which city he was taken by the deputy sheriff as a prisoner; that while taking his breakfast at the public house at Bangor, and before being taken to the jail, the deputy sheriff was himself arrested on a warrant from Commissioner Band, and Head was put in charge over him, having been detained as a prisoner under these proceedings before Martin more than four days.

Upon his direct examination. Head was not asked if he arrested J. H. Hall on the execution, but in reply to inquiries put on cross-examination he stated that the tirst night at the public house, as the Halls started to leave the parlor, Hudson said to him, “Ho you consider these men arrested?” and he replied he did; that he touched Asher on the arm; that both the Halls left the room and he did not see them again that night; that he did not arrest or touch J. H. Hall nor recollect to have stated any thing different from what he has said about Asher.

The following question was then proposed by the counsel for defendant. “Did you not say, in your testimony before Commissioner Band, that you would not state which one of the Halls you touched?” The question being objected to by the district attorney, was excluded, and for this cause a new trial is sought.

This ruling was in accordance with the decision of the supreme court of this state, in State v. Knight, 43 Me. 128, in which Ten-ney, C. J., says: “It has been regarded as an established rule, that a witness cannot be called upon to state his testimony, given on a former occasion, in a trial where the same evidence is relevant; and the authorities cited for the state sustain this rule.” A careful examination of these authorities has not convinced me that they are quite so decisive of this point as the learned chief justice supposed: but the rule thus broadly laid down, whether sustained to the full extent stated by the authorities or not, has. as I understand, since been enforced in the courts of this spite, and was frequently applied in cáses within my own personal knowledge when I was at the bar. One case in particular is distinctly within my remembrance: upon the second trial of a civil cause, a witness was asked whether on the former trial she had not stated differently as a witness, and Mr. Justice Walton excluded the inquiry. Such has also been the uniform practice in this court for the past eightyears, as upon objection, I have in repeated instances ruled in the same way, and so also has Mr. Justice Clifford, in the circuit court in this district, as 1 am well advised. If this question, therefore, is to be viewed as one of practice merely, then by act of congress of 1872. c. 235, § 5 [17 Stat. 197], this court is bound to adopt and conform to the state practice: but if it is matter of evidence, then by the same act, the court is not to depart from or alter the rules of evidence under the laws of the .United States, and as practised in the courts thereof; and the exclusion of the evidence, being in conformity to the practice of the district and circuit court in this district, was correct.

It is claimed that in Knight’s Case, the question put involved an inquiry as to testimony given by the witness before the grand jury; but the rule as stated by the chief justice is not so restricted, nor lias it since been thus limited in its application, in the practice of the state or federal courts in this district

In New York and some other states, it has been held, that such a question may be put to the witness, but that he can not be required to answer it, it being a personal privilege of the witness whether to answer or not, and that it is not for the party to the cause to interpose his objection; if this should be considered the better practice (and I am by no means clear that it is not) a court would not be justified in granting a new trial for the' exclusion of a question, which a witness was under no obligation to answer, which in no way related to the subject matter of his direet examination, or tended to prove any material fact in controversy; but the only purpose and design of the inquiry could be, to discredit the witness. Bellinger v. People, 8 Wend. 595.

Judge Story in Be Marsh [Case No. 9,108], says: “The question is not whether the ruling on evidence and the directions given by the judge at the trial have been entirely correct. but whether, upon the whole case, the party moving for a new trial suffered any wrong or prejudice or injustice. The books are crowded with cases in support of this doctrine."

If the party, therefore, had at strict law a right to propound the question, it is equally certain he had no right to an answer, and he therefore certainly cannot claim he has suffered wrong or prejudice from its exclusion, especially when in the opinion of the court, there was not a material fact testified to by [408]*408Head in his examination in chief, which was not either admitted by the counsel for the defense, or established by the witnesses called by defendant: and the answer to the question thus excluded would have borne but very slightly, if at all, on the credit to be given by the jury to Head’s testimony, which was abundantly sustained by other independent evidence. The party therefore was certainly not prejudiced by the exclusion of this inquiry.

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Related

State v. Knight
43 Me. 11 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1857)
Bellinger v. People
8 Wend. 595 (New York Supreme Court, 1832)
Commonwealth v. Kane
108 Mass. 423 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 406, 1 Hask. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hudson-med-1874.