United States v. Kessler

26 F. Cas. 766, 1829 U.S. App. LEXIS 275
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 23, 1829
StatusPublished

This text of 26 F. Cas. 766 (United States v. Kessler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Kessler, 26 F. Cas. 766, 1829 U.S. App. LEXIS 275 (circtdpa 1829).

Opinion

HOPKINSON, District Judge

(charging jury). It is a matter of much anxiety and regret to me, and I doubt not to you. that we are deprived of the aid of the learning and experience of the presiding judge of this court, [769]*769in the trial of this cause; and if any arrangement could have been made by which the numerous and important questions of law that liave been agitated, could have been reserved for his opinion, and, if necessary, carried to the supreme court, it would have been very agreeable to me. But the same law which authorizes a single judge to hold this court, makes it his duty to do so whenever required. The defendant has put himself on his trial before us, and he has a right to your judg-' ment and mine on his whole case. Our course is a plain one. We must render that judgment honestly and fearlessly, according to our own consciences and true opinion; and, doing this, we shall be acquitted of any wrong, even if we fall into error, and stand justified to ourselves and our country.

In the indictment now submitted to you, Henry Kessler, the prisoner at the bar, stands charged with four distinct offences; and your verdict, governed by the evidence and law of the case, will decide whether he is guilty or innocent of all or any of them. It is put beyond all doubt that a fearful crime has been committed, which, indeed, has seldom been exceeded in deep malignity and reckless cruelty. It is our duty, nevertheless, to inquire, with a deliberate and just impartiality, whether the defendant was an actor in the bloody scene, what part he took in it, and whether we have a warrant and authority to bring him to an - account for it. The first inquiry will be determined by the evidence you have heard; and the second, by the law of the land, to which we all owe an implicit obedience.

The indictment contains four counts: The first, in substance, charges that the prisoner, upon the high seas, with certain persons unknown, on board of a brig or vessel called L’Kclair, made an assault upon the master of the said brig, put him in fear, and robbed him of certain goods and moneys belonging to him. The second count charges the robbery to have been of the goods, effects, and moneys of persons unknown, and committed within a marine league of the coast of the United States. The third charges the prisoner with piratically and feloniously running away with the said brig, and with certain goods, moneys, and effects belonging to persons unknown. The fourth and last count charges the running away with the vessel and the stealing of the goods to have been done within a marine league of the coast of the United States.

It appears that in November last (1828), the brig L’Eclair was in the port of Philadelphia, when the defendant, with "five other persons, shipped on board of her as mariners. There were besides on board, the captain, a mate, and a young Frenchman. The vessel sailed from Philadelphia for Goree, in Africa, where she arrived, and remained about a month. She sailed from Goree to Cayenne, and arrived safely there; and remained there about six weeks. At this place the mate, who sailed with her from Philadelphia left her and another was taken in his place: but all the other persons who went out in her, were on board when she sailed from Cayenne. For the occurrences that happened after the vessel left Cayenne, including the horrible transactions which have brought the prisoner to the bar, we are compelled to rely on the testimony of John Battiste who was cook and steward of the brig, and is the only witness produced to give an account of them,

Before I call your attention to the cireum-stances and facts testified by this witness, it will be well to explain to you the rules of law by which his credibility may be tested. John Battiste was on board the brig when the enormities were committed; he received, by fear and compulsion, as he says, a part of the plunder; he made no’ discovery of the crime on .his arrival in the United States, but appropriated the money he had received to his own use, telling a falsehood as to the manner in which he had obtained it; and disclosing what he now has sworn to be the truth, only on being arrested and charged with the crime. Still we are hardly authorized to say he is an accomplice; he has made no such confession, nor is he charged as such in the bill before us. If, however, his evidence is to be considered as that of an accomplice, which is putting it in its worst light, it does not follow that it is to be disbelieved. The law, founded not only on good policy but on good sense also, admits such evidence to be competent, and then endeavours by certain wholesome and reasonable restrictions to guard the innocent from injury from witnesses in such suspicious circumstances. It is certainly true that when a witness is admitted to be competent. his credibility rests entirely with the jury, who may therefore convict upon the testimony of an accomplice, though unsupported by any other proof, and if they conscientiously believe him, it is their duty to do so. This, however is seldom the case; and it is usual for the court to advise a jury not to regard the evidence of an accomplice unless he is confirmed in some parts of his evidence by unimpeachable testimony. But you are not to understand by this that he is to be believed only in such parts as are thus confirmed, which would be, virtually, to ex-elude him, inasmuch as the confirmatory evidence proves of itself those parts it applies to. If he is confirmed in material parts, he may be credited in others; and the jury will decide how far they will believe a witness, from the confirmation he receives by other evidence; from the nature, probability and consistency of his story; from his manner of delivering it. and the ordinary circumstances which impress the mind with its truth.

The credit which shall be given to the evidence of John Battiste, is unquestionably of primary importance in the decision of this cause. It is from him only we have the details of the awful crimes which sacrificed three unoffending victims to avarice and cru[770]*770elty, and of tlie part taken by the several actors in this bloody tragedy. He avers his ignorance of this conspiracy, he denies any participation in it, and pretends that his acquiescence was owing to menaces and fear of his own life. On the other hand, we iind him receiving, reluctantly, he says, his share of the plunder: coming off from the vessel in apparent good fellowship with the murderers and robbers. He comes with them all io Brooklyn, a considerable town, opposite to New York; he goes into that city with the present prisoner; he comes on to Philadelphia, and proceeds to Cape May, the place of his residence, never giving the slightest hint of the crimes he had seen committed, nor taking a step to have the offenders brought to justice. On the contrary, he sits himself down quietly to enjoy his portion of the plunder; be buys land, and makes other purchases with the money, and in short appropriated it to his own use. as it it were honestly his own. In addition to this, he told a falsehood to those who inquired how he obtained so much wealth, saying he got it from his sister in the West Indies. All this weighs heavily upon him; and for the part he really took in the murder and robbery, if he took more than lie has avowed, he must answer not only to the justice of this country, but to a more awful tribunal hereafter. Notwithstanding all this, he may have told the truth to you, and under circumstances and with corroborations which will entitle him to belief.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 766, 1829 U.S. App. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kessler-circtdpa-1829.