United States v. Macomb

26 F. Cas. 1132, 5 McLean 286
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Illinois
DecidedJuly 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 26 F. Cas. 1132 (United States v. Macomb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Macomb, 26 F. Cas. 1132, 5 McLean 286 (circtdil 1851).

Opinion

DRUMAIOND, District Judge.

The defendant was indicted under the 21st and 22d sections of the post office act of Alarch 3, 1825 (4 Stat. 107-109), for stealing from the mail a packet containing a land warrant, and fifty dollars in bank notes. It appeared that the offense was committed near Dixon, on the 1st of August, 1850. The packet was mailed at Freeport on the 30th of July, addressed to Dixon. On the day the offense was committed, the defendant was arrested at the latter place, and a few days after-wards, a preliminary examination took place there before an officer. The defendant was present with his counsel, at the examination, during which one Hurlbut, since deceased,who had enclosed the land warrant and bank notes, and directed and posted' the letter, testified as a witness for the United States. Hurlbut was subjected—to use the language of the witnesses introduced here— to a long and tedious cross-examination toy the counsel of the defendant. An objection was taken by the counsel of the defendant at the trial in this court because witnesses were permitted to state' to the jury what Hurlbut had sworn to on the preliminary examination. This objection having been overruled, and " the defendant convicted by the jury, his [1133]*1133counsel has made a motion for a new trial, and it having been argued before me, I have examined the objection with more attention than I was able to bestow upon it at the trial. No question has been made of the power of the court to grant a new trial on the application of the defendant. Indeed, notwithstanding the doubts which have been thrown on that point heretofore, and the opinion expressed by Judge Story in U. S. v. Gibert [Case No. 15,204], I should have no hesitation in granting a new trial to a party who, I thought, was wrongfully convicted, more especially if it were caused, in any degree, by the erroneous ruling of the judge at the trial. See U. S. v. Harding [Id. 15,301]. In this ease there was other evidence, independent of the testimony of Hurlbut before the committing officer, which might have authorized the jury in finding their verdict; but there can bé no doubt that his testimony may have had much influence upon the jury, and, under the circumstances of this case, I should grant a new trial if I thought the testimony should have been excluded. After reflection, however, and all the examination I have been able to give to the subject, I am of the. opinion that the ruling at the trial was cor-| reet. '

The objection resolves itself into the two following propositions; First. The declarations of a deceased witness made at a former trial between the same parties, upon the same subject matter, can never be given in evidence in criminal eases. Secondly. If they can be, it is only when ' the persons who are called on to give the declarations of a deceased witness, can repeat the precise words of the witness, and it being admitted that that was not done here, the testimony ought to have been rejected. It is well known that there has long been a difference of opinion upon both these points. It is not controverted that the testimony of a deceased witness given at a former trial between the same parties, in the same issue, is admissible in civil eases. There seems no difference of opinion as to that. But some of the authorities &c., deny the application of the rule to criminal cases. A case which is generally cited as deciding that it does' not apply to criminal proceedings, is that of Sir John Fenwick in 1696. He was charged with being concerned in treasonable projects, but the witnesses who were expected to prove his guilt having left the country, there was no sufficient legal evidence to convict him of treason before the courts of law. The government resorted to a bill of attainder in' parliament A question arose whether the deposition of a person named Goodman, who was absent, taken before a justice of the peace when neither the defend-antnor his counsel was present, should be read as evidence? It was decided in the affirmative on the ground that the commons were not obliged to adhere to the rules established in Westminster Hall. During the discussions which took place in that case, it was said that such evidence could not be admitted in criminal cases in a court of law. Of . course it is clear that such testimony could not be admitted in a court of law; for, first, the witness was living; and, secondly,, the defendant had no opportunity of cross-examining him; and however the authorities may differ as to the first, they all agree as to the second point, that being an indispensable prerequisite to the introduction of the testimony. Mr. Parke relies upon this case for his assertion that there is a distinction between civil and criminal cases in this particular. The same opinion is expressed in Finn v. Com., 5 Rand. (Va.) 701, though the question there was, whether the testimony was admissible where the witness was absent. In Crary v. Sprague, 12 Wend. 41, Judge Nelson, who delivered the opinion of the court, while be admits it is questioned by high authority, and cites Hawkins and Parke, states his own opinion, that the testimony is admissible in criminal cases. In People v. Newman, 5 Hill, 295, while deciding that nothing but the death of the witness would authorize the admission of such testimony under the law of New York, the court say, if the rule were ' otherwise in civil cases, they thought it ought not to be applied to criminal proceedings. And they distinctly waive the question whether it would be allowed at all in criminal cases, if the witness were dead. Com. v. Richards, 18 Pick. 434, was a case very much like this. A witness who had testified against the defendant at a preliminary examination before a magistrate, having died, witnesses were called to state what the deceased witness had sworn at the examination. They were permitted to testify, and the case went to the supreme court of Massachusetts on this and another point. It was like this a case of an offence which was investigated in the first place before an officer, and the party was afterwards indicted for the same offense. The case was reversed, as we shall presently see, on another ground, but the court examined at some length the authorities for the purpose of ascertaining whether there is any distinction in this particular between civil and criminal proceedings, and came to the conclusion that there is none. In U. S. v. Wood [Case No. 15,756], which, like this, was a case of robbing the mail, though the testimony was rejected because the precise words could not be given, no allusion whatever is made to any difference between civil and criminal cases. Rex v. Joliffe, 4 Term R. 290, in which Lord Kenyon used these words in relation to the rule which has been since so often quoted, was a criminal information, and he speaks of no distinction.

Most of the modem elementary writers, Phillips, Starkie, Roscoe, and Greenleaf advert to the rule as one of general applica[1134]*1134tion in all cases. And Russell, particularly, in his valuable little treatise of the Law of Evidence, which he has' added to his work on Crimes, says expressly, the rule applies tQ criminal prosecutions. 2 Russ. Ev. 683. By the statutes of Philip and Mary, magistrates were directed and required to take the depositions of witnesses in certain criminal cases, and it has always been held, under these English statutes, that if the defendant were present at the taking of the deposition, and the witness were dead, it might be read on the trial as evidence. And yet there was nothing in the statutes from which it could be inferred that depositions were to be received as evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 1132, 5 McLean 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-macomb-circtdil-1851.