Vass v. Commonwealth

24 Am. Dec. 695, 3 Va. 786, 3 Leigh 786
CourtGeneral Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 24 Am. Dec. 695 (Vass v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering General Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vass v. Commonwealth, 24 Am. Dec. 695, 3 Va. 786, 3 Leigh 786 (Va. Super. Ct. 1831).

Opinion

Lomax, J.

delivered the opinion of the court. The question of the competency of testimony may depend upon facts extraneous and collateral to the testimony; or the matter and manner of the testimony may be such as to render it inadmissible. To make dying declarations receivable as evidence in any case, it has been laid down, that it must appear that the deceased was conscious of his being in a dying state, at the time he made them. This inquiry into the consciousness of the deceased, is collateral to the evidence of the dying declarations themselves, and the judgement to be pronounced upon it, depends upon proofs which may be wholly distinct from and unconnected with the declarations. So, all testimony presupposes the sanity of the witness who deposes, and whenever the question of sanity is raised, for the purpose of excluding the evidence which is offered, it must depend upon collateral proofs. These questions as to the competency or admissibility of testimony, at whatever stage of the trial they may be raised, (though regularly they [794]*794ought to precede the introduction of the testimony objected to) are referred to the decision of the judge. “ As it is the province of the jury to consider what degree of credit ought to be given to evidence, so it is for the court alone to determine, whether a witness is competent, or the evidence admissible. Whether there is any evidence is a question for the judge; whether it is sufficient is for the jury. And whatever antecedent facts are necessary to be ascertained, for the purpose of deciding the question of competency, as for example, whether a child understands the nature of an oath, or whether the confession of a prisoner was voluntary, or whether declarations, offered in evidence as dying declarations, were made under the immediate apprehension of death; these, and other facts of the same kind, are to be determined by the court, and not by the jury.” 1 Phil. L. Ev. 13. (edi. 1816). Clayton v. Anthony, 6 Rand. 299. Chaney v. Saunders, 3 Munf. 51. This preliminary adjudication of the court upon the question as to the admissibility of the testimony, in case the evidence be allowed, has decided nothing in regard to its credibility. That peculiar province still remains for the jury. It is every day’s practice to admit evidence as competent, which the jury have no hesitation in disbelieving. The court may decide, upon examination of proofs, that a witness is not incompetent for want of reason or understanding: the jury may, notwithstanding, determine within their province, what is the weight of his testimony, and may graduate the credit they will repose in it, from the point of total disbelief to that of the most implicit confidence., If in the judgement pronounced by the court, upon the question of competency, any error be committed, a bill of exceptions, embodying all the facts and circumstances upon which that judgement was given, is the proper mode of presenting the error to an appellate jurisdiction, for review and reversal. If no exception be taken, or if it do not appear what evidence was given to the judge, upon this collateral inquiry in regard to the competency of the evidence, all must be presumed to have been [795]*795legal and right. If the jury, in finding a verdict against the prisoner, have committed a mistake, and given undue credit to the testimony, the proper corrective is an application for a new trial, to the court which tried the cause; and if there be any mode of bringing to the consideration of the appellate court, the error of the court below in overruling the application, it would be by a bill of exceptions, stating all the proofs which were offered to the jury. The bill of exceptions must, in either case, adapt itself to the nature of the error complained of, and shew precisely wherein it was committed. It is upon the former ground alone that this case is brought before u's.

If, therefore, in the case now under consideration, the error complained of was, that the judge had admitted testimony of dying declarations which was incompetent, because the deceased, when he made them, was not under the apprehension of impending death, and was not of mental capacity to testify, we must refer to the record to ascertain, whether the matters therein stated shew, that the judge must have erred in admitting this evidence; and, in considering this question, we must view it exclusively as a question of mere competency, wholly distinct and apart from any consideration of the weight it might have been entitled to with the jury. The evidence would not be the less competent, though the court might think the jury would have done right in wholly disregarding it.

In this bill of exceptions, it is expressly stated, that the judge was of opinion, that the deceased was conscious of his approaching death, at the time the questions were put to him, and his answers thereto were given; and also that he was in his right mind and understood the questions. The evidence, to sustain this opinion in regard to the mental capacity of the deceased, was, (as it is stated in the bill of exceptions) that many witnesses, who saw the deceased in the interval between the time he received the wound and his death, and at the time the questions were put to him, gave evidence, that he was in his right mind. In regard to [796]*796the consciousness of the deceased of his impending death, the only direct testimony in the record, bearing upon this point, is the affirmative answer of the deceased to the question which was asked him, “ Do you think you are going to die?” But the consciousness of approaching death may be collected as well from the circumstances of the case (as from the nature of the wound and the state of the body) as from expressions used by the deceased. Woodcock’s case, 2 Leach C. C. 563. Dingler’s pase, Id. 638. John’s case, 1 East’s P. C. 357. This court, therefore, has clearly no warrant for pronouncing, that the opinion of the judge, as to the sanity of the deceased, and his consciousness of approaching death, was erroneous, unless it can be contended, that the facts stated in the record, furnish such conclusive proof that the deceased was unsound in his mind, and unconscious of imminent death, that it could not be disproved by other evidence however direct and cogent. What are the facts as stated in the record upon this subject?

It appeared, that the deceased received a stab with a knife on Thursday night; that from the time he received the wound until his death, which was sometime in the day of Sunday following, for much the greater part of the time (in consequence of the wound) he was unable to speak at all, and when he was able to speak, he could only utter a short word or two at a time; that the only answers he made to the inquiries that were propounded to him, were the words “ yes sir,” responding to three of the questions; and when a fourth question was put, he was unable to answer it. Whatever inferences the jury would have been warranted in drawing from such circumstances, to throw discredit upon the evidence arising from these answers thus given, this court cannot pronounce, that the condition of the deceased, as exhibited upon these proofs, could not possibly have been consistent with proof of a competent sanity of mind, and of a consciousness of approaching death.

In deciding then, whether, under the circumstances in the bill of exceptions stated, the evidence of the death-bed [797]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Daughters v. Commonwealth
73 S.W.2d 10 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1934)
Pippen v. Commonwealth
86 S.E. 152 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1915)
Mullins v. Commonwealth
75 S.E. 193 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1912)
People v. . Smith
10 N.E. 873 (New York Court of Appeals, 1887)
Claiborne v. Parrish
2 Va. 146 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1795)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Am. Dec. 695, 3 Va. 786, 3 Leigh 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vass-v-commonwealth-vagensess-1831.