Wilson v. United States

82 S.W. 924, 5 Indian Terr. 610, 1904 Indian Terr. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt Of Appeals Of Indian Territory
DecidedOctober 19, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 82 S.W. 924 (Wilson v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court Of Appeals Of Indian Territory primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. United States, 82 S.W. 924, 5 Indian Terr. 610, 1904 Indian Terr. LEXIS 58 (Conn. 1904).

Opinion

Townsend, J,

It was the contention of the prosecution that Wm. Couch shot deceased, Riggles, without excuse or justification, and. that appellant, Wilson, was present, aiding, abetting, and encouraging him in committing the act, and that t-hc deceased, Riggles, was standing unarmed, with his hands behind him, at the time Couch shot him; and a number of witnesses were introduced who testified to that state of facts. On the other hand, the defendant introduced several witnesses, among whom was Couch, who fired the shot, that the deceased, Riggles, was near to and advancing on him (Couch) in a threatening manner with a piece of drawn scantling, and about to strike him with it, when he shot him. Hence one of the vital questions [613]*613in tliia case was, wliat was the position and attitude of the deceased, Riggles, at the time Couch shot him?

The first error assigned by appellant was the permission given by the court to the prosecution allowing Dr. J. W. Brazel, after his examination of the wounds received bj^ the deceased, to state his opinion of the position of the arm of the deceased at the time he received the gunshot wound, and his reasons for that opinion. This was objected to bjr appellant, the objection was overruled by the court, and exception saved. The testimony of the doctor, to which objection was made and exception saved, was as follows: “Q. Doctor, did you make an examination of the. bullet wound in the arm, with reference to how the arm was at the time the bullet entered? A. Well, yes; some examination. Q. Well, I will ask you now what, in your opinion as a surgeon, was the location of the arm at the time the bullet wound was received? -Mr. Cravens: I object to that. My contention is that the doctor, taking it for granted that he was a surgeon, that he can- locate the wounds, show where they were, give an accurate description of them; but the other is a reasoning that is to follow from the facts given by him, and to be worked out by the jury, not by hini. He can describe the wound in every particular, but that is as far as he can go. The Court: The objection is overruled. Mr. Cravens: We except. Mr. Stuart: Q. What, in your judgment, was the position of the arm at the time the wound was received? A. My judgment is that the arm was slightly behind him and relaxed. Q. ' Now, doctor, you may state to the court and jury your reasons for that? Mr. Cravens: I object to that. The Court: The objection is overruled. Mr. Cravens: We except. The witness: My reason is that the arm did not correspond; that is, that it didn't make a straight opening through the skin into the muscle in any other position. Q. State that again? A. The bullet did not make— That is, it's course did not correspond with the location [614]*614of the bullet in any other position; that is, with the arm in any other position with relation to the superficial fasciae, and where it was in the muscle. Q. Doctor, was that wound a mortal one? A. It was.” The authorities are conclusive in sustaining the objection of the appellant to the expression of an opinion by the surgeon. In Brown vs State, 55 Ark. 698, 599, 18 S. W. 1051, 1052, Judge Mansfield says: “The opinion of an expert is not admissible to prove a matter of common experience and knowledge, upon which any person of ordinary intelligence is capable of arriving at a correct conclusion. 1 Wharton, Ev. § 436; Milwaukee, etc., R. Co. vs Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469, 24 L. Ed. 256; Hammond vs Woodman, 66 Am. Dec. 228, note. The testimony of medical experts forms no exception to this rule, and a physician or surgeon testifying as such cannot, therefore, give his opinion on a question which the jury was capable of answering without the aid of professional skill and experience. Cook vs State, 24 N. J. Law, 843. He may testify whether, in his opinion, a particular wound examined by himself, or described to him in the statement of a hypothetical case, was the cause of death, or was sufficient to produce death. Ebos vs State, 34 Ark. 520. He may also give his opinion as to the nature of the instrument which produced a particular wound, the force required to produce it, and whether a given injury could have been inflicted by a weapon of a particular description. Having examined a wound, a physician may state its direction upon the body; and if its appearance cannot be perfectly described to the jury, and is siich as to indicate the direction from which it was received, he may state his opinion as to such direction. Fort vs State, 52 Ark. 180, 11 S. W. 959, 20 Am. St. Rep. 163. But his opinion is never admissible to show the position of the body at the time a wound was received nor the position of the person who inflicted it.” In Williams vs State, 17 S. W. 1073 (Court of Appeals of Texas), the court says.: “The witness Alexander testified that he was called professionally to see the injured party, [615]*615Cusenberry, the night he was shot, and that he made an examination of his wounds. He was permitted to state that, ‘from the appearance of the wounds, I should judge that at the time Cusen-berry was shot he was in somewhat of an upright position. * * From an examination of the wounds, I am of opinion that he must have been in an upright position at the time the bullets entered the body/ The opinion of this witness went to show that the theory' of the defendant was not true. It ‘touched the most sensitive nerve of the defense. It was equivalent to an opinion on the question of his guilt or innocence'-/ ‘Where the jurors are as competent as any other persons to deduce the proper conclusions from a given state of facts, the opinions even of scientific witnesses are not admissible in evidence as to conclusions of inference to be drawn from them.' Cooper vs State, 23 Tex. 331. Expert opinion evidence of medical witnesses is not admissible to prove the relative positions and situations of parties involved in a homicide or an assault with intent to murder.” In Thompson vs State, 17 S. W. 449 (Court of Appeals of Texas), the court says: “The state, in order to prove its theory, introduced two physicians who were called in to attend the wounded man; and they, while there, went out and examined the locality of the shooting, and in substance, testified that from the relative position of the two parties, as pointed out to them by the witnesses who saw it, and from the appearances of the wound in the side of the deceased, the relative height of the two parties, and the shots which they saw in a post by the side of the house and a cistern 18 inches high, it was impossible that the deceased could have been standing erect when shot, being much taller than defendant, but that he must have been leaning over forward. This testimony was not objected to by defendant's counsel. Had it been objected to, under the great weight of authority, it was of doubtful admissibility, and perhaps should and would have been excluded. It is not competent for a witness to state his opinion as to the relative position of the'parties_to a [616]*616homicide, either from the appearances of the wounds or other physical facts. Where the jury is as competent as any other person to deduce conclusions from a given state of facts, the opinion even of scientific witnesses is not admissible in evidence, as it is a conclusion or inference to be drawn from them.” In State vs Rainsbarger, 74 Iowa, 196, 37 N. W. 153, the court says: “The counsel for defendant, after stating hypothetically the condition of the body of the deceased, the character of the wounds, and other matters, asked a witness, who was a physician, how the wounds upon defendant were probably made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 S.W. 924, 5 Indian Terr. 610, 1904 Indian Terr. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-united-states-ctappindterr-1904.