State v. Johnson

Supreme Court of Louisiana
State v. Johnson, 41 La. Ann. 574 (La. 1889)
Bermudez

State v. Johnson

Opinion of the Court

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Bermudez, C. J.

Joe Johnson, John Hardy and two others were prosecuted for murder. The former were found guilty without capital punishment and sentenced to hard labor for life. The latter were acquitted. Johnson had severed in Ms defense. Hardy alone appeals from the verdict and sentence.

The transcript contains eleven bills of exception and a motion for a new trial.

In their brief, counsel for appellant allude to many of them, saying merely, that they are all well founded, and calling the attention of the court to the remaining ones tfiken to the refusal of the trial judge to allow them to cross-examine Joe Johnson, a co-defendant, to grant a continuance, a new trial, and to issue compulsory process against certain witnesses.

The bills will,nevertheless be considered seriatim.

I.

The first bill relates to the refusal of the trial judge to issue an attachment for Hudson, an absent witness.

It appears that this witness had not been served, because not found, as he was then in Arkansas, and was not served.

The accused made no showing to establish that he did not know of the absence of the witness, that his testimony was material, or that his attendance could be secured for an early trial.

*576It also appears that on the day previous, when the case was called and taken up, counsel for the accused, after ascertaining that this witness could not be found, stated, in answer to inquiries from the court, that another witness, Emily Williams, was the only one for whom an attachment was desired.

This was a waiver of attachments against all other witnesses. The motion presented no merit, and apparently made for delay, was properly declined.

II.

The second bill refers to the refusal of the judge to compel Johnson, while a witness on the stand, to answer questions touching certain statements said to have been made by him.

The object in view appears to have been, in putting the questions, to impeach his veracity as a witness.

As no foundation had been previously laid to put this witness on his guard, and such was essential, the court was bound to protect him, and ruled correctly.

III.

The third bill relates to the refusal of the court to allow a continuance, owing to the absence of the witness Hudson.

What has already been said to justify the court in refusing an attachment against this witness, is a ready answer to the complaint of the refusal to continue the case owing to his absence.

IV.

The fourth bill refers to the arraignment of the co-defendant Johnson, in presence of the jury before which Hardy was being tried.

As already stated, Johnson had severed in his defense. Put on the stand by the State, he refused to testify, on warning by the court that his testimony might be used against him, on his trial for the same of-fence. On his refusal to testily, he was arraigned.

It appears that the court allowed the arraignment to give the State time to serve copy of the venire and indictment on Johnson*, to expedite Ms trial- at that term of the court.

The State had a right thus to arraign the accused, as it had to arraign any other accused, and the jury had no right to consider the arraignment as having any connection with Hardy’s case before them.

It is not perceived, nor has it been shown, how this arraignment could have illegally and injuriously influenced the jury on the occasion.

The judge did not err.

*577v.

The fifth hill relates to a remark made by the judge while Johnson was on the stand, which was, that it was perfectly evident that an effort was being made by defendants’ counsel to bulldoze him.

The objection that this remark amounts to pronouncing' on the facts, which are within the province of the jury alone, is too trivial to receive .an extended notice. The judge, however, has given satisfactory reasons to show, how this remark was induced and justified.

VI.

The sixth bill refers to the refusal of the judge on objection to allow the following qxxestion to be put to a witness on the stand:

“ Do yoxx know the general reputation of Jos. Johnson for truth and veracity 9”

The coxxrt ruled that the qxxestion was not in proper form, as it did not call for the general reputation of the witness in the neighborhood in which he lived.

The question ought to have embraced at least that material element, and was properly excluded.

VII.

The seventh bill relates to the admission of the statement of a witness that another had told him that the pond was dry.”

The adrixission was opposed, because hearsay, and the declaration was made out of the presence of the accused.

The judge says that the qxxestion was designed to establish one of the mediums of information by which the sheriff was enabled to make a sxxccessful search of the knife alleged to have been used by one of the accxxsed.

No showing is made to justify tlie slightest suspicion or inference that the statement could have, or had any influence on the jury, or that the accxxsed would be or was injxxriously affected by it.

Jxxrors know, without any charge from the court, that sxxch evidence mxxst be barren of effect, paitiexxlárly in criminal cases, in which substantial and convincing proof is required for conviction.

VIII.

The eighth bill refers to the refusal of the judge to allow the defendant to introduce evidence to show that he had allowed two co-defend- . ants the privilege of bail.

Had the judge admitted the proof, he might have been amenable to the charge of indirectly commenting' on the facts, as he would not have *578permitted release on bail, had the proof been, evident, or the presumption great.

IX.

The ninth bill relates to the refusal of the judge to grant compulsory process against witnesses to substantiate the grounds upon which the motion for a new trial was founded and to grant the new trial.

It appears that the facts intended to be proved had been established at the trial and that the testimony would have been cumulative only, and that the defendant had not used due diligence, as he could and should have done, .to secure the other witness, to testify before the jury.

Tiie reasons given by the judge amply support his ruling.

X.

The tenth bill refers to the admission of the statement of the sheriff, as a witness, that the knife with which the throat of the deceased had been cut, had been thrown in the pond.

The court received the statement as corroborative of a kindred matter testified to by another witness and as designed to establish a fact which induced the sheriff to take action, which he detailed to the jury.

The court properly received the testimony.

XI.

The eleventh and last bill relates to the refusal of the judge to allow a question to be put to Johnson recalled, after he had been examined on Ms voir dire and declared competent.

The question was put during a second examinatian on his voir direj but was not allowed to be answered, as it did not affect his credibility and he was not heard otherwise in the case, because he would not testify.

XII.

It is needless to consider the motion for a new trial and the affidavit in support, as its merits have already been tested and received attention in passing upon the ninth of bill of exception.

Judgment affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
The State of Louisiana v. Joe Johnsons.
Status
Published