State v. Mintz
State v. Mintz
Opinion of the Court
— Convicted of burglary in the second degree and larceny, defendant was by the circuit court of St. Louis county sentenced to serve four years in the penitentiary and has appealed.
Defendant was indicted jointly with Michael O’Connor and George Meyers but was’ separately tried. Meyers, who had not yet been put upon his trial, testified in defendant’s behalf, denying any conspiracy with defendant, or any other person, to commit the crime charged, denying complicity in it and also denying any personal acquaintance with' defendant. The State’s theory was, and its evidence tended to show, that the three coindictees, with another, conspired to commit the offense and that Meyers and O’Connor did the actual breaking, entering and stealing, the part of Mintz being to gather up the goods thrown from a moving car by them.
With respect to Meyers’s testimony the court, over defendant’s objection, gave the jury the following instruction:
“The witness George Meyers, although jointly indicted with the defendant Samuel Mintz, is a competent witness on behalf of said defendant, Mintz; but the fact that he is jointly indicted and his interest, if any, in the result of the case, may be considered by you in determining the credibility of his testimony. Yet, as a whole, you should receive and consider his testimony like that of any other witness and subject to the same rules as explained in other instructions.”
It is earnestly insisted that the giving of this instruction constituted reversible error. An instruction identical in character but, in terms, applicable solely to a defendant on trial was held not erroneous in
The correctness of these decisions is not assailed by counsel hut it is urged that whether sound or otherwise they are not in point because the decision in the Maguire case, upon which the series is founded, was grounded upon the statute (E. S. 1909, Sec. 5242) which removed the ban of incompetency from the testimony of a defendant in a criminal case, while, it is declared, no statute is available as the basis of a like rule and like instruction in the case of a codefendant, not put upon his trial, who testifies for a defendant jointly indicted with him.
At common law “one of two or more joint defendants cannot be a witness for or against another, even on a separate trial, until the case as to himself is disposed of, by plea of guilty, or a verdict of conviction or acquittal or a discharge on a plea in abatement.” [State v. Chyo Chiagk, 92 Mo. l. c. 402, quoting 1 Bishop, Crim. Proc., Sec. 1020.] In that case (407, et seq.) it was held that the identical clause of the identical section (then Sec. 1918, E. S. 1879) which rendered the defendant competent as a witness, and which had been mentioned in discussing the instruction as to the defendant complained of in the Maguire
We are asked now to sanction the extension of the principle, if such it can be called, to a new and different class — codefendants not on trial. The reasons (quoted) which have induced the mere refusal to reverse when like instructions have been applied to defendants on trial would seem not to be of a character to produce the firmest conviction that they may, withoiit question, be applied to other classes of witnesses. The interest of a defendant on trial in the result of
The fact that the statute referred to, as always construed, includes alike the defendant on trial and a codefendant not on trial, does not, of itself, make the decision in State v. Maguire and subsequent like cases authorities in the present case, that statute in nowise affirmatively authorizing any separate instruction as to the credibility of any one within ^ its purview, the ground of the decisions mentioned being merely that the obviousness of a defendant’s interest renders the instruction as to him harmless as well as useless and there being a marked difference between the interest of a defendant on trial and that of a co defendant who testifies for him. In truth the statute, so far as now pertinent, merely lays down a rule ■ of evidence and cannot be said to authorize giving a specific instruc
The rule requiring cautionai’y instructions to be given concerning the care with which the jury should scrutinize the testimony of an accomplice who testifies for the State, furnishes no support for the instruction given in this case concerning the testimony of a coindictee. That rule is based upon the fact that one who goes upon the stand at the State’s instance and confesses his infamy is to an extent impeached from his own lips, and that there is grave danger that such a one may, in order to escape the punishment he confesses he deserves, substitute another as the actual perpetrator of the crime. [State v. Chyo Chiagk, supra.] A coindictee, testifying for his codefendant and denying all complicity in the crime, is obviously in no such situation, and if his testimony, is open to suspicion it is for entirely different reasons.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
— The foregoing opinion is
adopted as the opinion of the court in so far as it reverses the judgment and remands the cause for prejudicial error in giving the cautionary instruction as to the testimony of the codefendant. Such an instrue-' tion has been held proper as to the testimony of the defendant on trial many times by this court, but it has been so held because, as said in the case of State v. Maguire, 69 Mo. l. c. 202: ‘ ‘ The instruction simply declares the law. The statute authorizing the accused, in criminal cases, to testify in his own behalf,, provides that the fact that he is the person on trial! ‘may be shown for the purpose of affecting his or her credibility.’ It certainly gives the jury, if properly composed, no information. And the legal proposition!, it asserts is incontrovertible.” The statute giving the State the right to show that the defendant is the person on trial or the husband or the wife of such person “for the purpose of affecting the credibility of such witness,” does not include the case of a codefendant testifying as a witness. And while we have-construed the statute as authorizing a cautionary instruction as to the testimony of the person on trial.,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. SIMON MINTZ
- Status
- Published