Raines v. State
Raines v. State
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant, being sentenced to the penitentiary for life upon a conviction of the murder of his wife, presents here many objections to the proceedings against him in the trial court. For a proper understanding of these objections, a brief statement of the matters objected to will be necessary. The record recites: “Immediately upon the conclusion of the argument for the prosecution, the audience began a demonstration of applause, which was immediately checked by the court by rapping on the table. The audience was reprimanded for it, and the court stated that there must be no further demonstration of any kind during the progress of this trial. There was a large crowd in the court room. ’ ’ The record disclosed that there was no eye witness to the killing. The evidence of it was entirely circumstantial, and the proof on the part of the state was substantially made by the sheriff of the county, who testified that the defendant told him of the kill ing, — “just said to me it was an awful thing ; he would not have had it to happen for the world ; and that it was an accident.” Bill Johnson testified that he lived at Raines’ four years ; worked.there five years, and commenced working for
That the misconduct of the audience or of others, strangers, to the proceeding, when done to affect the result of the case, may infect it with fatal error, is established by many cases in the books, not necessary to here note. The applause given- by the audience at the close of the oration of the prosecuting-counsel was intended, doubtless, to influence the verdict of the. jury, and was a gross breach of the proprieties of the occasion,, and an undisguised affront to the authority of the court. In Cartwright v. State, 16 Tex. App., 473 (49 Am. Rep. 826), in a matter of applause by the audience in like circumstances,, which was not in any way noticed by the trial court, Judges
The record discloses that there was no eye-witness to the killing charged upon the defendant. ' The evidence of it was entirely circumstantial, and the proof on the part of the state wás substantially made by the sheriff of the county, who testified that the defendant told him of the killing of his wife,— “ just said to me it was an awful thing; he would not have had it to happen for the world; and that it was an accident.” All the further proof in the case on the part of the state was in the effort to show the killing was not accidental, but was purposely and willfully done. The proof is partly noticed above, and consisted of many separate and distinct beatings or cursings of Mrs. Raines, committed at various times, running back many years, of one instance of a threat to get a divorce from her, and of continuous unpleasant relations of their married life.' The several distinct offenses proven against the defendant, as well as the repeated cursings and continuous ill treatment of his wife, extended back before the killing, to a period of ten years. Objection to this species of evidence as incompetent and illegal was made by appellant’s counsel in the court below, and is repeated to us here. Counsel for the state insists on its competency and applicability, and cite to us in its support Webb's case, 73 Miss., 456 (19 South., 238), and Story's
The third instruction for the state, which is based upon the
For the errors herein pointed out, the judgment is reversed, verdict set aside, and a new- trial is granted.
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Daniel Raines v. State of Mississippi
- Cited By
- 33 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Criminal Law and Procedure. Misconduct of audience. Applause. Misconduct of an audience, committed to affect the result of a trial, may infect the proceeding with fatal error. If an audience applaud the oration of a prosecuting attorney, the trial court should take prompt and decisive action to rebuke the breach of propriety and admonish the jury not to be misled by it. 2. Same. Evidence, scope of. Evidence should be confined to the issue joined, and in criminal cases it should be directed exclusively to the transactions of which the indictment is predicated. 3. Same. Previous crimes. Upon the trial of an indictment, a previous crime committed by defendant can be proved only: (a) Where it is connected with the one charged in the indictment, and sheds light upon the motive of defendant; or, (p) Where it forms a part of a chain of facts so intimately connected that the whole must be heard in order to interpret its several parts; or, (e) In cases of conspiracy, uttering forged instruments or counterfeit coin and receiving stolen goods, for the sole purpose of showing a criminal intention. 4. Same. Murder. Evidence. Case. It was error for the trial court, over the objection of a defendant on trial for the murder of his wife, to permit the state to prove: (a) That defendant had cursed and ill-treated the deceased for ten years before her death, and had committed many simple assaults upon her; (p) That three weeks before her death the accused, while drunk, told deceased that he would divorce her because she was slovenly in her dress; (e) That shot holes were in the walls of defendant’s residence, there being nothing to show when or how they were made; (d) That a witness who denied that defendant had made incriminating statements to him had told others that such statements were made by defendant. 5. Same. Instructions. Legal presumptions. Where the circumstances of a killing are fully laid before the jury, instructions announcing legal presumptions should not be given. 6. Same. Malice. Use of deadly weapon. Only a deliberate killing of a human being by the use of a deadly weapon imports malice, and where the defense is that the killing was accidental, an instruction informing the jury that malice may be inferred from the use of a deadly weapon, should not be given.