State v. Mowry
State v. Mowry
Opinion of the Court
The defendant, who, on the 18th day of January, 1898, was convicted of the murder of Abbie J. Reynolds, now petitions for a new trial on the grounds (1) that the verdict is against the evidence ; (2) that the jury, during the trial of the case, went without the county of Providence ; (3) that the court erred in refusing to grant the defendant’s motion in arrest of judgment; (4) that certain erroneous rulings as to the admission of testimony were made by the court; and (5) that the court erred in various' respects in its charge to the jury.
1. An examination of the evidence in the case satisfies us that the verdict is well sustained thereby. Although the evidence is all circumstantial in its character, in so far as it tends to connect the defendant with the corpus delicti, yet it points so clearly to him as the perpetrator of the terrible crime that the jury were warranted in finding that there was no'reasonable doubt as to his guilt.
2. Was the defendant in any way prejudiced by the fact that during the trial of the case the jury went without the county of Providence ?
The trial occupied the court and jury for eight days, during all of which time the jury were ordered to be kept together, and when out of court were in charge of officers detailed by the court for that purpose. The defendant’s counsel has produced an affidavit from one of the jurors who tried the case, which sets out that on Sunday next before the finding of the verdict the jury were taken to ride and were conveyed into the town of Warren; that during said ride they separated several times for' short periods of time, some of them being unattended by any officer or other person having them in charge, and that while thus separated they were out of sight of each other.
In contradiction of this affidavit the attorney-general has produced the affidavits of five other jurors who tried said case, together with the affidavits of the officers who had the *379 jury in charge, who severally state that on the day referred' to the jury were taken to ride by permission of the court; that they rode together in one team; that during the ride they may have been taken into the town of Barrington ; but that they were not at any time exposed to any improper influence or to ahy opportunity for such influence; that they only left said carriage once, and then only for a short time when in the woods at a distance from any house and any person; ■that they were not separated from each other by more than a very short distance, and were not at any time unattended by the officers having them in charge; that no opportunity was given to anybody to exercise any improper influence over said jury, and that none was ever exercised in fact.-
But the defendant’s counsel argues that when out of the county of Providence the jurisdiction of the officers in charge of the jury ceased, and hence that the jury were not within their control or keeping during the time they were without the county, as required by law. Admitting, for the sake of the argument, that this is so; that when the jury crossed the imaginary line which divides the counties of Providence and Bristol they were free to go where they pleased, and that the officers had no control over them ; how does this fact show that the defendant was in any degree injured or prejudiced thereby ? The fact appears that they did not leave or attempt to leave the officers in charge, and that the same authority in fact was exercised over them while without the county as while within it. And the further and much more important fact also appears, namely, that no opportunity was given for any improper influence to be exerted upon any of the jurors by outsiders. In these circumstances we fail to see that the irregularity complained of, while we deprecate the remissness of the officers in causing it, is any ground for granting a new trial.
It has many times been held that the mere separation of the jury, though against the express directions of the court and in violation of their duty, will not of itself be a sufficient cause for setting aside the verdict. Thus in Smith v. Thomp *381 son, 1 Cowen, 221, two of the jurors, after they had retired to consider of their verdict under the charge of an officer, ■eluded him and left the jury room. One went to his home and the other to a tavern. Both took supper and remained all night. They joined their fellows in the morning, and the whole went into the court together and rendered a verdict for the plaintiff. The court refused to set aside the verdict •on the ground that there was no reason to believe that it had been affected by the fact of their separation, although their conduct was conceded to have been irregular and improper. “It was then remarked,” says Sutherland, J., in commenting on the case in The People v. Ransom, 7 Wend. 423, ‘ ‘ that the ancient strictness in relation to the conduct of jurors had been in modern times essentially relaxed ; and the truth of that observation, as well as the correctness of the decision, are abundantly supported by the authorities collected in the learned note of the reporter to that case. The same decisions, under circumstances essentially similar, were made in Horton v. Horton, 2 Cow. 589, and Ex parte Hill, 3 id. 355.”
It was also held in The People v. Ransom, supra, that the doctrine upon this subject is the same in criminal, and even in capital, cases as in civil. See The People v. Douglass, 4 Cowen, 26 ; The King v. Woolf, 1 Chitty’s R. 401. There is some difference of judicial opinion upon this question, however, but the almost universal rule seems to be that a separation by the jury before bringing in their verdict, even in a capital case, does not per se render the verdict void, but it will be set aside or not according to circumstances. Many cases upon the subject are collected in a note to Bish. Crim. Proc. Vol. 1, § 828. But as it is the settled law of this State that the mere temporary separation of the jury in a criminal case, where no injury has ensued to the party objecting, is no ground for setting aside a verdict, unless the separation be attended with suspicion of abuse or some improper influence (State v. O’Brien, 7 R. I. 336), it is unnecessary to further consider this branch of the case.
The caption of the indictment is as follows : “ Providence, Sc. At the Common Pleas Division of the Supreme Court of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, holden at Providence within and for the county of Providence, on the third Monday of September in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-six.”
The indictment then charges, in the several counts thereof, which are all in due and legal form, that the crime was committed on the thirteenth day of April, 1897. The caption is no part of the indictment proper, but is merely the ministerial act of the clerk or prosecuting officer. It is therefore amendable by reference to the records of the court in which it was found. State v. Gilbert, 13 Vt. 647 ; State v. Smith, 2 Harring. 532 ; State v. Conley, 39 Me. 78 ; State v. Jones, 9 Hals. 357 ; State v. Norton, 3 Zabr. 33 ; 1 Ch. Cr. L. 335 ; State v. O'Brien, 18 R. I. 110; Whar. Cr. Pl. & Pr. § 91. The caption is merely a formal statement which, though placed at the head of the indictment, is still of no higher nature than is an entry on the docket made in court by the clerk (1 Bish. Crim. Pro. § 151); and to hold that a mere clerical error therein is fatal to the indictment which follows it would be both senseless and absurd. Indeed, it is not even necessary to amend the caption, as was held in a similar case in Massachusetts, where the court said it was sufficient if reference to the other records of the court showed the time of finding the indictment. Com. v. Stone, 3 Gray, 453. The motion in arrest of j udgment must therefore be overruled.
*383 4. Did the court err in admitting the testimony of the witness Andrew J. Bolster as to what the defendant told him relative to certain alleged occurrences on the night of the murder. Witness stated that he saw and conversed with the defendant on the fourteenth of April, 1897, and that all of defendant’s conversation was about the fire and what happened at the Elisha Mathewson house on the night thereof. It should here be stated, by way of explanation, that the murder was committed in said Mathewson house on the night of the thirteenth of April, 1897, and that the house was then burned to the ground, but the murdered woman was taken out of the house by the neighbors before she was dead, although her body was somewhat burned. It should also be stated that the defendant lived in said house at the time of the murder, and had lived there for a number of years previously. To return now to the defendant’s statements. Witness was asked if defendant said anything about five men breaking into the house that night, and witness said : “ He told me that five men had broken into his house, had shot him and robbed him and then burned the building.” That defendant then went on at considerable length to describe the men, how they were dressed and armed, that they wore masks, what they did, and where they compelled him to go with them into the woods near by, after firing the house. Defendant’s counsel duly excepted to the admission of this testimony. Deputy Sheriff Oliver A. Inman was also permitted to testify, over defendant’s objection, that defendant said he was at home the night before—that is, the night of the murder; that he had undressed and gone to bed at 9:30; that very soon afterwards he was taken with a pain, and got up and dressed and took some jamaica ginger; that as soon as he became easier he went back to bed, lying down with his clothes on ; that he fell into a drowse, and when he awoke, somewhere after eleven o’clock, there were five men in the bedroom where he lay; that one of the robbers shot him in the right ear and then asked him where his money was, and he told them; that they thereupon took the money and put it in an old carpet-bag, and then they compelled him to go *384 with, them to show them the nearest way to Douglas pike, &c. Defendant’s counsel argues that the foregoing testimony, if admissible at all, must be so upon the ground that it is either a part of the res gestee or else a declaration against interest. That it is not a part of the res gestee is at once apparent ; and nobody claims that it is. The attorney-general does claim, however, that, it being the story of the defendant relating to the transaction in question, it was admissible upon elementary principles as a declaration against interest.
5. The attorney-general was permitted, against the defendant’s objection, to ask the witness Martin Y. Smith, a neighbor of defendant, whether a few weeks before the murder he had a bayonet like the one produced at the trial, and whether said bayonet was missing from its place on his premises shortly before the tragedy. The State had introduced evidence that shortly before the murder defendant had in *385 quired for a flint-lock gun with a bayonet, and that he was told that said Martin V. Smith had such a gun and bayonet and would like to sell it, and that defendant said he would go and ask him about it. The State had also introduced evidence that there were two holes through the head of deceased, that the bayonet which was produced was found amongst the debris in the cellar of the burned house, and that it exactly fitted said holes.
6. The last ground for a new trial is based upon certain alleged errors in the charge of the court. The exceptions are not set out with that degree of exactness which good practice requires, but we have nevertheless carefully considered the same, and fail to, find any reversible error in connection therewith. Some of the isolated passages which defendant’s counsel has extracted from the charge might, if taken by themselves, show that the court was inclined to express an opinion unfavorable to the defendant. But when taken as a whole, we are unable to say that it was clearly prejudicial to his rights.
Petition for new trial denied, and case remitted to the Common Pleas Division for sentence.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. Martin L. Mowry.
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- Published