Court Opinion

ID: 6529455
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 19:59:34.171018+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:19.282081
License: Public Domain

GOLDTIIWAITE, J.-
-The correctness of thq several decisions made by the Circuit court, on the questions reserved by it, will be considered in the order in which they are presented.
1. The general rule on the subject of permitting testimony to be given of matters not alleged, is, that nothing shall he given in evidence, which does not directly tend to the proof or disproof of the matter in issue. A leading case, illustrative of tiiis principle, is cited in Philips’ *516Evidence, p. 170 — Upon an indictment for an infamous crime, an admission, by the defendant, that he had committed such an offence at another time, and with another person, and had a tendency to such practices, ought not to he received. Arehbold, in his treatise on Criminal Pleading, asserts, that, in fact, there is no exception to this rule in criminal cases, although there are some, which seem to. he so. It will be unnecessary to examine those cases which seem to present exceptions to this rule, as the one now to be considered, presents no claim to be classed as such. It is difficult to perceive, what other tendency, than to create a-prejudice against the prisoner, the proof that he was seen talking with other slaves, at the distance of eighteen miles from the place where the crime is charged to have been committed, could have. It certainly-did not, nor could, show his guilt in the particular transaction charged against him: If evidence'of this character is permitted to affect an individual, he ought to be allowed the chance to explain and controvert it, but this he never could be prepared to do, unless advised before the trial, of what was to be urged against him. The fact, that the prisoner was seen at Athens, a few days before the commission of the crime, was properly enough in evidence, as directly tending to shew, that he was in the same section'of the State where the crime was committed; and it might be important to trace him, step by step, from thence to the place of the larceny : but evidence of any act, or his general conduct, not connected with the crime charged, ought not to have been received. In a case otherwise doubtful, and depending purely on circumstancial evidence, a fact like *517the 011c detailed by the witness, might and would have a direct tendency to produce the most fatal coni equences, to the accused. The circumstance, in itself, is trivial and unimportant; hut connected with the charge laid in the indictment, ceases to he so, and would operate with fearful effect on a stranger. We cannot suppose, from the other facts which are detailed, that this evidence could have weighed a straw in the balance; but we are not sitting to determine the weight of the testimony, but to pronounce- the law as to its competency. It was improper evidence, and ought not to have been admitted., .
2. The evidence offered by the prisoner, of his assertion of a claim to the slave, when he was arrested, was properly rejected, as was also all the evidence touching the bill of sale. The- general rule, that one shall not be permitted to make evidence for himself, is familiar to every lawyer ; but the prisoners counsel supposes that the case of larceny creates an exception, as one who takes property under a bona fide caim of right, cannot be guilty of this offence. This claim of right must be asserted before, or at the taking, to enable the prisoner to. give evidence of his own declarations; and even then, the bona fides of the assertion, is always a subject for the consideration of the jury. To permit one, after the act committed, to give his own assertions in evidence to establish a claim, would, in most cases, defeat the ends of justice, if any reliance was placed on such assertions.
The notice given by the solicitor, to produce the .bill-bill of sale on the trial, did not authorise the prisoner to use it without proof. The rule as to the introduction of such evidence, is clearly, laid down by most elementary *518authors on evidence, and may he stated thus: If produced on the motion, it may be read by the party who has requested its production, but if he does not choose to give it in evidence, the mere notice will not have the effect to allow the party in whose possession it lists been, to read it without proof—(2 Starkie on Ev. 360.) A different rule would produce the result of making evidence, by the mere act of notice: and a false instrument might he introduced, which it would be difficult, if not impossible, to disprove.
¡\^y 3. The most important question presented, is the one arising out of the charge of the court. It assumes that the prisoner could commit a larceny in Dallas county, although he may not have been there when it was committed. The charge requested was, “ that unless the jury believed the prisoner was in company with the ne-groes in Dallas county at the time, or after they left Ca-hawba, he could not he indicted in Dallas county, and therefore, they should acquit.1” The instructions given were, “ that if they (the jury) believed the prisoner had concerted with the negro to go off with him to Mississippi; and the negro, in pursuance of that concert, had left the possession of the master, and was the* under the direction, and was acting under the control of the prisoner, they were authorised to infer that the negro was in his possession from the time he left his master, although the prisoner might have been in Perry county.” To determine whether these instructions were correct, resort must be had to the statute: this provides, “ if any person shall steal any negro or mulatto slave whatsosver, out of, or from the possession of the owner or overseer of *519such slave; the person or persons so offending, shall be, and are hereby declared to be felons, and shall suffer death.”
There is no new rule introduced by it, from which we can presume that the general assembly intended to provide that the stealing of a slave should be established in any other or different manner, than the stealing of any other chattel endowed with volition and the power of locomotion. Most of our sister States, possessing this description of property, have deemed it essential to the in.-' terests of their citizens, to make the inveigling or enticing slaves from their owners, high offences. It must be evident to all. that in many cases besides mere larceny, slaves may be wholly lost to their owners, by the acts or contrivances of others; and we cannot doubt the propriety of some amendment to our criminal code, in this particular. Our duty, however, is performed, when we decide on the laws as they exist, without suggesting alteration or change. To constitute larceny, there must not only be a taking, but a carrying away. A bare removal, however, from the place where the goods are found, though the thief does not make off with them, is a sufficient asportation or carrying away—(4 Blacks. Com. 231.) — As, for instance, if a man be leading another’s horse out of a close, and be apprehended in the fact. It must not be supposed, .that a literal interpretation is to he placed on the term, carrying away : if one entice a horse, hog, or other animal, by placing food in such a situation as to operate on the volition of the animal, and he assumes the dominión over it, and has it once under his control, the deed is complete: but. if we suppose *520him detected before he has the animal under his control, yet after he has operated on its volition, the offence would not be consummated. In the case of slaves, which not only possess volition, and the power of locomotion, but also intelligence, a further extension of the principle is called for, and must necessarily he introduced into the law of larceny, it cannot be supposed, that the legislature intended only to punish those who forcibly took possession of the slave, as well against his, as his master’s will: it was, without doubt, considered, that in many, perhaps most cases, the stealing would he effected by operating on the will of the slave. In such a case, actual control. at the Instant of stealing, would never be exhibited. The same' rules which apply to principals in the second degree, will, when examined, seem to afford the most direct analogies to cases of this description. It is not necessary that the party should he actually present, or even an eye witness of the transaction; he is, in construction of law, present, aiding and abetting, if, ' with the intention of giving assistance, he be near enough to afford it, should the occasion arise—(Foster, 347; Rex vs. Borthwick, 1 Doug. 207; Rex vs. Owen, R. & M. 96.)—but he must be sufficiently near to give assistance—(Rex vs. Stewart, R. & R. 363) — and the mere ^circumstance of a party going towards a place where a felony is to be committed, with intent to aid and assist in carrying off the property, and assisting in carrying it off, will not make him a principal in the second degree, unless at the time of the feilouious taking, he were within such a distance as to be able to assist in it—(Rex vs. Kelly, R. & R. 421.) And although an act be committed in *521pursuance of a previous concerted plan between the parties, those who are not present, or so near as to he able to afford, aid and assistance at the time when the offence is committed, are not principals—(Rex vs. Sears, R. & R. 25; Rex vs. Davis, ibid. 113; Archbold’s C. L. 4 a.)
If it is admitted, that the slave departed from the service of his master, in consequence of a concerted plan between the prisoner and himself, that the former might steal him, and that the latter would join him in Perry-county, the offence was not consummated until the prisoner was sufficiently near'the slave to aid him, if pursuit was attempted; or so near as to be capable of taking actual control over him; — if, then, his will consented to the act, the larceny would be, complete, and the prisoner subject to the punishment: until then, it could not be, because both the slave and himself might have repented; and the one have returned to his master, the other to his home.
Although the evidence was sufficient to warrant the strongest presumptions that the prisoner was with the slave in Dallas county, and could perhaps only be satisfactorily rebutted by establishing an alibi, the law does not authorise the charge given, because an individual cannot commit a larceny in one county, who is, at the time of its commission, in another, and, who is not near enough to aid and assist those who are active in its perpetration.
4. The next question is not very distinctly presented; it seems, however, to be this: whether the possession of one to whom a slave is hired, is the owner, within the meaning of the term, as used in the statute. Such an individual is pro hue rice the owner of the slave-, during *522the time for which he is hired, and may therefore be described as the owner. But we by no, means wish to be understood as deciding, that, in such a case, the insertion of the true owner’s name in the indictment, would render the proof irrelevant, or that such an indictment might not be supported by proof of possession, wTith the person hiring the slave.
5. The last question referred, may be shortly answered; that there is nothing repugnant in charging the ownership of the slave in different persons, in different counts of the same indictment. This was a precaution which is always advisable under similar circumstances.
For the error in admitting the evidence stated in the first point referred, as well as for the erroneous charge,— the judgment of the Circuit court is reversed, and the case is remanded, with instructions to cause the prisoner to be tried in due course of law.