Court Opinion

ID: 8061062
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 04:38:32.094578+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:38:03.602392
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Magie, J.
Among the many assignments of error in this case there is one which, in my judgment, points to an error so palpable that no consideration need be given to the others.
It appears by the bills of exceptions that the only direction given to the jury by the trial judge upon the subject of reasonable doubt was that contained in this sentence, “ any reasonable doubt must be given to the defendant, but it must be a very reasonable doubt.”
Under our system of criminal jurisprudence nothing is better settled than that the presumption of innocence shields from conviction any person accused of crime unless the prosecutor in behalf of the state has produced evidence which convinces the judgment of a jury of his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
*308If it be true that reasonable doubt can be said to exist in different degrees, it is obvious that the classification and definition of such degrees can be of no practicable moment in determining the question which the jury must solve, for if, after carefully weighing all the evidence, the judgment of the jury remains unconvinced of his crime, there is a state of reasonable doubt, the benefit of which must be given to the accused without reference to its class or degree.
But the instruction complained of in this case permitted and perhaps required the jury to refuse to the accused the benefit of such a doubt unless it was of the highest or at least of a very high degree.
This was erroneous and plainly tended to the injury of the accused. Eor this reason his conviction was wrong, and the judgment of conviction must be reversed.