The full and unconditional pardon of a person convicted of
larceny and sentenced to imprisonment therefor completely restores
his competency as a witness, although it may be stated in the
pardon that it was given for that purpose.
On the trial of a person indicted for murder, it appeared in
evidence that the killing followed an attempt to rob. The court
admitted, under objections, evidence tending to show that the
prisoner had committed other robberies in that neighborhood, on
different days shortly before the time when the killing took place,
and exceptions were taken.
Held that the evidence was
inadmissible for any purpose.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs in error were jointly indicted in the court below
for the crime of murder, alleged to have been committed on the 6th
day of April, 1890 at the Choctaw Nation, in the Indian Country,
within the Western District of Arkansas, the first count alleging
that the person murdered, John Dansby, was a negro, and not an
Indian, the second that the defendants were white men, and not
Indians. The court, in its charge
Page 142 U. S. 451
to the jury, said that the second count differed from the
first
"by alleging that Eugene Standley, alias Eugene Stanton [he is
charged that way in both counts] and John Boyd, were white men, and
not Indians. The proof, without any controversy, shows that
Standley is an Indian; therefore you will confine your finding, if
it should be a verdict of guilty, to the first count in the
indictment, if the proof shows that fact with reference to
Standley, and you should find him guilty. If it shows such other
facts as are necessary to give the court jurisdiction, as are
alleged in the first count of the indictment, then your finding
will be on that count, provided you should find a verdict of
guilty. If you should find a verdict of not guilty, it may be
general in its character, and it would be responsive to both
charges."
The defendants were found guilty of murder as charged in the
first count. A motion for a new trial having been overruled, the
defendants were condemned to suffer the punishment of death.
The proof was conflicting upon many points, but there was
evidence tending to show the following facts: in the night of April
6, 1890, the defendants, Boyd and Standley, with John Davis, alias
Myers, came to a ferry, on Cache Creek, in the Indian Country, a
short distance from Martin Byrd's, at whose house at the time were
John Dansby, the deceased, Joseph Byrd, a brother of Martin Byrd,
and Richard Butler. The defendants and Davis, or one of them,
called to the ferryman, Martin Byrd, to come and set them over the
creek. Byrd protested that he did not like to do work of that kind
after dark, but finally consented to get the key of the boat and
take them across the creek. He went to his house, avowedly to
obtain the key, and after remaining away some time, returned,
accompanied by Dansby, Joseph Byrd, and Richard Butler, each with
weapons. When Martin Byrd reached the ferry boat and was about to
unlock the chain by which it was held fast -- Boyd being at the
time in the rear end of the boat, while Davis and Standley were
sitting upon the bank of the creek -- Davis said to him, "Lay down
that chain, and throw out your rusty change." Upon Byrd's saying,
"Don't you want
Page 142 U. S. 452
to cross?" Davis, holding his pistol upon Byrd, replied, with an
oath, "No, it's your money we're after." Dansby started toward
Byrd, and was shot in the back by Boyd. When Davis presented his
pistol at Martin Byrd, the latter, dropping upon his knees, drew a
pistol. The ball from Davis' pistol passed over Byrd's head, but
Davis was shot by Byrd, and died instantly. The firing immediately
became general. Butler shot Boyd in the back, Standley shot at
Joseph Byrd, but was himself slightly wounded by a shot from the
latter's pistol. Boyd, although badly wounded, went up the creek
some little distance, but, being followed, was secured and carried
to Martin Byrd's house as a prisoner. He remained there until he
was arrested by an officer upon the charge of having murdered
Dansby. Standley escaped, and it was some time before he was
arrested. Dansby lived a few days only, and died at Martin Byrd's
house from the wounds inflicted upon him on the above occasion.
Upon the part of the defendants, there was evidence tending to
show a case in some respects materially different. They contended,
to use the words of their counsel,
"that while Boyd was sitting in the boat, and Standley and Davis
on the bank, the ferryman and his party came around with Winchester
rifles and revolvers, and before they suspected anything, had
leveled their guns on him and Davis, and told them to give up their
pistols; that they had the description of some men that had robbed
Judge Taylor; that he handed up his pistol, which they took, and
Davis drew his out, but whether to comply or to resist he does not
know; that they fired on Davis and killed him; that he turned, and
as he did so, was shot in the shoulder, and fell, the ball
remaining under the point of the shoulderblade; that they ran after
Boyd, and while they were gone, he picked up Davis' pistol and ran
off and hid."
The principal witness for the prosecution at the trial was
Martin Byrd. When presented as a witness, the defendants objected
to him as incompetent by reason of the fact that he had been
convicted of the crime of larceny and sentenced to the
penitentiary, the record of such conviction being offered
Page 142 U. S. 453
in support of the objection. The government thereupon produced a
pardon from the President of the United States, as follows:
"Benjamin Harrison, President of the United States of America,
to all whom these presents may come, greeting:"
"Whereas, Martin Byrd, in the United States District Court for
the Western District of Arkansas, was indicted, charged with
larceny, convicted May 10, 1884, and on the 19th day of May, 1884,
was sentenced to one year's imprisonment in the Detroit House of
Correction, Detroit, Michigan, and whereas, the said Martin Byrd
has been discharged from said prison, he having served out the term
for which sentenced, and was accredited for good behavior while in
prison, and whereas, the District Attorney for the Western District
of Arkansas requests the pardon of said Martin Byrd, in order to
restore him to competency as a witness in a murder trial to be had
July 1st next in said district court at Little Rock, in which
request the judge of said district court unites: Now therefore be
it known that I, Benjamin Harrison, President of the United States
of America, in consideration of the premises, divers other good and
sufficient reasons me thereunto moving, do hereby grant to the said
Martin Byrd a full and unconditional pardon."
"In testimony whereof I have hereunto signed my name and caused
the seal of the United States to be affixed."
"Done at the City of Washington this 27th day of June, A.D.
1890, and of the independence of the United States the one hundred
and fourteenth."
"[The place of the seal.] BENJAMIN HARRISON"
"By the President. JAMES G. BLAINE,
Sec. of State"
This pardon removed all objections to the competency of Martin
Byrd as a witness. The recital in it that the district attorney
requested the pardon in order to restore Byrd's competency as a
witness in a murder trial to be had in the district court at Little
Rock did not alter the fact that the pardon was, by its terms,
"full and unconditional." The
Page 142 U. S. 454
disability to testify being a consequence, according to the
principles of the common law, of the judgment of conviction, the
pardon obliterated that effect. The competency as a witness of the
person so pardoned was therefore completely restored.
United States v.
Wilson, 7 Pet. 150;
Ex Parte
Wells, 18 How. 307,
59 U. S. 315;
Ex Parte
Garland, 4 Wall. 333,
71 U. S. 380; 4
Bl.Com. 402.
The principal assignments of error relate to the admission,
against the objection of the defendants, of evidence as to several
robberies committed prior to the day when Dansby was shot and
which, or some of which at least, had no necessary connection with,
and did not in the slightest degree elucidate, the issue before the
jury -- namely, whether the defendants murdered John Dansby on the
occasion of the conflict at the ferry. This evidence tended to
show, and, for the purposes of the present discussion, it may be
admitted that it did show, that in the night of March 15, 1890,
Standley, under the name of Henry Eckles, robbed Richard C. Brinson
and Samuel R. Mode; that in the afternoon of March 17, 1890, he and
Boyd robbed Robert Hall; that in the night of March 20, 1890,
Standley, under the name of John Haynes, together with Davis,
robbed John Taylor, and that in the evening of April 5, 1890,
Davis, Boyd, and Standley robbed Rigsby's store. In relation to
these matters, the witnesses went into details as fully as if the
defendants had been upon trial for the robberies they were,
respectively, charged by the evidence with having committed. The
admissibility of this evidence was attempted to be sustained in
part upon the ground that Martin Byrd and his crowd, having the
right to arrest the parties guilty of the robberies, were entitled
to show that the robberies had been in fact committed by the
defendants. While the evidence tended to show that Martin Byrd had
information, prior to April 6, 1890, of the Taylor robbery, and of
Taylor having offered a reward for the arrest and conviction of the
guilty parties, there is nothing to show that he or his associates
had ever heard, before the meeting at the ferry, of the robberies
of Brinson, Mode, Hall, and Rigsby. It is said that the evidence in
chief as to what occurred at the
Page 142 U. S. 455
time of the shooting left the identity of the defendants, or at
least of Standley, in some doubt, and that the facts connected with
the robbery of Rigsby, showing that the defendants and Davis were
all engaged in it and were together only the night before Dansby
was shot, tended not only to identify Standley and Boyd, but to
show that they came to the ferry for the same purpose with which
they went to Rigsby's house -- namely, to rob and plunder for their
joint benefit, and consequently that each defendant was responsible
for Dansby's death if it resulted from the prosecution of their
felonious purpose to rob.
The rule upon this subject was thus expressed by the court in
its charge to the jury:
"If a number of men agree to do an act which, from its nature or
the way it is to be done, is an act that will put human life in
jeopardy, then the putting of human life in jeopardy, or the
destruction of human life, is a necessary and a natural and a
probable consequence of the act agreed to be done by the party, and
upon the principle of the law I have already announced to you, it
is but equal and exact justice that all who enter upon an
enterprise of that kind should be responsible for the death of an
innocent person that transpires because of the execution of the
enterprise then entered upon, and because that enterprise is one
that would naturally and reasonably produce that result."
"Again:"
"Now, the law defines the character of crimes that if a number
of persons enter upon the commission of them, they may be affected
by a result of this kind. It says robbery is one of them. Why?
Robbery has the very element that enters into it, to distinguish
it, to make it a crime, as that of violence upon the person, and it
is but a probable and natural and reasonable consequence of an
attempt to commit that crime that a human life will be destroyed.
The very demand of a man who robs -- 'Your money or your life' --
implies that human life is in jeopardy, so that when a number of
persons agree to and enter upon the commission of the crime of
robbery and a person is killed, who is an innocent person, in the
execution of that purpose to rob, all the parties who have so
entered into the agreement and enter
Page 142 U. S. 456
upon the execution of the purpose to rob are equally
responsible. The pistol or gun fired is the pistol or gun of each
and every one of them. There are other crimes of a like character,
and the law, I say, draws this distinction, and bases it upon a
just ground. It says that any crime which, from its nature and the
way it is usually committed, will necessarily or probably or
reasonably endanger a human life is a crime that, if a number of
persons agree to commit and enter upon the commission of, will
involve them all in the consequences that ensue. The commission of
robbery is a crime that may cause the death of an innocent
person."
These principles, of the soundness of which we entertain no
doubt, were enforced by the court in its charge by numerous
illustrations drawn from adjudged cases and text writers of high
authority. This being done, it proceeded:
"Now it becomes necessary for the court to remind you of what
figure these other crimes that have been proven cut in the case.
This crime of the robbery of Rigsby may be taken into consideration
by you in passing upon the question of the identity of the
defendants. It is a competent fact for that purpose. You will
remember that the evidence shows that goods were found upon the
person of one of these parties who was present at this ferry when
the killing of Dansby took place that were sworn to by Rigsby as
having been taken by the three parties -- the man Davis or Myers
and these two defendants -- from his store. That would be evidence
that might be taken into consideration with the statements of these
colored witnesses who were present at the time, and undertook to
point out and identify these defendants -- that may be taken into
consideration for that purpose. If you believe in the theory that
there was an attempt made to arrest upon the part of these parties,
and that the attempt wasn't made by these defendants, together with
Davis, to commit a robbery upon them, then the fact that the
robbery of Rigsby had transpired, and the robbery of Taylor and
these other robberies that have been proven before, may be taken
into consideration to show that crime had been committed that would
give the citizen the right to make an arrest, provided there was
reasonable ground to believe, in your
Page 142 U. S. 457
judgment at the time, that the parties they were seeking to
arrest were the ones that had committed those crimes. They may be
taken into consideration for that purpose. You are not to consider
these other crimes as makeweight against the defendants alone. That
is to say, you are not to convict the defendants because of the
commission of these other crimes. They were admitted for the
specific purposes that I have named. They are not to influence your
minds so as to induce you to more readily convict them than you
would convict them if the crimes had not been proven against him.
That is the figure they cut. That is the reason they were admitted
as testimony before you."
The charge made no reference to the robberies committed upon
Brinson, Mode, and Hall, except as they may have been in the mind
of the court when it referred to "these other crimes." Whatever
effect prejudicial to the defendants the proof of the robberies
upon Brinson, Mode, and Hall produced upon the minds of jurors
remained with them except as it may have been modified by the
general statement that the defendants were not to be convicted
"because of the commission of these other crimes." The only other
crimes referred to in the charge (other than the alleged murder of
Dansby) were the Rigsby and Taylor robberies. The jurors were
particularly informed as to the purposes for which the court
admitted testimony in respect to those two robberies, but they were
left uninstructed in direct terms as to the use to which the proof
of the Brinson, Mode, and Hall robberies could be put in passing
upon the guilt or innocence of the particular crime for which the
defendants were indicted. It is true, as suggested by counsel for
the government, that no exception was taken to the charge. But
objection was made by the defendants to the evidence as to the
Brinson, Mode, and Hall robberies, and exception was duly taken to
the action of the court in admitting it. That exception was not
waived by a failure to except to the charge.
If the evidence as to crimes committed by the defendants other
than the murder of Dansby had been limited to the robberies of
Rigsby and Taylor, it may be, in view of the
Page 142 U. S. 458
peculiar circumstances disclosed by the record and the specific
directions by the court as to the purpose for which the proof of
those two robberies might be considered, that the judgment would
not be disturbed, although that proof, in the multiplied details of
the facts connected with the Rigsby and Taylor robberies, went
beyond the objects for which it was allowed by the court. But we
are constrained to hold that the evidence as to the Brinson, Mode,
and Hall robberies was inadmissible for the identification of the
defendants or for any other purpose whatever, and that the injury
done the defendants in that regard was not cured by anything
contained in the charge. Whether Standley robbed Brinson and Mode,
and whether he and Boyd robbed Hall, were matters wholly apart from
the inquiry as to the murder of Dansby. They were collateral to the
issue to be tried. No notice was given by the indictment of the
purpose of the government to introduce proof of them. They afforded
no legal presumption or inference as to the particular crime
charged. Those robberies may have been committed by the defendants
in March, and yet they may have been innocent of the murder of
Dansby in April. Proof of them only tended to prejudice the
defendants with the jurors, to draw their minds away from the real
issue, and to produce the impression that they were wretches whose
lives were of no value to the community and who were not entitled
to the full benefit of the rules prescribed by law for the trial of
human beings charged with crime involving the punishment of death.
Upon a careful scrutiny of the record, we are constrained to hold
that in at least the particulars to which we have adverted, those
rules were not observed at the trial below. However depraved in
character, and however full of crime their past lives may have
been, the defendants were entitled to be tried upon competent
evidence, and only for the offense charged.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with
directions to grant a new trial.