The genuineness of disputed handwriting cannot, as a general
rule, be determined by comparing it with other handwriting of the
party.
A writing specially prepared for purpose of comparison is not
admissible. If a paper, admitted to be in the handwriting of the
party or to have been subscribed by him, is in evidence for some
other purpose in the cause, the paper in question may be compared
with it by the jury; but if offered for the sole purpose of
comparison, it is not admissible.
The right of a person indicted for a capital offence to have
delivered to him, under Rev.Stat. § 1033 at least two days
before the trial, a list of the witnesses to be produced may be
waived by sitting by and listening to the testimony in chief of a
witness not on such list before inquiring whether his name had been
furnished to defendant.
Proof of contradictory statements by one's own witness,
voluntarily called and not a party, is in general not admissible,
although the party calling him may have been surprised by them, but
he may show that the facts were not as stated, although this may
tend incidentally to discredit the witness.
Whether or not a particular homicide is committed in repulsion
of an attack, and, if so, justifiably, are questions of fact not
necessarily dependent upon the duration or quality of the
reflection by which the act may have been preceded.
Allen v. United States, 150
U. S. 151, followed in condemning the doctrine as
impracticable which tests the question whether a person on trial
for murder is entitled to excuse on the ground of self-defense, or
exceeded the limits of the exercise of that right, or acted upon
unreasonable grounds, or in the heat of passion, by the
deliberation with which a judge expounds the law to a jury, or the
jury determines the facts, or with which judgment is entered and
carried into execution.
Matter excepted to should be brought to the attention of the
court before the retirement of the jury.
When several distinct propositions are given, and the exception
covers all of them, it cannot be sustained if any one of them is
correct.
Sam Downing, alias Sam Hickory, and Tom Shade, two Cherokees,
were indicted and tried for the murder of Joseph Wilson, a United
States deputy marshal, the trial resulting in
Page 151 U. S. 304
the acquittal of Shade and the conviction of Hickory, who, being
sentenced to death, prosecuted this writ of error. As stated in the
brief for the government, Hickory admitted that he killed Wilson,
but claimed that he was the attacking party; that the marshal came
to arrest him for a violation of the liquor laws, and after the
arrest, and while he was proceeding towards his house to get a
saddle, the marshal began firing at him; that he ran into the
house, and an affray occurred there in which there was shooting by
both, until the marshal was killed; that he concealed the body in a
ravine, where it was found two or three days later; then hid in the
neighborhood for a while, and wandered about until he was arrested
among the Osage Indians. One Carey testified that he went with the
marshal to show him where Hickory lived, and that it was arranged
that he should remain in the woods while Wilson went to the house
and made the arrest; that after he had arrested Hickory, he would
fire his pistol to notify Carey that he had done so, so that Carey
could meet him at a designated point; that in about half an hour,
Carey heard a shot, followed by several others.
There was some evidence that Wilson's skull had been fractured;
also that Wilson's horse was found dead, with his throat cut, lying
in an opposite direction from the body, and an attempt to show that
Wilson, after being wounded by Hickory, was finally killed with an
axe by Shade.
A letter written in the Cherokee alphabet, and claimed to be in
Hickory's handwriting, to Ollie Hickory, alias Williams, was put in
evidence, and marked "A," and was interpreted as follows:
"October 15th, 1891. Ollie: I write you a few lines. You must
never disclose how this is about Tom Shade. Just say that I was the
only one that did it. You must never tell anybody that he killed
the horse, and all that he done. I tell you you must not. That is
all now. I write in haste. Sam."
The letter was identified as in Hickory's handwriting, although
he denied it, and was admitted under exception on the part of the
defendants. Joseph Shade, a witness for the defense, produced a
paper on cross-examination, not relevant in itself, which was
marked "X," which he testified was in Hickory's
Page 151 U. S. 305
handwriting, and which seems to have been put in evidence
without objection.
An expert in Cherokee handwriting testified on behalf of the
defendants, on comparison of Exhibits A and X, that they were
written by different persons, and that the only resemblance was in
the signatures. Another witness testified that A was not in
Hickory's handwriting, but that X was.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts in the
foregoing language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
1. Hickory, being called in his own behalf, denied that the
letter marked "A" was in his handwriting. His counsel offered a
paper, which Hickory testified he had written at the table in court
that day,
"to compare with the writing on the document marked 'X,' as
produced by Joseph Shade, written previous to this time, and also
to compare with the writing marked 'A' offered in evidence by the
district attorney."
The court excluded the evidence, and the defendant excepted.
According to the general rule of the common law, the genuineness
of disputed handwriting could not be determined by the court and
jury by comparing it with other handwriting of the party, but among
the exceptions to the rule was that if the paper admitted to be in
the handwriting of the party, or to have been subscribed by him,
was in evidence for some other purpose in the cause, the paper in
question might be compared with it by the jury.
Moore v. United
States, 91 U. S. 271;
Rogers v.
Ritter, 12 Wall. 317. And this with or without the
aid of witnesses. 1 Greenl.Ev. § 578.
By acts of Parliament, it is now provided in England, as
"to all courts of judicature, as well criminal as other, . . .
that comparison of a disputed writing with any writing proved to
the satisfaction of the judge to be genuine shall be permitted
Page 151 U. S. 306
to be made by the witnesses, and such writings and the evidence
of witnesses respecting the same, may be submitted to the court and
jury as evidence of the genuineness, or otherwise of the writing in
dispute."
17 & 18 Vict. c. 125; 28 & 29 Vict. c. 18.
Under these statutes, it has been decided that any writings of
the genuineness of which the judge is satisfied upon the proof may
be used for the purposes of comparison, although they may not be
admissible for any other purpose in the cause.
Birch v.
Ridgway, 1 Fost. & Fin. 270;
Creswell v. Jackson,
2 Fost. & Fin. 24; and that the comparison may be made either
by witnesses, or, without the intervention of any witnesses at all,
by the jury themselves,
Cobbett v. Kilminster, 4 Fost.
& Fin. 490; 1 Whart.Ev. § 712. But in the absence of
statute, papers irrelevant to the issues on the record were held
not receivable in evidence at the trial for the mere purpose of
enabling the jury or witnesses to institute a comparison of hands.
Bromage v. Rice, 7 Car. & P. 548;
Doe v.
Newton, 5 Ad. & El. 514;
Griffits v. Ivery, 11
Ad. & El. 322; 1 Greenleaf Ev. § 580. The danger of fraud
or surprise and the multiplication of collateral issues were deemed
insuperable objections, although not applicable to papers already
in the cause, in respect of which, also, comparison by the jury
could not be avoided.
We do not care to discuss the reasons for the rule, or examine
the decisions by the courts of the several states, in which there
is great want of uniformity, for the question here does not turn on
the general rule in relation to comparison of handwriting or the
admission of irrelevant papers for the sole purpose of comparison,
but on the question of the admissibility of such writings when
specially prepared for the purpose, and we are clear that they are
not admissible. Undoubtedly, circumstances may often arise where a
witness may be asked on cross-examination to write in the presence
of the jury for the purpose of testing his credibility, but as
original evidence, as remarked in
King v. Donahue, 110
Mass. 155, "a signature made for the occasion
post litem
motam, and for use at the trial, ought not to be taken as a
standard of genuineness."
Page 151 U. S. 307
"It would," as was said in
Williams v. State, 61 Ala.
33,
"open too wide a door for fraud if a witness was allowed to
corroborate his own testimony by a preparation of specimens of his
writing for the purposes of comparison."
"All evidence of handwriting," says Greenleaf (1 Ev. §
576), adopting the language of Patteson, J., in
Doe v.
Suckermore, 5 Ad. & El. 730,
"except where the witness sees the document written, is, in its
nature, comparison. It is the belief which a witness entertains
upon comparing the writing in question with an exemplar in his mind
derived from some previous knowledge."
We think, however, there is an obvious distinction between
comparison by juxtaposition of an admitted or established writing
and the disputed writing and comparison of the latter with an image
in the mind's eye, but in either instance papers prepared for the
purpose of having the comparison made are objectionable.
In
Stranger v. Searle, 1 Esp. 14, Lord Kenyon refused
to admit the testimony of a witness whose familiarity was derived
from seeing him write for the express purpose of qualifying the
witness, "as the party might write differently from his common mode
of writing through design."
It is only when the paper is written not by design, but
unconstrainedly and in the natural manner, so as to bear the
impress of the general character of the party's writing, as the
involuntary and unconscious result of Constitution, habit, or other
permanent cause, and therefore of itself permanent, that it
furnishes, if otherwise admissible, any satisfactory test of
genuineness. Coleridge, J.,
Doe v. Suckermore, 5 Ad. &
El. 703, 705.
The paper offered was rightly excluded by the court.
2. The admission of the testimony of one Charles H. Snell was
objected to upon the ground that his name was not on the
indictment, and the objection was overruled, because not made until
the examination in chief was concluded. The record shows no
exception taken, though counsel expressed a desire to save the
point. Under section 1033 of the Revised Statutes, any person
indicted of a capital offense has the right to have delivered to
him, at least two days before the trial, a list
Page 151 U. S. 308
of the witnesses to be produced, and it would be error to put
him on trial, and allow witnesses to testify against him whose
named have not been furnished, if he seasonably asserted his right,
Logan v. United States, 144 U. S. 263, but
we think he did not do that here, and that the defect was waived.
It was suggested by counsel for the defendant that the objection
was made as soon as it was discovered that notice had not been
given in respect of this witness, but we are of opinion that the
discretion of the trial court was properly exercised upon the
question. Counsel ought not to sit by and listen to the testimony
in chief of a witness before inquiring whether his name has been
furnished to the defendants.
3. It is assigned as error that the court did not allow
"defendants to show that they were surprised by the testimony of
John Johnson, a witness for defendants, and to show previous
declarations of said John Johnson to defendants' counsel through an
interpreter on several occasions during the preparation of said
case contrary to his testimony on the stand, which declarations
were favorable to defendants."
Johnson was called for defendants, and testified that defendant
Shade was at his house Tuesday evening, but not again until Friday
evening. He was asked if he had not stated to defendants' counsel,
through Isaac Shade as interpreter, that Tom Shade was there on
Wednesday and Thursday evenings also, but he answered that he had
not, and that the interpreter was mistaken. Thereupon Isaac Shade
was subsequently asked: "State whether or not, in your
interpretation of his testimony, that he said that Tom stayed at
his house Tuesday night, Wednesday night, and Thursday night, and
Friday night of that week," to which objection was made which the
court sustained, and defendants excepted.
During the trial, there was an attempt to show that Wilson
survived the shooting, which was on Tuesday afternoon, and that
defendant Shade afterwards, and by collusion with Hickory, slew the
wounded man with an axe. It is possible that if the evidence had
tended to establish that Hickory and Shade had conspired to compass
Wilson's death, testimony in support of Shade's alibi for the two
days succeeding Tuesday
Page 151 U. S. 309
(assuming it made out as to that day) might have been material
as to Hickory; but upon this record, the bearing upon Hickory of
Shade's whereabouts on Wednesday and Thursday is extremely slight,
and Shade was acquitted.
When a party is taken by surprise by the evidence of his
witness, the latter may be interrogated as to inconsistent
statements previously made by him for the purpose of refreshing his
recollection and inducing him to correct his testimony, and the
party so surprised may also show the facts to be otherwise than as
stated, although this incidentally tends to discredit the witness.
As to witnesses of the other party, inconsistent statements, after
proper foundation laid by cross-examination, may be shown,
Railway Company v. Artery, 137 U.
S. 507, but proof of the contradictory statement of
one's own witness, voluntarily called, and not a party, inasmuch as
it would not amount to substantive evidence, and could have no
effect but to impair the credit of the witness, was generally not
admissible at common law. Best, Ev. § 645; Whart.Ev. §
549;
Melhuish v. Collier, 15 Q.B. 878.
By statute in England and in many of the states it has been
provided that a party may, in case the witness shall, in the
opinion of the judge, prove adverse, by leave of the judge, show
that he has made at other times statements inconsistent with his
present testimony, and this is allowed for the purpose of
counteracting actually hostile testimony with which the party has
been surprised.
Adams v. Wheeler, 97 Mass. 67;
Greenough v. Eccles, 5 C. B. (N.S.) 786;
Rice v.
Howard, 16 Q.B.D. 681.
Johnson was not a hostile witness, and his testimony was not in
itself prejudicial so far as it failed to make out the alibi beyond
Tuesday; yet it did contradict defendant Shade, who testified that
he was at Johnson's Wednesday and Thursday nights. But the court
allowed defendants' counsel to cross-examine Johnson if they chose,
and to prove the fact to be otherwise than as stated by him, and we
cannot say that error was committed because the court, in the
exercise of its discretion, under the circumstances, declined to
concede any further relaxation of the rule.
Page 151 U. S. 310
4. Defendants took certain exceptions to parts of the charge,
the first of which was to "the court's criticism on circumstantial
evidence, denouncing persons who are slow to act on circumstantial
evidence as fools and knaves." Referring to the necessity of
determining the condition of the mind, the court said:
"Some say we cannot do it by circumstantial evidence, because it
is cruel and criminal, they say, to convict a man upon
circumstantial evidence. This is a declaration of either fools or
knaves, sympathetic criminals, or men who have not ability enough
to know what circumstantial evidence is, or to perform the ordinary
duties of citizenship. When you consider that these two mental
conditions -- the fact that the act was done willfully, and done
with malice aforethought -- can never in any case be found in any
other way than by circumstantial evidence, you can see the potency
in every case of that class of testimony. Circumstantial evidence
means simply that you take one fact that has been seen, that is
produced before you by evidence, and from that fact you reason to a
conclusion."
The exception gives a color to this part of the charge which it
will not bear -- namely that it amounted to a denunciation of
persons "who were slow to act on circumstantial evidence," whereas
the court was inveighing against the declaration that it is cruel
and criminal to convict a man upon circumstantial evidence, and
that the condition of the mind cannot be found in that way. This
was done with great vigor, perhaps induced by the arguments of
counsel, but that does not strengthen an exception otherwise
destitute of merit.
5. The second exception to the charge was as follows:
"Because the court instructed the jury that the defendant
Downing, or the party who invokes the law of self-defense at the
time of the difficulty puts himself in the place of the judge that
lays down the law, of the jury who passes upon the facts and enters
up judgment, and of the marshal who executes the sentence, and has
centered in himself the whole power of the government or people,
without telling them that he is not required to look at the case
and the occurrences with the same coolness and deliberation that a
court and jury would do in investigating the charge against him,
and that if, in this
Page 151 U. S. 311
case, as claimed by him, the officer, Wilson, fired off his
pistol in the first place when his back was to him, and led
defendant Downing to believe that the officer was assaulting him,
or the officer did then and afterwards assault him, then all the
circumstances of excitement, agitation, apparent or real peril that
surrounded him, and that may have caused him to misjudge as to the
purpose of Wilson, or as to the assault, or to misconceive as to
his exact rights and duties, are all to be taken into
consideration."
Hickory's defense was that the homicide was committed in
self-defense -- that is, that he was assaulted by Wilson upon a
sudden affray, and killed him, because he was in imminent and
manifest danger either of losing his own life or of suffering
enormous bodily harm, or that he was under a reasonable
apprehension thereof, and the danger, as it appeared to him, was so
imminent at the moment of the assault as to present no alternative
of escaping its consequences, except by resistance.
The experienced trial judge told the jury that the mere fact
that a killing is done willfully does not necessarily make it
murder; that it is also done willfully when done in self-defense,
and explained the characteristics of that malice the existence of
which is the criterion of murder, defining malice in the ordinary
acceptation of the term, and malice aforethought, malice express,
and malice implied, and pointing out that the requisite malice
exists when the act is perpetrated without any provocation or any
just cause or excuse, not only on special motive, or through
special malevolence, but also at the dictates of a heart regardless
of social duty and deliberately bent on mischief, and, saying that
such malice imported premeditation, thus continued:
"The doing of the act which kills must be thought of beforehand.
But how long, you will inquire in this case? A minute, or a day, or
an hour, or a year? Why, not at all. If it is thought of at a
period, practically speaking, contemporaneous with the doing of the
act, it is premeditated -- it is thought of sufficiently long.
Especially is that the rule applicable in this day, when a man with
the rapidity almost of the batting
Page 151 U. S. 312
of an eye or a flash of light may execute a purpose to kill. He
may conceive a purpose, and instantly with its conception draw his
deadly weapon, and execute his purpose before you can bat an eye.
The purpose is conceived and executed, and the man is dead, but yet
it is premeditated, as shown in a case of that kind by the very
drawing and presentation and firing of the gun. The law says, as I
will read to you presently, that the deliberate selection and use
of a deadly weapon is evidence of the existence of malice
aforethought, provided the party had no right to use that weapon,
or provided there is an absence of mitigating facts when he did use
it."
That is to say that when a homicide is committed by weapons
indicating design, then it is not necessary to prove that such
design existed at any definite period before the fatal act.
The learned judge then quoted from the charge in
United
States v. King, 34 F. 302 (Lacombe, J.), as follows:
"It imports premeditation. Therefore there must logically be a
period of prior consideration; but as to the duration of that
period no limit can be arbitrarily assigned. The time will vary as
the minds and temperaments of men, and as do the circumstances in
which they are placed. The human mind acts at times with marvelous
rapidity. Men have sometimes seen the events of a lifetime pass in
a few minutes before their mental vision. Thought is sometimes
referred to as the very symbol of swiftness. There is no time so
short but that within it the human mind can form a deliberate
purpose to do an act, and if the intent to do mischief to another
is thus formed, as a deliberate intent, though after no matter how
short a period of reflection, it nonetheless is malice."
Manslaughter was defined, and the distinction between that and
murder, and the right of self-defense invoked by counsel in the
case, was then explained. The first proposition as to the
justifiable exercise of that right was laid down generally to be
that when a man
"in the lawful pursuit of his business is attacked by another
under circumstances which denote an intention to take away his
life, or do him some enormous bodily harm, he may lawfully kill the
assailant provided he use all the means in his power otherwise to
save his own life or prevent
Page 151 U. S. 313
the intended harm, such as retreating as far as he can, or
disabling his adversary without killing him, if it be in his
power,"
and the second proposition, that
"when from the nature of the attack there is reasonable ground
to believe that there is a design to destroy his life or to commit
any felony upon his person, the killing of the assailant will be
excusable homicide although it should afterwards appear that no
felony was intended."
And in this connection, the learned judge charged, among other
things, as follows:
"You see, a man is required to discharge certain great duties
under all circumstances, and especially is this law of duty
incumbent upon him when he is put in that position -- in the
position of a judge sitting on the bench, deliberating upon what
the law is, and of a jury sitting in the jury box, listening to the
facts, and finding as coolly, deliberately, and dispassionately as
possible under the circumstances what the facts are. When a party
is in such a condition, he is the judge upon the bench and the jury
in the box, and not only that, but he is the executioner. He finds
what the facts are as a jury, and he makes an application of the
law that he finds as a judge to these facts that he finds as a
jury, he enters up a judgment, and he then and there, as a marshal,
kills, in the furtherance of the judgment. Suppose that the judge
of this court had that power, how long would the people of this
land permit him to sit on this bench? Suppose that you, as twelve
dispassionate citizens, had that power, how long would the people
of this land permit that system to exist? Suppose that the chief
executive officer of this government, the President of the United
States, presumably a discreet, wise, and just man, having no other
purpose than the good of the people, had that power, how long would
these people permit one man to exercise a power of that kind?
Exercise it, too, when he wasn't confronted with acts that inflamed
him, or that infuriated him, but exercised it when he was an
intelligent man, and just man, as our Presidents have always been,
and a fair-minded man? We have divided this power when it comes to
be executed deliberately. We have a court that performs one
office,
Page 151 U. S. 314
and the jury another, and the executive arm of the government
another. Yet the law of self-defense puts all of these mighty
elements of power into the hands of one man, and it may be, in a
given case, that he is not a very intelligent man, either; it may
be, in a case where he has sought to make application of it, that
he is not a very discreet man, or that he is not a very
dispassionate man, either; yet if the law applies to his case, if
there is an application of that kind that can be correctly made to
that condition, it is to be made although there is a concentration
of these mighty powers that would not be concentrated in any
department of the government alone, but these great powers in a
proper case are properly in the hands of the citizens. . . ."
"He is required to avoid the necessity of killing if he can with
due regard to his own safety. He must do that. If there is a
condition where the other party at the time of the killing is doing
an act of violence upon him, and he is in the right, and that would
take his life unless he avoided it, and he can avoid it otherwise
than by killing, and he does not do it, that is a case where he
would be guilty of manslaughter, because that is a failure to
observe his duty, and a use of the law of self-defense hastily. He
must not forget that he is judge, jury, and executioner when he is
sitting in that tribunal out in the woods or country. He is
therefore required to comprehend what this law is. He is required
to know what the facts are that confront him, and to make a correct
application of that law to these facts, and if he does not do that
when he might do it he makes a mistake in that regard, and he would
be guilty of manslaughter."
Having shown that premeditation may exist in the twinkling of an
eye, the learned judge thus treats of the act of self-defense as
involving, at least in kind, the deliberation of a judge, a jury,
and an executioner. If the jury, thus admonished, believed the
exercise of the right of self-defense involved the same
deliberation as their own grave consideration of a verdict upon
which a human life might depend, it is easy to see that they might
well confound the distinction between such deliberation and
instantaneous conclusions under sudden
Page 151 U. S. 315
attack, or in the presence of apprehended or imminent danger.
The charge was open to the construction that while premeditation
may exist in a criminal sense upon the conception of an instant,
the conclusion to kill in self-defense must be arrived at upon more
serious deliberation, or it furnishes no excuse. If, in the
language of the Court of Appeals of New York in
People v.
Clark, 7 N.Y. 385,
"there be sufficient deliberation to form a design to take life,
and to put that design into execution by destroying life, there is
sufficient deliberation to constitute murder, no matter whether the
design be formed at the instant of striking the fatal blow or
whether it be contemplated for months."
Then, in the matter of self-defense, the deliberation of the
slayer in respect of the greatness of the necessity to protect
himself from death or great bodily harm, if material, would also be
sufficient, although the conclusion to kill was arrived at
instantaneously. The swiftness of thought in the latter case would
no more exclude the element of deliberation than in the former, and
whether the act was excusable or not could only be determined by
all the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence.
In short, whether or not a particular homicide is committed in
repulsion of an attack, and, if so, justifiably, are questions of
fact not necessarily dependent upon the duration or quality of the
reflection by which the act may have been preceded.
The gravest deliberation would not absolve under all
circumstances, though it might mitigate the offense under some, and
if the facts justified the act, the extent of deliberation would be
immaterial.
To enlarge upon the magnitude of the power of slaying in
defending against an attack as being a power which in itself would
not be tolerated in the chief executive of the country or in the
judge then passing upon the issues of life and death, and to advise
the jury to inquire not into the existence of defendant's belief or
the reasonableness of the grounds on which it rested, but into the
character of the deliberation which accompanied it, tested by the
standard of that of the judge, the jury, and the executioner, in
the discharge of their appropriate duties, manifestly tended to
mislead. Nor does
Page 151 U. S. 316
this view impute a want of intelligence in the jury. They might
find a verdict in disregard of the instructions of the court, but
this is not to be presumed, and if that strict attention to
judicial direction were paid which the due administration of
justice requires, we are constrained to the conclusion that such
instructions as those under consideration could not but have a
decided influence upon their action.
As was said in
Allen v. United States, 150 U.
S. 551, we do not think that the doctrine is practicable
which tests the question whether a defendant was entitled to excuse
on the ground of self-defense, or exceeded the limits on the
exercise of that right, or acted upon unreasonable grounds, or in
the heat of passion, by the deliberation with which a judge
expounds the law to a jury, or the jury determines the facts, or
with which judgment is entered and carried into execution.
However improbable Hickory's story may have been and however
atrocious his conduct, he could not be deprived of making the
defense he put forward, and these instructions of the court were
erroneous, as they stood unqualified.
The rule in relation to exceptions to instructions is that the
matter excepted to shall be so brought to the attention of the
court before the retirement of the jury as to enable the judge to
correct error, if there be any, in his instructions to them, and
this is also requisite in order that the appellate tribunal may
pass upon the precise question raised without being compelled to
search the record to ascertain it, and it is also settled that
where several distinct propositions are given, and the exception
covers all of them, if any one of them is correct, the exception
cannot be sustained. The exception here is not obnoxious to
objection as violating the rule in these regards. The trial judge
could not have been in doubt as to the particular part of the
charge objected to, and, as his attention was called to the matter
before the jury retired, could have modified or withdrawn it if he
had thought it necessary to do so, and the portion excepted to is
indicated with sufficient precision, so far as this Court is
concerned. Nor did the exception embrace other than the specified
statements objected to. Again, the exception was not to the
omission of the court to
Page 151 U. S. 317
charge upon a particular point, in which case, in the absence of
request that that should be done, it would not have been well
taken,
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Volk, ante,
151 U. S. 73,
although even in that view, the exception might be held equivalent
to a request for the qualification; but the objection really was to
the giving of the instructions unqualified, and counsel signified
out of abundant caution what in their judgment would remove their
ground of complaint. We hold, therefore, that the point was
sufficiently saved.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, with a direction to
grant a new trial.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER dissented.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN took no part in the consideration and decision
of this case.