The record showed an indictment, arraignment, plea, trial,
conviction and the following recital:
"This cause coming on to be heard upon the motion in arrest of
judgment, and after being argued by counsel
pro and
con and duly considered by the court, it is ordered that
the said motion be, and the same is hereby denied. The defendant,
Sandy White, having been convicted on a former day of this term,
and he being now present in open court and being asked if he had
anything further to say why the judgment of the court should not be
pronounced upon him, sayeth nothing, it is thereupon ordered by the
court that the said defendant, Sandy White, be imprisoned in Kings
County Penitentiary at Brooklyn, New York, for the period of one
year and one day, and pay the costs of this prosecution, for which
let execution issue."
Held that this was a sufficient judgment for all
purposes.
Entries made by a jailor of a public jail in Alabama, in a
record book kept for that purpose, of the dates of the receiving
and discharging of prisoners confined therein, made by him in the
discharge of his public duty as such officer, are admissible in
evidence in a criminal prosecution in the federal courts, although
no statute of the state requires them.
When a jury has been properly instructed in regard to the law on
any given subject, the court is not bound to grant the request of
counsel to charge again in the language prepared by counsel, or if
the request be given
Page 164 U. S. 101
before the charge is made, the court is not bound to use the
language of counsel, but may use its own language so long as the
correct rule upon the subject requested be given.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error was indicted in the District Court of the
United States for the Southern division of the Northern District of
Alabama for presenting false, fictitious, and fraudulent claims
against the United States to one A. R. Nininger, a marshal of the
United States for the Northern District of that state, for the
purpose of obtaining payment of the fees of certain witnesses
alleged to have been brought before a United States commissioner
for that district, when in truth the witnesses had not attended,
and the fees had not been paid. The defendant pleaded not guilty,
and upon trial was found guilty as charged in the indictment. The
defendant was sentenced to be imprisoned in the Kings County
Penitentiary at Brooklyn, New York for the period of one year and
one day, and to pay the costs of the prosecution. He sued out a
writ of error from this Court, and now assigns three grounds for a
reversal of the conviction: first that there was no judgment upon
which the defendant could be properly sentenced; second, the trial
court erred in receiving in evidence entries made in a book kept by
the jailer, James Morrow; third, the trial court erred in refusing
to charge, as requested, in regard to the effect to be given to
evidence of good character.
In regard to the first objection, we think it not well founded.
The objection seems to be that there is no statement in the
sentence showing what the offense is of which the defendant is
convicted, and also that the record shows no
judgment,
because the language used amounted only to a recital by the clerk
as to what the court did, and not to a judgment pronounced
Page 164 U. S. 102
by the court as the judgment of the law. The record shows an
indictment, arraignment, plea, trial, conviction, and the following
recital:
"This cause coming on to be heard upon the motion in arrest of
judgment, and after being argued by counsel
pro and
con, and duly considered by the court, it is ordered that
the said motion be, and the same is hereby, denied."
"The defendant, Sandy White, having been convicted on a former
day of this term, and he being now present in open court, and,
being asked if he had anything further to say why the judgment of
the court should not be pronounced upon him, sayeth nothing, it is
thereupon ordered by the court that the said defendant, Sandy
White, be imprisoned in Kings County, Penitentiary at Brooklyn, New
York, for the period of one year and one day, and pay the costs of
this prosecution, for which let execution issue."
This, we think, was a sufficient judgment for all purposes. The
record fully and plainly shows what the offense is of which the
defendant was convicted, and the language used shows that the
sentence was the judgment of the court, and of the law, pronounced
upon the defendant on account of the conviction upon the
indictment.
Pointer v. United States, 151 U.
S. 396,
151 U. S.
417.
Second. The second alleged error consists in receiving in
evidence upon the trial of the case the entries in a book kept by a
witness who was the jailer of one of the jails in Alabama. Upon the
trial, it became necessary to show that one L. W. Andrews, admitted
to be a colored man, was neither examined as a witness on the 6th
of December, 1892, in Jefferson County, Alabama, before one William
H. Hunter, circuit court commissioner, nor was he there present on
that day. Witnesses who were there and examined on that occasion
testified on this trial that Andrews was not examined, and was not
present before the commissioner on the day mentioned. The
government then produced one James Morrow as a witness, who, being
sworn, testified that he was jailer of Jefferson County, Alabama,
and that he had brought with him a book of dates of receiving in
and discharging prisoners from the county jail
Page 164 U. S. 103
of that county. He further testified that, according to the
entries in the book, L. W. Andrews, colored, was placed in jail
under a commitment of W. H. Hunter, United States commissioner, on
the 28th day of November, 1892, and that he was in that jail on the
6th day of December, 1892, but that, independently of the record,
witness had no distinct recollection of Andrews' being in jail on
that day. The witness further stated that the book was a book kept
by him as jailer, and the entries therein as to said Andrews were
made by him in his own handwriting, and that the book was kept by
him because, as jailer, he was required to keep such a jail book.
The defendant objected to the introduction in evidence of the book
or the entries therein on the ground that there was no law in
Alabama requiring such a record to be kept, and it could only be
used as a private memorandum to refresh the recollection of the
witness. The court overruled the objection, and the defendant duly
excepted. The witness then was allowed to and did read to the jury
the entries in the book showing that Andrews was in jail on the 6th
of December, 1892, and the defendant duly excepted to the ruling of
the court allowing such entries to be read.
We think no error was committed by the trial court in thus
ruling. It was not necessary that a statute of Alabama should
provide for the keeping of such a book. A jailer of a county jail
is a public officer, and the book kept by him was one kept by him
in his capacity as such officer and because he was required so to
do. Whether such duty was enjoined upon him by statute or by his
superior officer in the performance of his official duty is not
material. So long as he was discharging his public and official
duty in keeping the book, it was sufficient. The nature of the
office would seem to require it. In that case, the entries are
competent evidence. 1 Greenl.Ev. §§ 483, 484.
It is obvious that the nature of the office of jailer requires
not only the actual safekeeping of the prisoners committed to his
charge, but that, in order to the proper discharge of those duties,
some list should be kept by him or under his supervision showing
the names of those received and discharged,
Page 164 U. S. 104
together with the dates of such reception and discharge. If
there were a clerk whose duty it was to keep such a book, instead
of the jailer, then the entries so made by that clerk would be
evidence in and of themselves. But the jailer, who was a witness,
testified that it was his duty to himself keep such book, and the
entries were therefore within the rule in regard to official
entries. The sections of the Criminal Code of Alabama cited below
show the necessity for the keeping of such a book by the jailer.
(Secs. 4537-4539, 4555). In speaking of entries in books which are
evidence in and of themselves, Greenleaf, in section 484,
supra, mentions many kinds of such entries, and among them
he includes prison registers, and cites the cases of
Rex v.
Aickles, 1 Leach's Cr.Cas. 438, and
Salte v. Thomas,
3 B. & P. 188, as authority. Those cases hold that the prison
books are evidence to prove the period of the commitment and
discharge of a prisoner, although the second case holds that the
cause of the commitment cannot be thus shown, as the commitment
itself is the best evidence of the cause. The same principle as to
the admissibility of entries made by an official is held in
Evanston v. Gunn, 99 U. S. 660,
99 U. S.
665.
The ruling of the trial court was therefore correct.
As to the third ground, it appears by the record that the
defendant offered to prove his good character for the last twenty
years, whereupon the district attorney admitted his good character.
All the evidence being in, the defendant prayed the court to charge
the jury as follows:
"The evidence of good character, when established by the
evidence in a case, taken in connection with all the other
evidence, may generate a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the
defendants."
The court refused to give this charge, and the defendant
excepted. The court, in his oral charge, said to the jury:
"It is admitted in this case that the defendants are men of good
character, the law presuming every defendant to have a good
character, and the jury may consider such good character, and give
it such weight as they see proper, under all the evidence in the
case, that defendant is entitled to a reasonable doubt."
Assuming that the request stated the proper rule in regard
to
Page 164 U. S. 105
evidence of good character, we are of opinion that the charge as
given to the jury by the trial court amounted, in substance, to the
charge as requested.
When a jury has been properly instructed in regard to the law on
any given subject, the court is not bound to grant the request of
counsel to charge again in the language prepared by counsel; or, if
the request be given before the charge is made, the court is not
bound to use the language of counsel, but may use its own language,
so long as the correct rule upon the subject requested be given.
When the court told the jury it was admitted that the defendant was
a man of good character, and that the jury might consider such good
character and give such weight to it as they saw proper under all
the evidence in the case, and that the defendant was entitled to a
reasonable doubt, it was sufficient, although the court
unnecessarily added that the law presumed every defendant to have a
good character. The charge gave the jury the right to give weight
enough to the evidence to generate a reasonable doubt of the guilt
of the defendant, and a substantial compliance with the request was
made, although not in the very words thereof.
The record reveals no error, and the judgment must be
Affirmed.