1. To make out a dying declaration, the declarant must have
spoken without hope of recovery and in the shadow of impending
death, and this state of mind must be exhibited in the evidence,
and not left to conjecture. P.
290 U. S.
99.
2. On a trial for murder by poison, where the defense was
suicide, a statement that deceased had made, accusing the defendant
of having poisoned her, and which was offered and erroneously let
in as a dying declaration so that it must have been considered by
the jury as testimony to the act of poisoning, cannot be treated on
appeal as properly in the case because, as evidence of the
declarant's state of mind, it tended to rebut defensive evidence of
suicidal intention. P.
290 U. S.
102.
3. A trial may become unfair if testimony offered and
erroneously accepted for one purpose is used in an appellate court
as though admitted for a different purpose, unavowed and
unsuspected. P.
290 U. S.
103.
4. Evidence having a dual tendency, inadmissible and gravely
prejudicial for one purpose but not objectionable for another if
separately considered, should be excluded from the jury where the
feat of ignoring it in the one aspect while considering it in the
other is too subtle for the ordinary mind and the risk of confusion
is so great as to upset the balance of practical advantage. P.
290 U. S.
103.
5. The declarations of deceased persons (short of dying
declarations) which may be used to show their intentions for the
future must be sharply distinguished from declarations of memory
merely, and from those that recite the past conduct of other
persons. P.
290 U. S. 106.
62 F.2d 683; 64
id. 641, reversed.
Certiorari, 289 U.S. 721, to review the affirmance of a sentence
on conviction of murder.
Page 290 U. S. 97
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner, Charles A. Shepard, a major in the medical corps
of the United States Army, has been convicted of the murder of his
wife, Zenana Shepard at Fort Riley, Kansas, a United States
military reservation. The jury having qualified their verdict by
adding thereto the words "without capital punishment" (18 U.S.C.
§ 567 (18 U.S.C.A § 567)), the defendant was sentenced to
imprisonment for life. The judgment of the United States District
Court has been affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Tenth Circuit, one of the judges of that court dissenting. 62 F.2d
683; 64 F.2d 641. A writ of certiorari brings the case here.
The crime is charged to have been committed by poisoning the
victim with bichloride of mercury. The defendant was in love with
another woman, and wished to make her his wife. There is
circumstantial evidence
Page 290 U. S. 98
to sustain a finding by the jury that, to win himself his
freedom, he turned to poison and murder. Even so, guilt was
contested, and conflicting inferences are possible. The defendant
asks us to hold that, by the acceptance of incompetent evidence,
the scales were weighted to his prejudice and in the end to his
undoing.
The evidence complained of was offered by the government in
rebuttal when the trial was nearly over. On May 22, 1929, there was
a conversation in the absence of the defendant between Mrs.
Shepard, then ill in bed, and Clara Brown, her nurse. The patient
asked the nurse to go to the closet in the defendant's room and
bring a bottle of whisky that would be found upon a shelf. When the
bottle was produced, she said that this was the liquor she had
taken just before collapsing. She asked whether enough was left to
make a test for the presence of poison, insisting that the smell
and taste were strange. And then she added the words, "Dr. Shepard
has poisoned me."
The conversation was proved twice. After the first proof of it,
the government asked to strike it out, being doubtful of its
competence, and this request was granted. A little later, however,
the offer was renewed; the nurse having then testified to
statements by Mrs. Shepard as to the prospect of recovery. "She
said she was not going to get well; she was going to die." With the
aid of this new evidence, the conversation already summarized was
proved a second time. There was a timely challenge of the
ruling.
She said, "Dr. Shepard has poisoned me." The admission of this
declaration, if erroneous, was more than unsubstantial error. As to
that, the parties are agreed. The voice of the dead wife was heard
in accusation of her husband, and the accusation was accepted as
evidence of guilt. If the evidence was incompetent, the verdict may
not stand.
Page 290 U. S. 99
1. Upon the hearing in this Court, the government finds its main
prop in the position that what was said by Mrs. Shepard was
admissible as a dying declaration. This is manifestly the theory
upon which it was offered and received. The prop, however, is a
broken reed. To make out a dying declaration, the declarant must
have spoken without hope of recovery and in the shadow of impending
death. The record furnishes no proof of that indispensable
condition. So, indeed, it was ruled by all the judges of the court
below, though the majority held the view that the testimony was
competent for quite another purpose, which will be considered later
on.
We have said that the declarant was not shown to have spoken
without hope of recovery and in the shadow of impending death. Her
illness began on May 20. She was found in a state of collapse,
delirious, in pain, the pupils of her eyes dilated, and the retina
suffused with blood. The conversation with the nurse occurred two
days later. At that time, her mind had cleared up, and her speech
was rational and orderly. There was as yet no thought by any of her
physicians that she was dangerously ill, still less that her case
was hopeless. To all seeming, she had greatly improved, and was
moving forward to recovery. There had been no diagnosis of poison
as the cause of her distress. Not till about a week afterwards was
there a relapse, accompanied by an infection of the mouth, renewed
congestion of the eyes, and later hemorrhages of the bowels. Death
followed on June 15.
Nothing in the condition of the patient on May 22 gives fair
support to the conclusion that hope had then been lost. She may
have thought she was going to die and have said so to her nurse,
but this was consistent with hope, which could not have been put
aside without more to quench it. Indeed, a fortnight later, she
said to one of her physicians, though her condition was then
grave,
Page 290 U. S. 100
"You will get me well, won't you?" Fear or even belief that
illness will end in death will not avail of itself to make a dying
declaration. There must be "a settled hopeless expectation"
(Willes, J. in
Reg. v. Peel, 2 F. & F. 21, 22) that
death is near at hand, and what is said must have been spoken in
the hush of its impending presence.
Mattox v. United
States, 146 U. S. 140,
146 U. S. 151;
Carver v. United States, 160 U. S. 553;
164 U. S. 694;
R. v. Perry, [1909] 2 K.B. 697;
People v.
Sarzano, 212 N.Y. 231, 235, 106 N.E. 87; 3 Wigmore on
Evidence, §§ 1440, 1441, 1442, collating the decisions.
Despair of recovery may indeed be gathered from the circumstances
if the facts support the inference.
Carver v. United States,
supra; Wigmore, Evidence, § 1442. There is no unyielding
ritual of words to be spoken by the dying. Despair may even be
gathered, though the period of survival outruns the bounds of
expectation. Wigmore, § 1441. What is decisive is the state of
mind. Even so, the state of mind must be exhibited in the evidence,
and not left to conjecture. The patient must have spoken with the
consciousness of a swift and certain doom.
What was said by this patient was not spoken in that mood. There
was no warning to her in the circumstances that her words would be
repeated and accepted as those of a dying wife, charging murder to
her husband, and charging it deliberately and solemnly as a fact
within her knowledge. To the focus of that responsibility her mind
was never brought. She spoke as one ill, giving voice to the
beliefs and perhaps the conjectures of the moment. The liquor was
to be tested, to see whether her beliefs were sound. She did not
speak as one dying, announcing to the survivors a definitive
conviction, a legacy of knowledge on which the world might act when
she had gone.
The petitioner insists that the form of the declaration exhibits
other defects that call for its exclusion, apart from the objection
that death was not imminent and that
Page 290 U. S. 101
hope was still alive. Homicide may not be imputed to a defendant
on the basis of mere suspicions, though they are the suspicions of
the dying. To let the declaration in, the inference must be
permissible that there was knowledge or the opportunity for
knowledge as to the acts that are declared. Wigmore, §
1445(2). The argument is pressed upon us that knowledge and
opportunity are excluded when the declaration in question is read
in the setting of the circumstances. On the one side are such cases
as
Berry v. States, 63 Ark. 382, 38 S.W. 1038;
State
v. Wilks, 278 Mo. 481, 213 S.W. 118;
State v.
Williams, 67 N.C. 12;
State v. Jefferson, 125 N.C.
712, 34 S.E. 648;
Shaw v. People, 3 Hun, 272; 63 N.Y. 36;
Stewart v. Commonwealth, 235 Ky. 670, 679, 32 S.W.2d 29,
and
Commonwealth v. Griffith, 149 Ky. 405, 149 S.W. 825;
on the other,
Shenkenberger v. State, 154 Ind. 630, 57
N.E. 519;
State v. Kuhn, 117 Iowa, 216, 228, 90 N.W. 733;
Fults v. State, 83 Tex.Cr.R. 602, 204 S.W. 108;
Cook
v. State, 90 Tex.Cr.R. 424, 235 S.W. 875;
cf. the
cases cited in 63 A.L.R. 567, note, and 25 A.L.R. 1370, note. The
form is not decisive, though it be that of a conclusion, a
statement of the result with the antecedent steps omitted. Wigmore,
§ 1447. "He murdered me," does not cease to be competent as a
dying declaration because in the statement of the act there is also
an appraisal of the crime.
State v. Mace, 118 N.C. 1244,
24 S.E. 798;
State v. Kuhn, supra. One does not hold the
dying to the observance of all the niceties of speech to which
conformity is exacted from a witness on the stand. What is decisive
is something deeper and more fundamental than any difference of
form. The declaration is kept out if the setting of the occasion
satisfies the judge, or in reason ought to satisfy him, that the
speaker is giving expression to suspicion or conjecture, and not to
known facts. The difficulty is not so much in respect of the
governing principle as in its application to varying and equivocal
conditions. In this case, the ruling that there
Page 290 U. S. 102
was a failure to make out the imminence of death and the
abandonment of hope relieves us of the duty of determining whether
it is a legitimate inference that there was the opportunity for
knowledge. We leave that question open.
2. We pass to the question whether the statements to the nurse,
though incompetent as dying declarations, were admissible on other
grounds.
The Circuit Court of Appeals determined that they were.
Witnesses for the defendant had testified to declarations by Mrs.
Shepard which suggested a mind bent upon suicide, or at any rate
were thought by the defendant to carry that suggestion. More than
once before her illness, she had stated in the hearing of these
witnesses that she had no wish to live, and had nothing to live
for, and on one occasion she added that she expected some day to
make an end to her life. This testimony opened the door, so it is
argued, to declarations in rebuttal that she had been poisoned by
her husband. They were admissible, in that view, not as evidence of
the truth of what was said, but as betokening a state of mind
inconsistent with the presence of suicidal intent.
(a) The testimony was neither offered nor received for the
strained and narrow purpose now suggested as legitimate. It was
offered and received as proof of a dying declaration. What was said
by Mrs. Shepard lying ill upon her death bed was to be weighed as
if a like statement had been made upon the stand. The course of the
trial makes this an inescapable conclusion. The government withdrew
the testimony when it was unaccompanied by proof that the declarant
expected to die. Only when proof of her expectation had been
supplied was the offer renewed and the testimony received again.
For the reasons already considered, the proof was inadequate to
show a consciousness of impending death and the abandonment of
hope; but inadequate though it was, there can be no
Page 290 U. S. 103
doubt of the purpose that it was understood to serve. There is
no disguise of that purpose by counsel for the government. They
concede in all candor that Mrs. Shepard's accusation of her
husband, when it was finally let in, was received upon the footing
of a dying declaration, and not merely as indicative of the
persistence of a will to live. Beyond question, the jury considered
it for the broader purpose, as the court intended that they should.
A different situation would be here if we could fairly say in the
light of the whole record that the purpose had been left at large,
without identifying token. There would then be room for argument
that demand should have been made for an explanatory ruling. Here,
the course of the trial put the defendant off his guard. The
testimony was received by the trial judge and offered by the
government with the plain understanding that it was to be used for
an illegitimate purpose, gravely prejudicial. A trial becomes
unfair if testimony thus accepted may be used in an appellate court
as though admitted for a different purpose, unavowed and
unsuspected.
People v. Zackowitz, 254 N.Y. 192, 200, 172
N.E. 466. Such, at all events, is the result when the purpose in
reserve is so obscure and artificial that it would be unlikely to
occur to the minds of uninstructed jurors, and even if it did,
would be swallowed up and lost in the one that was disclosed.
(b) Aside, however, from this objection, the accusatory
declaration must have been rejected as evidence of a state of mind,
though the purpose thus to limit it had been brought to light upon
the trial. The defendant had tried to show by Mrs. Shepard's
declarations to her friends that she had exhibited a weariness of
life and a readiness to end it, the testimony giving plausibility
to the hypothesis of suicide. Wigmore, § 1726;
Commonwealth v. Trefethen, 157 Mass. 180, 31 N.E. 961. By
the proof of these declarations evincing an unhappy state of mind,
the defendant opened the door to the offer by the government
Page 290 U. S. 104
of declarations evincing a different state of mind, declarations
consistent with the persistence of a will to live. The defendant
would have no grievance if the testimony in rebuttal had been
narrowed to that point. What the government put in evidence,
however, was something very different. It did not use the
declarations by Mrs. Shepard to prove her present thoughts and
feelings, or even her thoughts and feelings in times past. It used
the declarations as proof of an act committed by some one else, as
evidence that she was dying of poison given by her husband. This
fact, if fact it was, the government was free to prove, but not by
hearsay declarations. It will not do to say that the jury might
accept the declarations for any light that they cast upon the
existence of a vital urge, and reject them to the extent that they
charged the death to some one else. Discrimination so subtle is a
feat beyond the compass of ordinary minds. The reverberating clang
of those accusatory words would drown all weaker sounds. It is for
ordinary minds, and not for psychoanalysts, that our rules of
evidence are framed. They have their source very often in
considerations of administrative convenience, of practical
expediency, and not in rules of logic. When the risk of confusion
is so great as to upset the balance of advantage, the evidence goes
out. Thayer, Preliminary Treatise on the Law of Evidence, 266, 516;
Wigmore, Evidence, §§ 1421, 1422, 1714.
These precepts of caution are a guide to judgment here. There
are times when a state of mind, if relevant, may be proved by
contemporaneous declarations of feeling or intent.
Mutual Life
Ins. Co. v. Hillmon, 145 U. S. 285,
145 U. S. 295;
Shailer v. Bumstead, 99 Mass. 112; Wigmore, §§
1725, 1726, 1730. Thus, in proceedings for the probate of a will,
where the issue is undue influence, the declarations of a testator
are competent to prove his feelings for his relatives, but are
incompetent as evidence of his conduct or of theirs.
Throckmorton v. Holt, 180 U. S. 552,
Page 290 U. S. 105
180 U. S.
571-573;
Waterman v. Whitney, 11 N.Y. 157;
Matter of Kennedy, 167 N.Y. 163, 172, 60 N.E. 442. In
suits for the alienation of affections, letters passing between the
spouses are admissible in aid of a like purpose. Wigmore, §
1730;
Ash v. Prunier, 105 F. 722;
Mutual Life Ins. Co.
v. Hillmon, supra, p.
145 U. S. 297;
Jameson v. Tully, 178 Cal. 380,
173 P. 577;
Cottle v. Johnson, 179 N.C. 426, 102 S.E. 769;
Curtis v. Miller, 269 Pa. 509, 512, 112 A. 747. In damage
suits for personal injuries, declarations by the patient to
bystanders or physicians are evidence of sufferings or symptoms
(Wigmore, §§ 1718, 1719), but are not received to prove
the acts, the external circumstances, through which the injuries
came about. Wigmore, § 1722;
Amys v. Barton, (1912) 1
K.B. 40;
Chicago & A. R. Co. v. Industrial Board, 274
Ill. 336, 113 N.E. 629;
Peoria Cordage Co. v. Industrial
Board, 284 Ill. 90, 119 N.E. 996;
Larrabee's Case,
120 Me. 242, 113 A. 268;
Maine v. Maryland Casualty Co.,
172 Wis. 350, 178 N.W. 749. Even statements of past sufferings or
symptoms are generally excluded (Wigmore, § 1722(b);
Cashin v. New York, N.H. & H. R. Co., 185 Mass. 543,
70 N.E. 930), though an exception is at times allowed when they are
made to a physician (
Roosa v. Loan Co., 132 Mass. 439,
440;
Cleveland, C., C. & I. R. Co. v. Newell, 104 Ind.
264, 271, 3 N.E. 836;
contra, Davidson v. Cornell, 132
N.Y. 228, 237, 30 N.E. 573). So also in suits upon insurance
policies, declarations by an insured that he intends to go upon a
journey with another may be evidence of a state of mind lending
probability to the conclusion that the purpose was fulfilled.
Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Hillmon, supra. The ruling in that
case marks the high water line beyond which courts have been
unwilling to go. It has developed a substantial body of criticism
and commentary.
* Declarations
Page 290 U. S. 106
of intention, casting light upon the future, have been sharply
distinguished from declarations of memory, pointing backwards to
the past. There would be an end, or nearly that, to the rule
against hearsay if the distinction were ignored.
The testimony now questioned faced backward, and not forward.
This at least it did in its most obvious implications. What is even
more important, it spoke to a past act, and, more than that, to an
act by someone not the speaker. Other tendency, if it had any, was
a filament too fine to be disentangled by a jury.
The judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded to the
District Court for further proceedings in accordance with this
opinion.
Reversed.
* Maguire, The
Hillmon Case, 38 Harvard Law Review,
709, 721, 727; Seligman, An Exception to the Hearsay Rule, 26
Harvard Law Review, 146; Chafee, Review of Wigmore's Treatise, 37
Harvard Law Review, 513, 519.