U.S. Supreme Court
WILSON v. U S, 149 U.S. 60 (1893)
149 U.S. 60
WILSON
v.
UNITED STATES.
No. 1284.
April 17, 1893.
[149 U.S. 60, 61] Statement by Mr. Justice FIELD:
The defendant below, George E. Wilson, the plaintiff in error
here, is a bookseller and publisher, carrying on his business in
Chicago, Ill. He was indicted in the United States district court for
the northern district of that state for a violation of section 2 of
the act of congress of September 26, 1888, (25 St. p. 496,) amending
section 3893 of the Revised Statutes, relating to the use of the mails
to give information where and by what means obscene and lewd
publications might be obtained, and was convicted and sentenced to
imprisonment in the penitentiary of the state for two years. To
reverse that judgment, he has brought this case to this court on writ
of error.
The indictment charged, in different counts, that the defendant,
by himself and another person, had deposited in the mail at Chicago,
for delivery to John Hobart, at O'Fallon, Ill., and Jack Horner, at
Collinsville, Ill., a letter and circular giving information where
certain designated lewd and obscene books could be obtained. No
attempt was made to show that
[149 U.S. 60, 62]
the letter and circular was mailed by the defendant in
person, but an attempt was made to show that some other person had
done the act at the instigation or request of the defendant, and that
he was responsible for it. The defendant did not request to be a
witness or offer himself as such, and the district attorney of the
United States, in summing up the case to the jury, commented upon the
fact that he had not appeared on the stand, as follows:
'They say Wilson is a man of good character. It is a grand
thing for a young man in Chicago to be the son of an honest man,
because blood will tell. If the father is honest, the chances are
the son will be honest too. Men live all their lives to build up a
good character, because it is a shield against the attack of infamy.
They called two or three witnesses here who testified to this young
man's character as being good, so far as they know; but I want to
say to you, gentlement of the jury, that, if I am ever charged with
a crime, I will not stop by putting witnesses on the stand to
testify to my good character, but I will go upon the stand, and hold
up my hand before high heaven, and testify to my innocence of the
crime.'
To this language of the district attorney the counsel for the
defendant excepted, and called the court's attention to it, and the
court said: 'Yes, I suppose the counsel should not comment upon the
defendant not taking the stand. While the United States court is not
governed by the state's statutes, I do not know that it ought to be
the subject of comments by counsel,'-to which the district attorney
replied as follows: 'I did not mean to refer to it in that light, and
I do not intend to refer in a single word to the fact that he did not
testify in his own behalf,'- to which the counsel for the defendant
thereupon excepted.
The act of congress of March 16, 1878, (20 St. p. 30, c. 37,)
provides 'that in the trial of all indictments, informations,
complaints, and other proceedings against persons charged with the
commission of crimes, offenses, and misdemeanors, in the United States
courts, territorial courts, and courtsmartial, and courts of inquiry,
in any state or territory, including the District of Columbia, the
person so charged shall, at his own
[149 U.S. 60, 63] request, but not
otherwise, be a competent witness; and his failure to make such
request shall not create any presumption against him.'
The objections of the defendant's counsel to the language of the
district attorney in his argument to the jury in referring to the
defendant's failure to appear on the stand as a witness, and testify
to his innocence of the charge against him, and to the neglect of the
court to forbid and condemn such reference, were embodied in a bill of
exceptions, and constitute one of the grounds urged for a reversal of
the judgment and the award of a new trial.
C. Stuart Beattie, for plaintiff in error.
Asst. Atty. Gen. Parker, for defendant in error.
[149 U.S. 60, 65]
Mr. Justice FIELD, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the court.
The act of congress permitting the defendant in a criminal
action to appear as a witness in his own behalf, upon his request,
declares, as it will be seen, that his failure to request to be a
witness in the case shall not create any presumption against him.
To prevent such presumption being created, comment, especially
hostile comment, upon such failure must necessarily be excluded from
the jury. The minds of the jurors can only remain unaffected from this
circumstance by excluding all reference to it.
At common law no one accused of crime could be compelled to give
evidence in a prosecution against himself, nor was he permitted to
testify in his own behalf. The accused might rely upon the presumption
of the law that he was innocent of the charge, and leave the
government to establish his guilt in the best way it could.
This rule, while affording great protection to the accused
against unfounded accusation, in many cases deprived him from
explaining circumstances tending to create conclusions of his guilt
which he could readily have removed if permitted
[149 U.S. 60, 66]
to testify. To relieve him from this embarrassment the law was
passed. In mercy to him, he is by the act in question permitted, upon
his request, to testify in his own behalf in the case. In a vast
number of instances the innocence of the defendant of the charge with
which he was confronted has been established.
But the act was framed with a due regard also to those who might
prefer to rely upon the presumption of innocence which the law gives
to every one, and not wish to be witnesses. It is not every one who
can safely venture on the witness stand, though entirely innocent of
the charge against him. Excessive timidity, nervousness when facing
others and attempting to explain transactions of a suspicious
character, and offenses charged against him, will often confuse and
embarrass him to such a degree as to increase rather than remove
prejudices against him. It is not every one, however honest, who would
therefore willingly be placed on the witness stand. The statute, in
tenderness to the weakness of those who from the causes mentioned
might refuse to ask to be witnesses, particularly when they may have
been in some degree compromised by their association with others,
declares that the failure of a defendant in a criminal action to
request to be a witness shall not create any presumption against him.
In this case this provision of the statute was plainly
disregarded. When the district attorney, referring to the fact that
the defendant did not ask to be a witness, said to the jury, 'I want
to say to you that, if I am ever charged with crime, I will not stop
by putting witnesses on the stand to testify to my good character, but
I will go upon the stand, and hold up my hand before high heaven, and
testify to my innocence of the crime,' he intimated to them as plainly
as if he had said in so many words that it was a circumstance against
the innocence of the defendant that he did not go on the stand and
testify. Nothing could have been more effective with the jury to
induce them to disregard entirely the presumption of innocence to
which by the law he was entitled, and which by the statute he could
not lose by a failure to offer himself as a
[149 U.S. 60, 67]
witness; and, when counsel for defendant called the attention
of the court to this language of the district attorney, it was not met
by any direct prohibition or emphatic condemnation of the court, which
only said: 'I suppose the counsel should not comment upon the
defendant not taking the stand.' It should have said that the counsel
is forbidden by the statute to make any comment which would create or
tend to create a presumption against the defendant from his failure to
testify.
Instead of stating, after mentioning that the United States
court is not governed by the state's statutes, 'I do not know that it
ought to be the subject of comment by counsel,' the court should have
said that any such comment would tend necessarily to defeat the very
prohibition of the statute; and the reply of the district attorney to
the mild observation of the court only intensified the fact to which
he had already called the attention of the jury: 'I did not mean to
refer to it in that light, and I do not intend to refer in a single
word to the fact that he did not testify in his own behalf,' which was
equivalent to saying: 'You, gentlemen of the jury, know full well that
an innocent man would have gone on the stand, and have testified to
his innocence, but I do not mean to refer to the fact that he did not,
for it is a circumstance which you will take into consideration
without it.' By this action of the court in refusing to condemn the
language of the district attorney, and to express to the jury in
emphatic terms that they should not attach to the failure any
importance whatever as a presumption against the defendant, the
impression was left on the minds of the jury that, if he were an
innocent man, he would have gone on the stand as the district attorney
stated he himself would have done.
This language of the district attorney, and this action, or
rather want of action, of the court, are set forth in the bill of
exceptions; and although exceptions are generally taken to some
ruling, or want of ruling, by the court in the progress of the trial
in the admission or rejection of evidence or the interpretation of
instruments, yet they can be taken to its action or want of proper
action upon any proceeding in the progress of the trial from its
commencement to its conclusion,
[149 U.S. 60, 68] and, when properly
presented, can be considered by the court on writ of error.
The refusal of the court to condemn the reference of the
district attorney and to prohibit any subsequent reference to the
failure of the defendant to appear as a witness tended to his
prejudice before the jury, and this effect should be corrected by
setting the verdict aside and awarding a new trial.
Similar statutes to the one we have been considering have been
passed by several states, and the rulings upon them have been
substantially in accordance with our judgment in this case.
In 1866 the legislature of Massachusetts passed an act almost
identical in terms with the act of congress under consideration. It
provided that, 'in the trial of all indictments, complaints, and other
proceedings against persons charged with the commission of crimes or
offenses, the person so charged shall, at his own request, and not
otherwise, be deemed a competent witness; nor shall the neglect or
refusal to testify create any presumption against the defendant.' The
provision has been since re-enacted in substantially the same terms.
St. Mass. 1866, c. 260; St. Mass. 1870, c. 393, 1, c1. 3; Pub. St. c.
169, 18, cl. 3. And in the case of Com. v. Scott, 123 Mass. 239, where
the indictment against the defendants was for breaking and entering a
house in the nighttime with intent to commit larceny therein, none of
the defendants testified at the trial, and the prosecuting attorney,
in his closing argument, commented upon this fact, when the counsel
for the defendants interrupted him, and asked the judge to rule that
the fact that the defendants did not testify could not be commented on
by the government; but the judge, having first stated the law that the
fact that they did not testify did not create any presumption against
them, ruled that, inasmuch as the matter had been referred to by their
counsel, the prosecuting attorney had a right to comment on the
reasons given for their not going upon the stand and testifying in
their behalf, and also to give the reasons which the government
contended really existed for their not testifying, and permitted the
prosecuting attorney [149
U.S. 60, 69] to proceed in his comments. The jury having
rendered a verdict of guilty, the defendants alleged exceptions, and
the case went to the supreme judicial court of the commonwealth. The
chief justice, in delivering the opinion of the court, after referring
to the fact that the government had no right to interrogate a person
accused of crime, or to compel him to testify, but was bound to
sustain its charge by independent evidence, observed that 'the
statutes allowing persons charged with the commission of crimes or
offenses to testify in their own behalf were passed for their benefit
and protection, and clearly recognize their constitutional privilege,
by providing that their neglect or refusal to testify shall not create
any presumption against them.'
And, again: 'The course of the closing argument for the
prosecution tended to persuade the jury that the omission of the
defendants to testify implied an admission or a consciousness of the
crime charged; and the presiding judge, in permitting such a course of
argument, against the objection of the defendants, and in ruling that
the prosecuting attorney had a right to comment on the reasons which
the defendants' counsel gave for their not going upon the stand and
testifying in their behalf, and also to give the reasons which the
government contended really existed for their not testifying,
committed an error which was manifestly prejudicial to the defendants,
and which obliges this court to set aside the verdict and order a new
trial.'
The Criminal Code of Illinois, after providing that in criminal
cases the accused may, on his own motion, testify in the case,
declares in a proviso that 'his neglect to testify shall not create
any presumption against him, nor shall the court permit any reference
or comment to be made to or upon such neglect.'
In the case of Austin v. People, 102 Ill. 261, 264, a reference
had been made to the neglect of the accused to testify, both in the
opening and concluding argument for the prosecution; and the court, in
setting aside the verdict of guilty which was rendered in that case,
said: 'When the statute says that no presumption against the accused
shall be created [149
U.S. 60, 70] by his neglect to testify, it clearly meant
that, in cases where the defendant should not choose to avail himself
of the privilege offered by the statute, the trial should be conducted
in the same manner and upon the same presumptions as if the statute
had not been passed.' And, again: We do not see how this statute can
be completely enforced, unless it be adopted as a rule of practice
that such improper and forbidden reference by counsel for the
prosecution shall be regarded as good ground for a new trial in all
cases where the proofs of guilt are not so clear and conclusive that
the court can say affirmatively the accused could not have been harmed
from that cause.'
This view of the effect of the objections taken to the course of
the district attorney, and to the failure of the court to properly
condemn it, renders it unnecessary to consider any other alleged
errors.
The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded, with
directions to award a new trial; and it is so ordered.