2.
The facts proved are either possible or impossible, ordinary and
probable, or extraordinary and improbable, recent or ancient; they may
have happened near us, or afar off; they are public or private,
permanent or transitory, clear and simple, or complicated; they are
always accompanied by circumstances which more or less influence the
mind in forming a judgment. And in some instances these circumstances
assume the character of irresistible evidence; where, for example, a
woman was found dead in a room, with every mark of having met with a
violent death, the presence of another person at thescene of action was
made manifest by the bloody mark of a left hand visible on her left arm.
14 How. St. Tr. 1324. These points ought to be carefully examined, in
order to form a correct opinion. The first question ought to be, is the
fact possible ? If so, are there any circumstances which render it
impossible ? If the facts are impossible, the witness ought not to be
credited. If, for example, a man should swear that he saw the deceased
shoot himself with his own pistol, and upon an examination of the ball
which killed him, it should be found too large to enter into the pistol,
the witness ought not to be credited. 1 Stark. Ev. 505; or if one
should swear that another had been guilty of an impossible crime.
3.
Toullier mentions a case, which, were it not for the ingenuity of the
counsel, would require an apology for its introducion here, on account
of its length. The case was this: La Veuve Veron brought an action
against M. de Morangies on some notes, which the defendant alleged were
fraudulently obtained, for the purpose of recovering 300,000 francs, and
the question was, whether the defendant had received the money.
Dujonquai, the grandson of the plaintiff, pretended he had himself,
alone and on foot, carried this sum in gold to the defendant, at his
hotel at the upper end of the rue Saint Jacques, in thirteen trips,
between half-past seven and about one o'clock, that is, in about five
hours and a half, or, at most, six hours. The fact was improbable;
Linquet, the counsel of the defendant, proved it was impossible; and
this is his argument:
4.
Dujonquai said that he had divided the sum in thirteen bags, each
containing six hundred louis d'ors, and in twenty-three other bags, each
containing two hundred. There remained twenty-five louis to complete
the whole sum, which, Dujonquai said, he received from the defendant as a
gratuity. At each of 'these trips, he says, he put a bag, containing
two hundred louis, that is, about three pounds four ounces, in each of
his coat pockets, which, being made in the fashion of those times, hung
about the thighs, and in walking must have incommoded him and obstructed
his speed; he took, besides, a bag containing six hundred louis in his
arms; by this means his movements were impeded by a weight of near ten
pounds.
5.
The measured distance between the house where Dujonquai took the bags
to the foot of the stairs of the defendant, "as five hundred and sixteen
toises, which, multiplied by twenty-six, the thirteen trips going and
returning, make thirteen thousand four hundred and sixteen toises, that
is, more than five leagues and a half (near seventeen miles), of two
thousand four hundred toises, which latter distance is considered
sufficient for an hour's walk, of a good walker. Thus, if Dujonquai had
been unimpeded by any obstacle, he would barely have had time to perform
the task in five or six hours, even without taking any rest
orrefreshment. However strikingly improbable this may have been, it was
not physically impossible. But
6.-
1. Dujonquai, in going to the defendant's, had to descend sixty-three
steps from his grandmother's, the plaintiff's chamber, and to ascend
twenty-seven to that of the defendant, in the whole, ninety steps. In
return ing, the ascent and descent were changed, but the steps were the
same; so that by multiplying, by twenty-six, the number of trips going
and returning, it would be seen tbere were two thousand three hundred
and forty steps. Experience had proved that in ascending to the top of
the tower of Notre Dame (a church in Paris), where there are three
hundred and eighty-nine steps, it occupied from eight to nine minutes of
time. It must then have taken an hour out of the five or six which had
been employed in making the thirteen trips.
7.-2.
Dujonquai had to go up the rue Saint Jacques, which is very steep; its
ascent would necessarily decrease the speed of a man, burdened and
encumberedwith the bags which he carried in his pockets and in his arms.
8.-3.
This street, which is very public, is usually, particularly in the
morning, encumbered by a multitude of persons going in every direction,
so that a person going along must make an infinite number of deviations
from a direct line; each by itself, is almost imperceptible, but at the
end of five or six hours, they make a considerable sum, which may be
estimated at a tenth part of the whole course in a straight line; this
would make about half a league, to be added to the five and a half
leagues, which is the distance in a direct line.
9.
- 4. On the morning that Dujonquai made these trips, the daily and
usual incumbrances of this street were increased by sixty or eighty
workmen, who were employed in removing by hand and with machine, an
enormous stone, intended for the church of Saint Genevieve, now the
pantheon, and by the immense crowd which this attracted; this was a
remarkable eircumstance, which, supposing that Dujonquai had not yielded
to the temptation of stopping a few moments to see what was doing, must
necessarily have impeded his way, and made him lose seven or eight
minutes each trip, which, multiplied by twenty-six would make about two
hours and a half.
10.
- 5. The, witness was obliged to open and shut the doors at the
defendant's house; it required time to take up the bags and place them
in his pockets, to take them out and put them on the defendant's table,
who, by an improbable supposition, counted the money in the intervals
between the trips, and not in the presence of the witness. Dujonquai,
too, must have taken receipts or acknowledgments at each trip, he must
read them, and on arriving at home, deposited them in some place of
safety all these distractions would necessarily occasion the loss of a
few minutes. By adding these with scrupulous nicety, and by further
adding the time employed in taking and depositing the bags, the opening
and shutting of the doors, the reception of the receipts, the time
occupied in reading and putting them away, the time consumed in several
conversations, which he admitted he had with persons in the street; all
these joined to the obstacles above mentioned, made it evident that it
was physically impossible that Dujonquai should have carried the 300,000
francs to the house of the defendant, as he affirmed he had done.
Toull. tom. 9, n. 241, p. 384. Vide, gencrally, 1 Stark. Ev. 502; 1
Phil. Ev. 116. See some curious cases of circumstantial evidence in
Alis. Pr. Cr. Law, 313, 314; and 2 Theorie des Lois Criminelles, 147,
n.; 3 Benth. Jud. Ev. 94, 223; Harvey's Meditations on the Night, note
35; 1 Taylor's Med. Jur. 372; 14 How. St. Tr. 1324; Theory of
Presumptive Proof, passim; Best on Pres. SSSS 187, 188, 197. See Death;
Presumption; Sonnambulism.
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