
    PENDLETON v. UNITED STATES.
    ERROR TO THE SUPREME COURT OP THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS.
    No. 53.
    Argued January 21, 1910.
    Decided February 21, 1910.
    The retention by the prosecuting authorities, without using it on the trial, of a statement made by the accused, does not amount to compelling him to be a witness against himself within the provisions of Chap. '5 pf the Philippine Act of Congress of July 1, 1902, 32 Stat. . 691.
    The Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands tries a criminal case on . the record de novo, and if it avoids an error which may have been committed by the Court of First.Instance, the judgment will not be reversed by this court on Account of such error; and so held in this case in which the - Court, of First Instance took into consideration the fact that accused did not offer to testify on his own 'behalf, but the Supreme Court, on the accused's own appeal, declared that it did not take that fact into consideration but rendered its decision' oh the proofs.
    7 Philippines, 457
    The facts aré stated in the opinion.
    
      Mr. Henry E. Davis and Mr. James H. Blount for plaintiff in. error:.
    The neglect or refusal of accused to be a witness shall not in any manner prejudice or be used against him. Military Order, No. 58, of April-23, 1900,- 1 Pub. Laws Phil. Comm., § 15, subsec. 3, p. 1083; Kepner v. United States, 195 U. S. 112; Ruloff y. The People, 45 N. Y. 203; People v. Doyle, 58 Hun (N. Y.), 535; Wilson v. United States, 149 U. S. 60; Showalter v. State, 84 Indiana, 562, 566; Staple v. State, 89 Tennessee, 231; Commonwealth v. Scott, 123 .Massachusetts, 239; Minor v. State, 120 Georgia, 490; Quinn v. The People, 123 Illinois, .333, 347; Dorr v. United States, 195 U: S. 138; State v. Brownfield, 15 Mo. App. 593; People v. Tyler, 36 -California, 527; Baker v. People, 105 Illinois, 458; Wait y. People, 120 Illinois, 31 ¡.Slate v. Ryan, 70 Iowa, 150; Stale v. Graham, 02 Iowa, 111; State v. Mosley, .'11 Kansas, 357; State v. Banks, 78 Maine, 492; Slate v. Cleaves, 59 Maine, 801; People v. /tee, 52 Hun (N. Y.), 29; Reddick v. State (Miss.), 10 Bo. Rep. 490; Eubanks v. State, 7 Bo. Rep. 420; Yarborough v. State, 70 Mississippi, 593; Sale v. Howard, 35 B. Car. 203; Brazell v. Slate, 29 Tex. Orim. App. 452; Johnson v. State, 31 Tex, Orim. Rep. 404; Jordan v. State, 29 Texas, 595; Richardson v. State, 27 B. W. Rep. 139; Stale v. Chicell, 30 W. Va. 659; Wharton’s Grim. Ev. 435.
    Military'Order No. 58 is for the Philippine Islands what the Fifth Amendment is for .the Fniled Btates, and constitutional provisions, for security of persons and property- must be liberally construed. Bee Boyd v. United Slates, 116. C. B. 610, 635.
    The action of the prosecuting attorney in holding on to the affidavit improperly obtained from accused prevented accused from taking .the witness stand and was therefore prej udicial to his interests.
    
      Mr. Assistant Attorney General Russell for the United States.
   Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court;

Plaintiff in error was convicted of the crime of murder in the Court of First Instance of the Province of Cebu, Philippine Islands, and sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment, which was reduced to seventeen years by the- Supreme Court'.

The assignments of error are as follows:

“ 1. 'The accused has been compelled to be á witness against himself in violation of Article V of the law of Congress'' of July 1, 1902.
“2. The fact that the accused did not offer himself as a witness'in his own favor has been used to his prejudice in ■ violation of his right’to remain silent until his guilt be established by the'cvidence beyond a reasonable doubt.
“3. The evidence does not show the guilt of accused of the crime imputed to him beyond a reasonable doubt.”

The argument to support the first assignment of error is not very tangible: It is based upon an affidavit of defendant in error that he was subpoenaed as a witness and obeyed by going to the fiscal’s, where he answered questions put tq him without knowing that he had, .a right to refuse or being notified that he had such right, and not knowing that “the object of securing his statement was in order to search for proof against him.” The affidavit also states that he was not represented by counsel, and did not know that he had a right to consult a lawyer. Motion was made, presumably baséd on the affidavit, .for an order to the fiscal to return to the defendant the statement, together with all copies of the same, and that the fiscal be prohibited from using the statemeiit in>ny manner whatever. Nothing seems to have been done with that motion, and' subsequently it was repeated and denied on the ground, “that it was not a proper time to make such motion, as the court could not then decide on the admissibility of proofs which had not yet.been offered in the cause.” An exception was entered.

It is not contended that the statement was afterwards used in any way, but the .action of the eburt is urged nevertheless as an error “so grave and so material,” to use counsel’s words, “as to call for a new trial.”

The argument to support it is based on suppositions of what might have been done, and the potency of the statement in the hands of the prosecuting officer. “It left the. defendant open, it is said, to the fire of a masked.battery.” But the law has no measure to apply to such a situation-. Defendant was' certainly not disabled from tolling the truth in other statements if he wished to make them, and to be able not to tell the truth can hardly be urged- as a legal and constitutional right. The assignment nf error, therefore, is not well taken.

The second assignment of- error is that the fact that the defendant did not offer himself as a witness was used against him. To support this contention certain remarks of the judge of the trial court in delivering, sentence upon the defendant are quoted. The court said:

“The prosecution Has presented an abundance of proof which, in case‘the court should give it full credence, would' establish the guilt of the accused beyond all reasonable doubt. On the.other hand, the defense has presented very little direct proof; the accused did not use his right to testify in his own favor, and no eyewitness has testified favorably to him.1 The defense has practically limited itself to insisting dn: (1) Alleged contradictions between the various witnesses of the prosecution relating to. the details of. identical facts or happenings related by them. ■ (2) Mistakes which they claim to be essential, in the testimony of the witnesses for the prosecution with respect to distances arid relative positions of persons and obj ects connected with the case. (3) The expert testimony of two physicians that-the deceased could not have died as the result of a wound received in the. manner stated by the witnesses for the prosecution.”

An analysis of this language is made by counsel and its relation to the general character of the evidence is discussed, and the conclusion deduced that the' trial court urged three arguments to sustain its judgment: “Fi^st, paucity of proof in behalf of the defendant. Second, Hiá' failure to testify iri his own favor. Third, his failure to get ariy eyewitness to the shooting, to rebut evidence of the Filipinos who claim to have been eyewitnesses.” And to this summary, which, it is urged, demonstrates that the trial court considered in determining the guilt of defendant, that he failed to take the stand in his own behalf, there is added the comment of the Supreme Court of the islands in its review of the case, or rather in .denying a motion for a new trial, after its decision of the case. Upon the first consideration of the case in the Supreme Court no assignment of error based on the point was made. It was raised for the first time in what is styled “ Exception'to the judgment,, and motion for a new trial,” in which he excepted ■to the judgment rendered by the Supreme Court and prayed that it be set aside and a new trial granted,him. The reasons given" were as-follows:

..“I. The• defendant has been compelled,to testify against himself in violation of art. No. 5 of the law of Congress of Julyrl, 1.902, in the following manner:

“ The accused, taking advantage of the right conceded him in the third-paragraph of article 15 of the General Orders, No-. 58, did not testify in the. Court of First Instance, and. said'court in its-judgment considered this circumstance as prejudicial to the defendant; and the attorney general adduced the same circumstance in his £>rief in this court in the following words:
“ ‘No direct proof was presented by the defense to eon-tradict the facilitated by the witnesses for the prosecution; nor did the defendant himself testify in' his own favor .to deny the grave crime with which he is.charged.’.
“'And to overcome as far as. possible’ thmeffect of this illegal procedure so prejudicial to the accused, his counsel in this court, speaking in his name, felt himself obliged to state to the court that the defendant did not.go on the witness stand .because he did not remember anything about the occurrence: which circumstance was considered by the court as a fact prejudicial to the defendant and appellant in the following-words:
-.“ ‘The defendant, a lieutenant of constabulary in command at the Parian Barracks at Cebu, being intoxicated borrowed "a carromata, which, was without lights, from a friend and was found wandering about the streets therein by-•a municipal policeman, named Almonte, - who' at- his .request, drove him to the barracks. As,to subsequent'occurrences we.have not,the benefit of his recollection and must rely on-.the testimony of.■ the witnesses for the¡.prosecution"and the’ circumstances of the casé.’ ” ■ ' •

To which it. was replied:

“The court having heard the petition of Attornéy Kincaid, praying for a hew trial of case No. 3176, the United States v. Pendleton, in which a decision, was rendered by this court on the ninth of the present month of February, 1907, said, that, although the fact that the defendant declined of failed to testify as a witness was taken into consideration by the Court of First Instance, this court, in deciding th'e cause did not take said fact into consideration, but rendered the decision in accordance with the proofs presented at the trial, and, therefore, the new trial solicited is denied.”

Defendant puts aside the disclaimer of the Supreme Court as unimportant in an argument which is certainly difficult to represent if not to follow. He appealed to the Supreme Court to review the judgment .of the lower court. He made a motion for a new trial in the Supreme Court, and that being denied, he now urges, not error committed in the Supreme-Court, but error committed in the trial,court-. This is worked out and attempted to be justified by an argument that, it may be, we do not understand. It is said that the Supreme Court misapprehended the “function conferred upon it by Congress and the Philippine Commission in relation to reviewing,the decisions of Courts of First Instance.” That it -seemed to be of opinion .that it had “ the same authority in ¡this regard as was possessed by its Spanish predecessor, the audiencia,” and “passed on the decision of the court below .about as a reviewing court would pass on an equity proceeding 'upon written testimony submitted by affidavits and •interrogatory depositions.”' And by doing so, counsel further urge that the Supreme Court .did not have before it what they describe as “the supremely human element — the áppearance of the witnesses and their manner on the stand,.etc.,” and, not, having such element, could not judge of the effect' of the evidence independently of the silence of the defendant, and could not determine therefore how much the error of the trial court, in considering such silence, controlled its judgment. The answer is that the Supreme Court had the power to review the case and consider all that was necessary to the exercise of such power. That power was invoked by defendant, and he secured from its exercise a reduction of three years in his sentence. And Trono v. United States, 199 U. S. 521, may be cited as an answer to the contention. In that case the power of review which the Supreme Court possessed over the judgment of the trial court was exerted to the extent of reversing a judgment and sentence for assault, and rendering a judgment for homicide. Trono v. United States needs very little comment. It declares the relation of the courts and the scheme of procedure existing in the Philippine Islands and brings the case at bar to the simple proposition, when stripped of ingenious suggestions, that an error which was made (if .error was made, of which we express no opinion) at the trial in the court of first instance, and which was not repeated in the Supreme Court, is not a ground of legal complaint.

The third assignment of error is not discussed by counsel. It is, however, manifestly without merit.

Judgment affirmed.

Mb., Justice Harlan dissents..  