Billings v. Commonwealth

3 S.W.2d 770, 223 Ky. 381, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 347
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 2, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 770 (Billings v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Billings v. Commonwealth, 3 S.W.2d 770, 223 Ky. 381, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 347 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The appellant, William Billings (to whom we shall hereafter refer as defendant), was indicted by the grand jury of Boyd county charged with transporting intoxicating liquors, and a second count in the indictment accused him of having been previously convicted of the offense of unlawfully possessing intoxicating liquors, and which latter offense and his conviction thereof occurred after the taking effect of the 1922 statute commonly known as the Rash-G-ullion Act (Acts 1922, c. 33), and before the commission and conviction of the first offense charged *382 in the indictment and which under the terms of the statute made the last committed offense a felony and punishable by confinement in the state penitentiary. Upon his trial under a plea of not guilty he was convicted and punished by confinement in the penitentiary for a period of two years; His motion for a new trial was overruled, followed by this appeal to this court. A number of alleged errors as grounds for reversal were relied on in the motion for a new trial and which are argued here, but none of them is of sufficient merit and materiality to require our consideration except (1) error of the court in admitting the testimony of the two police witnesses because (a) under the statute upon which the prosecution was based they were entitled to a fee to be taxed as costs upon convictions for any of its violations and which rendered them interested witnesses and therefore incompetent; and (b) that their discovery of the liquor with which defendant was charged as possessing was illegally made and should have been excluded from the jury; and (2) the failure of thé court to instruct the jury upon the whole law of the case.

In disposing of subdivision (a) of ground (1) it may be admitted at the outset that at common law no one was a competent witness who was financially interested in the final result of the proceedings in which the testimony was offered, and that rule of exclusion applied to criminal prosecutions as well as to civil causes. It was so universally recognized by the common law that we need not cite text-book authority or court opinions. Suffice it to say that this court recognized it as applicable to criminal prosecutions, in the cases of Commonwealth v. Moore, 5 J. J. Mar. 655, and Bridgeford v. City of Lexington, 7 B. Mon. 47. In the latter case the precise question here involved was before the court, except that the offense was different. In that case the officers whose testimony was objected to for the reason under consideration were interested only in a fee to be taxed as a part of the costs in their favor if defendant on trial was convicted, and which is the exact question presented in this case. They were held by this court to be incompetent because of such interests, although it was small. On the latter point the opinion said:

“It is true the interest (of the witnesses) is inconsiderable, but it is a direct interest and sufficient, we think, to render them incompetent as witnesses.”’

*383 It is unnecessary to refer to cases wherein the interest of the witness in the result of the litigation disqualified him in civil cases, for we are now concerned only with criminal prosecutions. Unless, therefore, such disqualification has been expressly or by necessary implication removed by statute in this commonwealth the ground of objection founded on subdivision (a) of ground (1) should be sustained, and our first task is to determine whether it has been abolished, in the manner indicated, in this commonwealth.

In the first place, the competency of such remotely interested witnesses has been at least tacitly recognized by this court for a great number of years. Especially is that true with reference to prosecutions concerning the liquor traffic and its prohibition. But a large number of penal actions have been before this court involving other offenses not appertaining to the liquor traffic and wherein the arresting officer was remotely interested in the conviction of his prisoner and wherein the conviction was upheld, which would seem to indicate that this court either overlooked or tacitly recognized no such disqualification. However, in the case of Commonwealth v. McGuire, 84 Ky. 57, the question as to the competency of witnesses (not defendants) in criminal prosecutions was before this court. At that time and at the time of the commission of the offense for which defendant in that case was indicted, the statutory laws of the commonwealth contained in the compilation known as General Statutes of Kentucky were in force. Section 8 of article 8 of chapter 29 of that compilation said:

“If any person be convicted of either of the offenses described in the .five preceding sections, he shall ever afterwards be disqualified from giving-evidence in any judicial proceeding, or from being a witness in any case whatever. ’ ’

Section 1180 of our present Kentucky Statutes is practically the same as the excerpt we have taken from the immediately preceding General Statutes. That section (1180) says:

“If any person be convicted of either of the offenses described in the seven preceding sections, he shall ever afterwards be disqualified from giving evidence in any judicial proceeding, or from being a witness in any case whatever.”

*384 In that opinion none of the specified disqualifications set forth in article 8 of chapter 29 of the General Statutes applied to the witness who it was claimed was disqualified in that case, and it was held therein that section 8 of that article had the effect to repeal section 5 of chapter 107 of the prior Revised Statutes, and to also prescribe the only disqualification of witnesses (not defendants) in criminal prosecutions. The effect of the enactment of article 8 of the General Statutes, supra, with its disqualifying- section 8, was held by us in that opinion “to render all persons qualified to give evidence in (criminal) judicial proceedings, and testify as witnesses, except those especially excluded by section 8, art. 8, c. 29, General' Statutes; and there is no other law regulating the qualifications of persons to give evidence as witnesses (in criminal prosecutions) except the General Statutes, and áll who are not expressly inhibited thereby are qualified.”

That case was followed by a like ruling in the subsequent ones of Patterson v. Commonwealth, 86 Ky. 313, 5 S. W. 387, and Commonwealth v. Minor, 89 Ky. 555, 13 S. W. 5. At the time of the rendition of those opinions section 606 of the Civil Code had a subsection in it reading:

“No prisoner in the penitentiary of this state, or of any other country, shall testify; nor shall any person testify for himself against such prisoner.”

In the Minor opinion the questioned witness was such a prisoner, and it was held that such provision, which was then a part of section 606 of the Civil Code, as we have said, did not apply in criminal prosecutions, since that section, except in. so far as otherwise expressly stated therein to the contrary, applied to the competency of witnesses in the trial of civil cases only, and not to their competency in the trial of criminal prosecutions.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 770, 223 Ky. 381, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billings-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1928.