Commonwealth v. Sapp

14 S.W. 834, 90 Ky. 580, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 140
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 25, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 834 (Commonwealth v. Sapp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Sapp, 14 S.W. 834, 90 Ky. 580, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 140 (Ky. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE HOLT

delivered the opinion op the court.

Upon the trial of William Sapp upon the charge of attempting to poison his wife, the State offered her as a witness against him, avowing by its attorney that it would prove by her she had seen the accused sprinkle a substance upon a piece of watermelon intended for her, and that the portion of it produced at the examining trial, and then shown to contain arsenic, was a part-of the piece prepared for her, and was, when so produced, in the same condition as when she got it from him. It is claimed the attempt was made in August, 1888. Afterward, and before his trial, they were absolutely divorced. The court refused to permit her to testify, holding that she could not be a witness for any purpose; and whether this is so is the main question now pi’esented.

It is a general rule of the common law, based both upon public policy and because of identity- of interest, that neither a husband or wife can testify for or against the other; and some authorities hold that where this relation has once existed, the one is inadmissible for or against the other, even after the relation has ceased, as to any and all matters that occurred during its existence. They follow Lord Alvanley, who said, in the early case of Monroe v. Twisleton, Peake’s Ad. Cas., 219, that the divorced wife is a competent witness to prove any fact arising after the divorce, but not to prove any thing which happened during coverture. Thus Mr. Wharton says: “If a woman be divorced a vinculo matrimonii, she can not prove a contract, or any thing else which happened during the coverture. Any fact arising after the. divorce she may prove.” (1 Wharton’s Crim. Law, sec. 774.)

[582]*582It is, perhaps, questionable whether some of the writers to this effect do not mean that the divorced wife can not testify as to any matter occurring during coverture, if her knowledge as to it arose by reason of the marital relation. It was held in the State v. Phelps, 2 Tyler’s Reports, 374, that a woman, although divorced absolutely, is not a competent witness upon an indictment against her former husband for a crime committed during the coverture, but the court so announced without any argument in the opinion of the question. Cases may, however, be found where courts of high authority have held that a widow may testify against the administrator of her husband as to any facts which she did not learn from the latter, or which did not come to her knowledge by reason of the marital, relation, although relating to the transactions of her husband. (1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 338; Babcock v. Booth, 2 Hill, 181.)

In the case last cited the court said: “The policy of the law only excludes her when her answer will be a violation of the confidence which existed between the husband and wife while the marriage relation continued;” and in Ratcliffe v. Wales, 1 Hill, 63, which was an action for crim. con. with the plaintiff’s wife, it was held that while a divorced wife is generally incompetent to testify against the husband as to facts occurring during the marriage, yet she was competent to prove the charge for him, although the act occurred during the existence of the marriage. We fail to see any reason for a distinction, whether she be called as a witness for or against him.

[583]*583It was held by this court in Storms, &c., v. Storms, &c., 3 Bush, 77, that the testimony of a husband, after his wife has been divorced from him, is competent against her, if it divulges no communication between them during coverture. In English’s Adm’r v. Cropper, 8 Bush, 292, the testimony of the widow of the intestate was offered by his administrator to prove facts which came to her knowledge during the coverture, but not by reason of her confidential relation as wife.

It was urged that our then existing law (1871) provided that husband and wife should not testify for ■or against each other, and that, construing it by the reasons of public policy, which, before its adoption, disqualified them from so testifying,- it should be held to exclude them after the dissolution of the marriage by divorce or the death of one of them; but this ■court said: -“Neither the literal import of the language of the Code cited nor any principle of policy or propriety will exclude a surviving wife or husband from testifying to facts known by the witness from .other means of information than such as result from ■the marriage relation, where, as in this case, the witness is not otherwise incompetent, although the testimony may relate to transactions of the deceased husband or wife.”

Our statute, adopted in 1872, and which, in substance, so far as it bears upon the question we are now considering, is again found in section 606 of the Civil Code, appears to be declaratory of these decisions of this court. It says: “Neither husband nor wife shall be competent for or against each other, or [584]*584concerning any communication made by one to the other during marriage, whether called while that relation subsisted or afterwards, provided, however,, that in actions where the wife, were she: a feme sole,. would be plaintiff or defendant, the wife- may testify or her husband may testify, but both shall not be-permitted to testify.” (General Statutes, edition 1883, page 414.)

This provision was considered in the case of Elswich v. The Commonwealth, 13 Bush, 155, where the husband was indicted for a felony, but not one against the wife, who had been divorced before the trial; and it was decided, that inasmuch as she had been divorced she was a competent witness for him to prove facts; which came to her knowledge while the marriage relation existed, but not confidentially or by means of her situation as wife. Unquestionably, information obtained by the husband or wife during the marital relation by reason of its existence should not be disclosed, even after the relation has been dissolved.. Whether this rule may be relaxed so as to permit the wife to testify against the husband by his consent has been, to some extent, a mooted point, but in this country it has generally been denied. Its. importance to the interests of society, protecting, as it does, the peace and harmony so vital to the most intimate of all relations, can not be overestimated. Its disregard would throw open to the public gaze-all' that privacy of married life which tends to cement the relation and destroy, in great degree, if not altogether, that mutual confidence and dependence the one upon the other, so necessary to its existence. [585]*585Discord and misery would reign where peace and concord are so necessary. In the language of an eminent legal writer: “The great object of the rule is to secure domestic happiness by placing the protecting seal of the law upon all confidential communications between husband and wife; and whatever has come to the knowledge of either by means of the hallowed confidence which that relation inspires, can not be afterwards divulged in testimony, even though the other party be no longer living.” (1 Greenleaf on Evidence, section 337.)

If the proposed testimony violates marital confidence in the slightest degree, or tends, however slightly, to impair the rule for its protection, the highest considerations forbid its introduction. The word “communication,” therefore, as used in our statute, should be^ given a liberal construction. It should not be confined to a mere statement by the husband to the wife or vice

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 834, 90 Ky. 580, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-sapp-kyctapp-1890.