Durham v. State

128 Tenn. 636
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 128 Tenn. 636 (Durham v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Durham v. State, 128 Tenn. 636 (Tenn. 1913).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff in error, Durham, was tried and convicted of murder in the second degree. His defense was self-defense ; and he has appealed and assigned numerous errors, one only of which will be treated and disposed of in this'opinion.

The trial judge in his charge to the jury said:

“Every defendant is entitled to the benefit of his good character when it'is shown in proof. If the good character of the defendant, considered in connection with the other proof, creates a reasonable doubt of his guilt, you should acquit.”

The defendant submitted the following request to charge, which was refused, and therefor error is assigned :

“I further charge that the defendant is presumed to have a good character until the contrary is shown by competent evidence, and this good character stands as a witness for him and in his favor upon every issue in the case.. The defendant is always entitled to the benefit of his good character, and the jury may look to this, with the other evidence, to see whether there is a reasonable doubt as to his guilt.”

The defendant had offered no testimony to show his good character for peace and quietness; but he did testify in his own behalf, and offered evidence in sup[638]*638port of himself as a witness to the effect that his character for truth‘and veracity was good.

It is insisted for the State that defendant thus put his character in evidence, and is not, on that account, entitled to the law’s presumption of a good character, since a presumption is operative only in the absence of proof. In this there is a failure to distinguish between the good character of an accused (for peace and quietness,) and the good character of an accused as a witness (for truth and veracity). Powers v. State, 117 Tenn., 363, 97 S. W., 815. The putting by a defendant of the latter to proof cannot have the effect of putting with it the former, against his intent and interest.

So that we are of opinion that there is nothing in this counter insistence of the State that embarrasses the defendant in his reliance upon the error assigned, the purport of which is that there is a presumption of a good character in favor of an accused which, as would a fact, stands as a witness for him, to he looked to by the jury as having effect upon reasonable doubt of his guilt, even where he does not offer to set up a good character for peace and quietness.

The contention does not lack support of authority that is entitled to great consideration. The circuit court of Appeals of the sixth circuit, in Mullen v. United States, 106 Fed., 892, 46 C. C. A., 22, in an opinion by Mr.- Justice Day, then circuit judge, dealt with a like contention. There the trial judge refused a request to charge as follows:

[639]*639“Ton are charged that the law presumes the good character of the accused, and such presumption is to be considered evidence in favor of the accused in considering the question of his guilt or innocence.”

The court held that it was error to refuse this request, and said:

“The comment of the judge in his charge and the several refusals to charge in the exceptions noted raise the question whether in a criminal trial, in a court of the United States, where no testimony has been offered as to the previous good character of the accused, a presumption of such good character exists in favor of the accused, of which, upon a request to that effect, the jury should be instructed. The supreme court of the United States, dealing with the presumption of innocence in criminal trials, in the case of Coffin v. United States, 156 U. S., 432, 460, 15 Sup. Ct., 394, 405, 39 L. Ed., 481, 493 (opinion by Mr. justice White) said:

“ ‘The fact that the presumption of innocence is recognized as a presumption of law, and is characterized by the civilians as a presumptio .juris, demonstrates that it is evidence in favor of the accused; for in all systems of law legal presumptions are treated as evidence giving rise to resulting proof to' the full extent of their legal efficacy.’

“This reasoning applies to the presumption, if such exists, of good character of the accused, and should be given in the charge to the jury, where a specific re[640]*640quest on that subject is made at the trial. ' Does such presumption exist? We fail to find any difference of opinion in the well-recognized text-writers upon this subject. All assert that a presumption exists in favor of the accused in the absence of testimony that he hád a good character previous to the time of the alleged commission of the offense in question. It is true that the government may not attack the character of the accused until he puts it in issue by affirmative testimony on his part. He is not obliged to do this, but may, if he sees fit, rest upon the presumption raised by the law. . . .

“It is true that there are cases which hold that, where there is no testimony upon the subject, the court is not obliged to say anything to the jury, either one way or the other. But, if the presumption exists in favor of the accused, it cannot be available to him unless he can have an instruction advising the jury of this proposition of law. The presumption, to the extent to which it exists, though less important, is as. much his right in a criminal trial as the presumption in favor of his innocence. It is in consonance with the general principle of law that a man is presumed to stand ordinarily well, and to have at least the average qualities-of morality and good conduct.”

In a learned opinion, Mr. Justice White, in Coffin v. United States, supra, as noted, undertook to demonstrate that the presumption of innocence is tantamount to evidence in favor of the accused, but further said: ‘ ‘ The evolution of the principle of the presumption, of [641]*641innocence, and its resultant, the doctrine of reasonable doubt, . . . indicates the necessity of enforcing the one in order that the other may continue to exist. While Rome and the Mediaevalists taught that, wherever doubt existed in a criminal case, acquittal must follow, the expounders of the common law, in their devotion to humaii liberty and individual rights, traced this doctrine of the doubt to its true origin, the presumption of innocence, and rested it upon this enduring basis.”

The argument of appellant is that the presumption of a good character should, treated as a law-assumed fact, strengthen the presumption of innocence, and thereby strengthen that which is thus declared' to be the resultant of the presumption of innocence_the reasonable doubt.

We deem the error in this contention and in theauthority relied on in its support to be in assuming that the presumption of good character may be conceived of as not incorporated in and as a part of the presumption of innocence, and that it may be resorted to as an independent probative element to reinforce the presumption of innocence with like effect upon its resultant — the doubt. When the law affords to an accused the presumption of innocence, that, in its inclusive nature, tends to produce the resultant doubt. Neither that presumption nor its resultant is to be strengthened by the other or included presumption, . but the production by defendant of proof of the [642]

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Bluebook (online)
128 Tenn. 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durham-v-state-tenn-1913.