Gallaher v. State

17 Fla. 370
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 17 Fla. 370 (Gallaher v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallaher v. State, 17 Fla. 370 (Fla. 1879).

Opinion

Me. Justice VanValkenburgii

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an indictment found in pursuance of sections 4 and 5 of chapter 8 of “an act to provide for the punishment of crime and proceedings in criminal cases,” approved August 6th, 1868, which sections read as follows:

“Section- 4. Whoever, having a former husband or wife living, marries another person, or continues to cohabit with such second husband or wife in this state, shall (except in the cases mentioned in the following section,) be deemed guilty ’ of polygamy, and be punished by imprisonment in the State Penitentiary not exceeding five years, or in the county jail not exceeding one year, or by fine not exceeding five hundred dollars.

“Sec. 5. The provisions of the preceding section shall not extend to any person whose husband or wife has been continually remaining beyond sea, or has voluntarily withdrawn from’'the other and remained absent for the space of three years together, the party marrying again not knowing the other to be living within that time, nor to any person legally divorced from the bands of matrimony, and not the guilty cause of such divorce.”

The first assigned error is in permitting certain letters from H. D. D. Twiggs to Asa Ambrister, a witness for the prosecution, to be read in evidence to the jury.

Asa Ambrister was a witness for the State on the trial of the plaintiff in error. -Among other things he testified, “I was present at the marriage of J. C. Gallaher, the defendant, to Mary A. Ambrister; I heard the ceremony performed, and defendant accepted her as his wife; they were married on the 23rd of October, 1851; I know the defendant; he is the same man; his wife has lived with me since 1863; the defendant was in the Confederate service, lost his prm at the seige of Vicksburg, returned to his family after the surrender of Vicksburg, and remained until the Federal army took possession of East Tennessee, which was but a short time. He returned in 1866 Bon after the final surrender; he had lost all and had no means and nothing to do; defendant Baid if he had Borne means, lie would go where he could get business and provide a home for his family; hiB wife was willing, and I and my neighbor, Lenoir, indorsed his note in bank for some money and he went away; kept writing back from Alabama that he was ’unable to provide a home for his family for a year or. more. Then he moved'* to Macon, Georgia, and continued the cor[101]*101respondence until 1871, when I received a letter from one Judge Twiggs.”

Here follows in the bill of exceptions a statement in these words, “which letter, with a number of other letters from Judge Twiggs to witness, was introduced as evidence, to which testimony defendant’s counsel objected. The court understanding the defendant to oppose the objection made by his atorney, permitted the letters to be read to the jury, to which action of the court defendant’s counsel then and there excepted, and the exception noted.”

The first letter, which was then read in evidence to the jury, was as follows:

“SANDERSVILLE, ‘WASHINGTON Co., Gav
December 28, 1870.
“Mr. Asa Ambrister:
“My Dear Sirs I take the liberty to write you a few lines in-order to obtain some definite information witji regard to'the circulntion of various reports against the character of Maj. J. 0. Gallaher, who resides in this place, and is engaged in the practice of law. This man has long since been regarded by the people of this place with distrust and suspicion,” &c.
The remainder of the letter is filled' with charges against the character of the defendant Gallaher, not properly admissible in evidence, and tending only to prejudice the mind of the jury against him.
Three other letters of the Same character and equally objectionable, purporting to be written by H. D. D. Twiggs to the witness, Ambrister, were also, read in evidence to the jury. There was no proof of the genuineness of either of the letters, had they not been otherwise objectionable, other than in the testimony of Ambrister above quoted. It is true, that after they were so read to the jury and on the commencement of his subsequent examination, he testified, “After receiving these letters, I consented to go to Sandersville as a witness against defendant.”
This* cannot be taken as sufficient proof of the letters, ' even if ‘they were otherwise admissible, to warrant their introduction as evidence. But they were mere hearsay, irrelevant and immaterial to the issue, in no way tending to prove the first marriage of Gallaher, as is suggested on the part of defendant in error, or any other fact, but on the contrary, having the effect to prejudice the case • of the prisoner with the jury. They were not even proven to be in the handwriting of Twiggs, who, it is claimed, wrote them.

In a subsequent part of the bill of exceptions is the following statement:

“State vs. Gallaher.
“It is hereby noted that the prisoner’s counsel objects to the introduction by the State of the evidence of Ambrister to the following effeot, that he went to Sandersville, Geo., in 1871, as a witness for the prosecution against defendant, in a charge- of living with a woman as his wife while his first . wife was still living, and that the defendant was mobbed while there and shot, and that he, Ambrister, protected him and carried him in a hack to Macon, and that Judge Twiggs and others told him that defendant had been living in adultery with a woman in Sandersville and passed her off as his wife. Also, that defendant had borrowed money from him and not paid it back- on his leaving Tennessee in 1865.
“It is also noted that defendant’s counsel objected to the introduction of the letters of Judge Twiggs offered in evidence by the State, said letters being here noted as received in evidence,, and that the defendant’s counsel further grayed that these exceptions be noted by the judge on the trial of 379 cause.
“(Signed) Wilkinson Call,
“For Prisoner.
“The above exceptions are hereby noted and allowed, but it is stated here on.the record that when the defendant’s counsel made the exception last stated, the prisoner, as the court understood him, objected to the exclusion of this evidence, and the same not’ being urged thereafter the court did -not rule on the subject, but the evidence was allowed to be stated to the jury.
“Wilkinson* Call,
“For Prisoner.6
“Exceptions noted and allowed Dec. 12, 1878.
“W: Bryson, J. 3d J. C.”

This paper, which seems to have been filed by the counsel for the prisoner, bears date on the 12th day of December, after the trial had been concluded on the 11th. If this was the only exception taken, under our previous decisions, referred to by the Attorney-General, it would not .be available to reverse this judgment. This court has frequently held that exceptions, to be available on an appeal or writ of error, must be taken during the trial; to evidence, when offered; to the charge of the court, when made, and before the jury leave their seats to consider of their verdict.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gomez v. Spencer
151 So. 395 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1933)
McKinney v. State
76 So. 333 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1917)
Guinn v. United States
228 F. 103 (Eighth Circuit, 1915)
Weeks v. Hays
55 Fla. 370 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1908)
Keigans v. State
52 Fla. 57 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1906)
Reynolds v. Smith
49 Fla. 217 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1905)
Shivers v. Territory of Oklahoma
1903 OK 98 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1903)
Westcott v. State
31 Fla. 458 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1893)
Brown v. State
29 Fla. 543 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1892)
Ex Parte Warris
28 Fla. 371 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1891)
Waddell v. Cunningham
8 So. 643 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1891)
Pittman v. State
25 Fla. 648 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1889)
Willingham v. State
21 Fla. 761 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1886)
Tilly v. State
21 Fla. 242 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1885)
Burroughs v. State
17 Fla. 643 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1880)
Bass v. State
17 Fla. 685 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1880)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Fla. 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallaher-v-state-fla-1879.