General Exchange Insurance v. Sherby

165 A. 809, 165 Md. 1, 1933 Md. LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 25, 1933
Docket[No. 7, April Term, 1933.]
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 165 A. 809 (General Exchange Insurance v. Sherby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Exchange Insurance v. Sherby, 165 A. 809, 165 Md. 1, 1933 Md. LEXIS 103 (Md. 1933).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

An action at law to recover the damages resulting from the collision of two automobiles while being driven on the public highway was begun by the owner of one of the automobiles and his assurer against the owner and the driver of the other automobile. The trial of the case resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendants. The plaintiffs have appealed, and the single ground upon which a reversal is'asked is presented by an exception to' the court’s ruling on the evidence. The defendant driver was under cross-examination, and had stated that he had been driving carefully, but that he and the owner of the other automobile had both been charged with reckless driving and had immediately been taken before a justice of the peace, who- had tried the case at once. At this point the plaintiffs offered to prove by the witness that the latter had been found guilty of this charge by the justice of the peace and that he had been fined two dollars and costs. The error assigned is the refusal to admit this testimony. The driver of each automobile attributed the cause of the accident to the negligent or reckless driving of the other, and which one was at fault so> as to have been the direct cause of the accident was the issue for the jury to determine from all the testimony on the subject. Dwyer v. Chew, 149 Md. 281, 283, 131 A. 350.

Subject to the limitation that there had been a conviction 1 that was not too remote, 2 the credibility of a witness had freely been allowed to be impeached by proof of a former conviction of crime, without reference to- its nature, 3 until the case of Nelson v. Seiler (1921), 154 Md. 63, 139 A. 564, *3 566. See Donnelly v. Donnelly, 156 Md. 81, 86, 143 A. 648 (moral turpitude).

Tlie comparatively recent multiplication of penal laws to enforce ordinances and statutes enacted under tlie police power gave rise to a large class of offenses whose commission indicated neither moral turpitude, a lawless disposition, nor untrathfulness. The problem is illustrated and its solution stated in Nelson v. Seiler, supra, where the opinion for the court was written by Chief Judge Bond. It is there said: “To admit as possible evidence of a witness’ unworthiness of belief the fact that he has been convicted of driving1 over a stop signal, or making a left-hand turn where it is not permitted, would be unreasonable. Criminal law and criminal procedure are made use of for the enforcement of a largo volume of mere regulations of convenience and order, wholly without relation to any moral qualities; and while it may have been less apparent in times past, it is now, at least, unescapable that some discrimination nmst be made when the courts come to receive evidence of violations to impeach the credibility of a witness. It is not required that the evidence be restricted to infamous crimes or those involving moral turpitude on the one hand, but, on the other, the purpose of the admission, to impeach credibility, must impose some limits. Tlie convictions should be of infringements of the law that may have some tendency to impeach credibility, and not all infringements do. Ro rigid classification seems possible. The principle generally adopted by courts which *4 follow otherwise the practice followed, in Maryland is that the trial court must exercise discretion when offers of convictions are made, looking- to the purpose for which the evidence is offered, and that its decision will not be interfered with on appeal, except when the evidence is so clearly irrelevant that its admission could not be said to be within the discretion lodged with the trial court. 2 Wigmore, Evidence (2nd Ed.), sec. 983. Third Great Western Co. v. Loomis, 32 N. Y. 127, 132; People v. McArron, 121 Mich. 1, 79 N. W. 944. And this we take to be the principle we are required to follow in Maryland.” The doctrine thus formulated was affirmed in Burgess v. State, 161 Md. 162, 173, 155 A. 153, 158, where Judge Digges suceintly states for the court that “The most satisfactory disposition of the question, so far as the courts are concerned, is to leave it in the sound discretion of the trial court, whose judgment in such matter should not be disturbed on appeal, except in clear cases of error.” O’Dell v. Barrett, 163 Md. 342, 163 A. 191, in which Judge Urner wrote the opinion, expresses the same rule.

These decisions are conclusive that the credibility of the witness could not be impeached on cross-examination by evidence of his prior conviction for reckless driving of an automobile on a public highway, unless by reason of the circumstances that in these cases the criminal act of which the party had been convicted had occurred before the accrual of the subject-matter of the trial, whereas in the case at bar the conviction may have been for the reckless driving -out of which the pending alleged cause of action arose. It is not perceived how the time of the conviction of crime is generally material or relevant in the determination of'the admissibility of the fact of a conviction of crime before the trial at which the witness is so sought to be impeached, because it is the nature of the crime in relation to the credit of the witness that is decisive of its admissibility, and the element of time merely goes to the present weight to be given to the conviction, unless the length of time since the conviction is, in connection with the nature of the crime, so great as to make *5 the fact of no probative value. Simond v. State, 127 Md. 29, 38, 95 A. 1073. If the nature of the crime indicate a lack of veracity, it is the conviction of that crime that is the discrediting fact, whenever, if not too remote, or wherever, it may have been committed. So in the recent appeal of Dorman v. Koontz, 164 Md. 535, 165 A. 461, 463, filed April 6th, 1933, in which the opinion was written by Judge Urner, the court, after stating the principle declared in Nelson v. Seiler, and Burgess v. State, supra, and its application in the later case of O'Dell v. Barrett, supra, held the principle properly applicable to the ruling at nisi prius which allowed the defendant to be asked on cross-examination if he had not been convicted of driving on the day of the accident a motor vehicle while he was under the influence of liquor. The ruling was made under these circumstances. The witness had been arrested on the day of the accident for an offense which had been committed in close association with the time of the accident, and had been tried and convicted before a justice of the peace a few days after the accident. In his testimony in the civil action, the witness had denied that he had been drinking, and, for the purpose of impeachment, the stated question was immediately put to the witness.

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Bluebook (online)
165 A. 809, 165 Md. 1, 1933 Md. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-exchange-insurance-v-sherby-md-1933.