Lockard v. Commonwealth

8 S.W. 266, 87 Ky. 201, 1888 Ky. LEXIS 66
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 1, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 8 S.W. 266 (Lockard v. Commonwealth) 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
Lockard v. Commonwealth, 8 S.W. 266, 87 Ky. 201, 1888 Ky. LEXIS 66 (Ky. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

JUDGE HOLT

delivered the opinion of the court.

An indictment for uttering a forged writing must state the acts constituting the uttering, and not the forging of it. It is immaterial who committed the forgery, or how it was done. The falsity of the paper is merely a fact necessary to the existence of the offense. If it be forged, and one so knowing utters it as genuine, he is guilty. The acts constituting the uttering are the gravamen of the offense.

[202]*202In this case the indictment charges, in substance, that the appellant had the writing; knew it to be false; presented it to the party defrauded, representing it as genuine, and thereby obtained property of value. The statement that the appellant knew it to be false embraces the charge that it was so in fact.

It is charged in the forepart of the indictment when and where the paper was forged. This was unnecessary ; but in this instance it aids as to the sufficiency of the charge of uttering the paper, because, in thereafter stating it, the words “then and there” are used, thus fixing the venue of the offense. ' The indictment is sufficient. We now reach the next question in the case, and one which has not been heretofore considered by this court.

The act of May 1, 1886, provides: “In all criminal and penal prosecutions now pending, or hereafter instituted in any of the courts of this Commonwealth, the defendant on trial, on his own request, shall be allowed to testify in his own behalf, but his failure to do so shall not be commented upon, or be allowed to create any presumption against him or her.” (General Statutes, page 548.)

The appellant testified for himself, but offered no evidence as to his character. The Commonwealth then introduced several witnesses, who were, over the appellant’s objection, permitted to testify that while they knew nothing of his character for truthfulness, yet his general moral character was bad.

The law invests every person charged with crime with a presumption of good character. If the accused chooses to rest upon it, and not put his general char[203]*203acter in issue by offering evidence as to it, then the State can offer none to impeach it. It is only when the defendant casts aside this shield of presumption, and attempts to show his general good character by affirmative evidence, that the door is opened for evidence of his bad character upon the part of the prosecution. This has long been a familiar rule. He may now, however, be both a defendant and a witness.

The weight of common law authority is, that an inquiry into the general character of a witness must be confined to truth; and where this rule obtains there is no difficulty in holding that evidence as to the general moral character of a defendant is inadmissible, unless he has first offered testimony as to it, although he may have testified for himself. The inquiry must be confined to his general character for truth and veracity. Thus, in the case of Fletcher v. The State, 49 Ind., 124, it was held, that as the accused had not put his general character in issue, evidence of his general bad moral character was inadmissible to assail him as a witness. In that State a witness, whether he be a defendant or not, can not be thus attacked in a criminal cause. This is not so, however, in this State. Here, evidence of the general moral character of a witness is admissible upon the ground, as was said in the case of Tacket v. May, 3 Dana, 80, that “a witness whose moral character is bad, is not as credible as one whose moral character is good.” This is the settled rule with us. It is no longer open to first impression. The real question, therefore,’ now presented is, whether, while the testimony of witnesses generally may be assailed by reason of their general moral char[204]*204acter, that of defendants in criminal cases shall only be open to attack upon the score of truth or veracity ?

If this restriction of the general rule existing with us is to be applied, it must be because otherwise the general moral character of a defendant would, without his consent, by his becoming a witness, be in effect thrown into the scale, and he might sometimes be convicted more upon his bad character than upon the facts of the transaction under investigation. It is, therefore, now urged, and the argument is not without weight, that an impeachment of his testimony upon the score of character should be confined to his general reputation for truth and veracity. If so, this qualification of the general rule must be attributed to the existence of that other rule, which, in a criminal case, gives to the defendant alone the right to put his general character in issue. The law making him a competent witness is silent upon this point. Its language merely places him upon the plane of any other witness, if he chooses to testify.

Undoubtedly the rule that the defendant only can put his general character in issue is founded in sound policy. If the State could do so ad libitum, convictions would be likely to result often from bad character rather than from guilt of the offense charged. When, however, the defendant becomes a witness, he voluntarily assumes another character.

Public policy and individual safety forbid that his reputation for veracity should then be beyond inquiry. Probably no case to the contrary can be found. A different rule would serve but as a shield for crime. Why, also, if the testimony of other witnesses may [205]*205be impaired or destroyed by evidence of general bad moral character, should not his be open to like attack ? If there be good reason for it in the one case, does it not exist at least equally in the other? If it be said that in his case it may affect him as a defendant, and not merely ás a witness j that it, instead of the evidence as to the act in question, may produce a conviction, why may it not also be said that testimony showing he is unworthy of belief is likely to have the same effect? If by his becoming a witness the State is enabled in effect to avoid the rule that one criminally charged can alone put his general moral character in issue, yet he voluntarily affords the opportunity. If he chooses to exercise the privilege, should it not be with any burden that is necessary to the safety of the public? Its rights, as well as his, must be regarded. Reason dictates that he, as a witness, should not be afforded an advantage not enjoyed by other witnesses. If it is important to the administration of justice that their general character for morality should be open to inquiry, why is this not also true of the defendant when he voluntarily becomes a witness? If the testimony of others, who are disinterested, may be thus discredited, ought that of the party interested, however bad may be his character, to be beyond inquiry ? Surely a shield should not be furnished to him that is denied to the disinterested and the impartial. It would be strange indeed if the character of a disinterested witness could be attacked by the adverse party, and shown to be infamous, while that of the party interested, and who voluntarily becomes a witness, could not be questioned. If so, then the legal presumption [206]*206that a witness is of good character could be overthrown as to one altogether disinterested, but must remain indisputable when the party himself becomes the witness. . The mere statement of such a position furnishes its own refutation.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.W. 266, 87 Ky. 201, 1888 Ky. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockard-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1888.