Lynch v. Bates

38 N.E. 806, 139 Ind. 206, 1894 Ind. LEXIS 369
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1894
DocketNo. 17,068
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 38 N.E. 806 (Lynch v. Bates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynch v. Bates, 38 N.E. 806, 139 Ind. 206, 1894 Ind. LEXIS 369 (Ind. 1894).

Opinion

Howard, J.

The appellant made application to the board of commissioners of Howard county for a license to sell intoxicating liquors. The appellees filed a remonstrance to the granting .of the petition. Upon a hearing had the board refused to grant the license; and an appeal to the circuit court resulted in a verdict and judgment for the remonstrants.

The error assigned in this court is the overruling of the motion for a new trial; and the questions discussed by counsel relate to the giving and the refusal of certain instructions to the jury.

The appeal was taken under the following provisions, contained in section 662, R. S. 1894 (section 650, R. S. 1881): “When in any case an appeal is prosecuted upon the question of the correctness of instructions given or refused, or the modifications thereof, it shall not be necessary to set out in the record all the evidence given in the cause, but it shall be sufficient in the bill of exceptions to set out the instructions or modifications excepted to, with a recital of the fact that the same were applicable to the evidence in the cause.”

Bills of exceptions are properly in the record in compliance with the foregoing provisions of> the statute.

Even in the absence of such statute, this court would presume, unless the contrary should appear, that there was evidence to which the instructions given were applicable. Drinkout v. Eagle, etc., Works, 90 Ind. 423; Rozell v. City of Anderson, 91 Ind. 591.

[208]*208The following instructions, requested by appellant, were refused:

“11. In passing upon this case you will be governed by the law and the evidence, and it is your duty not to allow yourselves to be influenced by the presence of a lobby in the court room opposed to the granting of the plaintiff’s petition.”

‘'12. The law contemplates the public trial of causes, but it is improper for persons interested in causes, to pack the court room with their friends and partisans for the purpose of influencing the action of a jury. You will, therefore, be careful not to allow the presence in the court room of the large number of persons who are taking an active interest in behalf of the defendants and their actions and wishes (outside the evidence in the case) to influence you in favor of the defendants in making your verdict. ’ ’

In so far .as these instructions were calculated to inform the jury that they should decide the case according to the law and the evidence, free from passion or prejudice, and without being influenced by public sentiment or popular clamor, they were correct; but in that respect the instructions were fully supplemented by other instructions given to the jury. In so far, however, as the instructions characterized the people in attendance upon court as a lobby who had packed the court room with intent to influence the jury in partisan spirit to decide the case without regard to the evidence, we think the instructions were objectionable, as being themselves calculated to prejudice the jury against the remonstrants.

It is the right of the people to attend trials in court; and, provided such attendance is orderly and respectful of the dignity and procedure of the court, no objection can be made simply on the ground that the questions at issue are of great public interest.

[209]*209It might be that in a proper case a judge would find it his duty to warn a jury against being influenced by demonstrations on the part of those in attendance upon a trial, but we do not think this was such a case. The jury were sufficiently advised as to their duty in this regard; and if the audience behaved improperly, it was the right of the court to admonish them, and of the officers .of court to preserve order.

The following instruction, given by the court on its own motion, is objected to:

“1. You are the exclusive judges of the credibility of the witnesses, and the weight to which their testimony is entitled. In passing upon these questions, you should take into consideration the interest the'witness has in the suit, if any; the bias or prejudice of the witness, if any be shown; the opportunity the witness had of knowing and recollecting the facts about which he has testified; the fact whether the witness jfras been corroborated or contradicted by other witnesses who have testified in this cause. In case there is any apparent contradiction in the testimony of the different witnesses who have testified in this case, it is your duty to attempt to harmonize such apparent contradictions so as to give full weight and credit to all the witnesses; but if you can not so reconcile such apparent contradictions, if any, so as to believe all the witnesses, then you must determine for yourselves what witnesses you will not believe.”

Counsel contend that the manifest purpose and effect of this instruction was to discredit as witnesses the appellant and one of the sureties on his appeal bond in the circuit court, on account of their interest in the suit..

We can not see that there is any force in this contention. The instruction singles out no witnesses by name or by allusion, and the instruction applies to all wit[210]*210nesses on both sides, who may be affected by it. The language, so far as relates to persons, is as general as it could well be made.

Counsel cite Unruh v. State, ex rel., 105 Ind. 117, and other like cases, in support of their contention; but we do not consider that the cases cited are in point on the question.

In Unruh v. State, ex rel., supra, the language objected to in the instruction was: £ 'The relatrix and defendant have testified, and they are both interested in the event of the suit. This fact should be considered in weighing their evidence, in connection with the other facts and circumstances which I have indicated apply to witnesses generally.”

This court rightly disapproved of this language. It singled out two witnesses and discredited them by name before the jury. This can not be done by the court, and such will be found do be the character of the objectionable instructions in all of the cases relied upon by appellant in this contention.

Where, however, the credit that ought to be given to witnesses is stated generally to the jury, without making particular allusion to any witness or class of witnesses in the case, no objection on this score can be made.

With one exception, we think the instruction here complained of is entirely unobjectionable, and is a fair and correct statement of the law upon the question as to the credit to be given to witnesses. While we do not believe, considering the whole instruction together and other instructions given, that the jury were misled in any degree by the language used; yet we do think that, in the first part of the instruction, where the jury are told that they "should” take into consideration the interest, if any, which, a witness has in the result of a suit, the word used ought to be "may,” and not "should.” The [211]*211use of the word “should” in that connection seems, in some measure, to invade the province of the jury. The jury ought to be informed as to what circumstances they may take into account in weighing the evidence heard by them; but, as this instruction itself informs them, they are themselves “the exclusive judges of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to which their testimony is entitled.” Nelson v.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E. 806, 139 Ind. 206, 1894 Ind. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-bates-ind-1894.