Matthews v. Poythress

4 Ga. 287
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1848
DocketNo. 32
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 4 Ga. 287 (Matthews v. Poythress) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matthews v. Poythress, 4 Ga. 287 (Ga. 1848).

Opinion

By the Court.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

There are as many as twelve specifications of error in the assignment in this case. I shall endeavor to condense and simplify them as I proceed, without omitting to notice any one principle involved. The plaintiff in error insists—

[1.] That the Circuit Judge erred in instructing the Jury as to the character of arguments used by the counsel for the plaintiff, [294]*294before the Jury, arising from the testimony. This exception presents no point of law upon which the Court is charged to have committed error. It goes to the right of the Court to comment, in its charge, upon positions taken by counsel, in their arguments to the Jury. It is the right of the Court to give the law of the case in charge to the Jury; it is more — it is the duty of the Court. And if in the argument, legal positions are taken by counsel, which in the judgment of the Court are wrong, I see no sort of objection to the Court’s instructing the Jury, according to its judgment of those positions. Nor does it matter whether those positions arise out of the facts or the pleadings, or are extrinsic to both. It is the duty of the Court to advise the Jury as to all the law which, in its judgment, relates to the case. If it errs as to the law, no matter how the instructions may originate, the parties have their remedy by writ of error. It is also the privilege of the Court to sum up the evidence to the Jury, to declare the law which results from a given state of facts, and to announce the rules by which testimony is to be weighed, reconciled and estimated by the Jury. If in so doing, if in commenting on the argument of counsel, the Court should instruct the Jury as to what are the facts proven, or that they must find them for the one party or the other; it would depart from its appropriate sphere, and this Court would apply the correction. Such is not charged to be -the error of the Court in this case, and we do not consider that this exception is well taken.

The second exception in the order in which I notice them, is of like character with the first. It is, that the Court erred in this — that it charged the Jury that misconstructions were made by the plaintiff’s counsel, of the argument of the defendant’s counsel, touching rules of law, growing out of the facts of the case. My reply to this assignment is made in what I have already said relative to the first.

[2.] It is farther claimed to be an error in the Court, that it charged the Jury, that the witness Scroggins was a negative witness, and therefore should not be believed, in preference to a witness who swore positively, touching the same subject-matter. This was Trover for a promissory note, which the plaintiff had placed in the hands of a Mrs. Jones, as the witness Scroggins stated, for safe, keeping; and which was fraudulently negotiated, and finally came to the hands of the defendant. The plaintiff, in [295]*295endeavoring to make out his case, introduced the interrogatories of the witness Scroggins, who among other things swore, that the plaintiff had never at any time received any consideration for the note. Mrs. Jones was afterwards sworn by commission in behalf of the defendant, who testified that she took the note from the plaintiff in payment of a debt due by him to her. Judge Hill instructed the Jury that Scroggins was a negative witness, and was not to be believed in prefei ence to the witness, who swore positively that the plaintiff did receive a consideration for the note, in the payment of a debt due by him to her. Beyond all controversy the Judge was right in both positions. It is true, that in the terms in which Scroggins testifies, he without qualification or limitation, asserts a negative. A rash thing for any witness to do. What no intelligent and honest witness will venture to do, except in cases that are very rare and very peculiar. Still, the witness is called to prove that a given thing was not done, to-wit: that a consideration was not received by the plaintiff for the note, It is a matter about which it is useless to reason, and the light of which, attempted illustration would darken. It was negative testimony. Of two witnesses testifying, one affirmatively, and the other negatively, the testimony of the former is to be preferred to that of the latter, as a general rule. Nor does this rule impeach the credibility of the negative witness. The fact may be, as proven by the affirmative witness, and still the negative witness swear truly. Thus, one witness swears that he saw or heard a fact, and another, who was present, swears that he did not see nor hear it. Both are to be taken as swearing truly. And if both are equally credible, the general principle would create a preponderance in favor of the affirmative. The affirmative testimony being true, the falsity of the negative testimony is to be attributed to inattention, defective memory, or mistake. So too, if one witness swears affirmatively that a certain thing was done, and another swears that within his knowledge, it was not done, both may swear truly — the thing, although not done within the knowledge of the negative witness, may still have been done. As in the case before us ; suppose that one of the witnesses had sworn that the plaintiff did positively receive a consideration for this note, and the other, that within his knowledge, the plaintiff did not receive a consideration'for it — or at a given time and place, he did not receive a consideration for it. Both witnesses may be well held [296]*296as swearing truly. But the preponderance is, unquestionably, to be given .to the affirmative testimony; because, although not known to the negative witness, at some other time and place, he may have received a consideration. At the same time, evidence of a negative character, may, under peculiar circumstances, not only he equal, but superior to positive evidence. For example, two persons are placed in a room for the express purpose of ascertaining by their senses, whether a clock placed therein would strike — and they testify, that within a given time, it did not strike; whilst a third person testifies, that within the specified time, it did strike. In this case, reason could not attribute the variance in evidence, to inattention or mistake in the two. She must needs award the preponderance in favor of the negative witness. The case, however, before us, is stronger in favor of the positive testimony, than any I have put. Here one witness swears directly to an affirmative fact, to-wit: that the plaintiff did receive a consideration for the note ; the other swears that he did not, generally, without qualification as to the witness’ knowledge, and without limitation as to time or place. To place the latter testimony upon an equality with the former, the witness must be invested with omniscience. He swears that the plaintiff never did receive a consideration for the note in question. How could he know that, unless from the time the note was made, until the moment he is sworn, he was present with the plaintiff, and all the time exercising the most intense observation, and the most unre-laxing vigilance. We ar’e clear that the Court correctly instructed the Jury, that he was not to be believed in preference to the other witness. 1 StarJde on Evidence, 517, 518.

[3.] The defendant tendered in evidence, the depositions of Mrs. Jones and her husband, John E.

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4 Ga. 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-poythress-ga-1848.