Phillips v. State

1922 OK CR 18, 203 P. 902, 20 Okla. Crim. 415, 1922 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 21, 1922
DocketNo. A-3719.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1922 OK CR 18 (Phillips v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. State, 1922 OK CR 18, 203 P. 902, 20 Okla. Crim. 415, 1922 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 75 (Okla. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

MATSON, J.

(after stating the facts as above). During the progress of the trial counsel for the defendant offered to prove by several witnesses that about six or eight months before the homicide the deceased had been arrested and lodged in jail on charges of hog stealing and larceny of merchandise from private residences in the Rufe neighborhood, and that it had been frequently and openly discussed at that time by numerous persons in that neighborhood that the deceased would be killed if he got out of jail, and further that at the time of the homicide the deceased was at large on bail pending trial for these larcenies. Upon objection of the county attorney, the trial court excluded this proffered evidence, to which action the counsel for defendant excepted, and contended that the ruling of the trial court in this respect was erroneous and highly prejudicial to the substantial rights of the defendant.

No offer was made to show by either facts or circumstances that some one other than defendant was guilty of the commission of this homicide. All the defendant offered to prove was a state of ill feeling upon the part of the residents of the neighborhood in which the homicide was committed against the defendant about six months prior to the commission of the homicide, without any proof tending to connect any third person with the killing. The ruling of the trial court in excluding this proffered evidence was correct.

In Irvin v. State, 11 Okla. Cr. 301, 146 Pac. 453, this court held:,

*419 “It is competent for the' defendant to show, by any legal evidence, that some other person committed the crime charged, and that he had no participation in it. But this cannot be shown by testimony merely tending to show a possible motive on the part of another to commit the crime. The evidence offered must connect such other person with the fact; that is, some overt act on the part of another towards the commission of the crime itself. There must be evidence of acts or circumstances that tend clearly to point to another, rather than to the defendant, as the guilty party.
“On a trial for murder, the defendant, for the purpose of showing that the stepfather of the victim may have committed the crime, and for the purpose of showing motive, offered to prove that he and Ms wife had separated, at which time he took with him the property of his wife; that he remained away from his wife until all the money had been squandered; that he then returned to her, because he hoped to profit by her children’s estate; and that he knew the income from the property of stepdaughter was $500 per month. The defendant also offered to prove that, for some time prior to the murder, the stepfather was intimate with a woman other than his wife; this offer having been made upon the court sustaining objections to questions asked on cross-examination of the stepfather as a witness for the state. All the evidence offered on this line was excluded. Held, not proper cross-examination, and that the evidence offered was properly excluded.”

For further authorities on this subject see body of the opinion in the Irvin Case.

It is next contended that the trial court erred in striking, and instructing the jury to disregard, the testimony of a witness for the defendant, concerning the general reputation of the prosecuting witness Grant Williams for truth and veracity.

In this connection the record discloses that on direct examination this witness had testified that he knew the general reputation of this Williams boy in the community where he *420 lived for truth and veracity, and that such reputation was bad. On cross-examination the witness was asked whom he had-heard say that such reputation was bad, and he named one person. He was then asked if he had heard anybody else discuss it, and replied:

"He is the only one I recall at present.”

Whereupon the trial court instructed the jury as follows:

"Gentlemen of the jury, when a witness testified on the witness stand that a man’s character is bad for truth and veracity, and then states that he only knows his reputation on the statement of one man, you are instructed that that is not sufficient, and you will entirely disregard all the testimony of this witness along that line, to which remarks and rulings the defendant then and there excepted.”

We believe that the ruling of the trial court in this respect was erroneous. The rule is well established that where a witness testifies that he knows the general reputation of a witness for a particular trait of character, he may then be permitted to state what that reputation is, provided it relates to the time of the offense and residence of the witness whose reputation is attacked. Ward v. State, 15 Okla. Cr. 150, 175 Pac. 557, and cases therein cited.

Nor do we believe a witness is rendered incompetent to testify as to general reputation because he cannot say that he has heard a! majority of persons of any community, nor even any definite number of them, discuss that reputation. The general reputation of a person is-dependent to a large extent on the habits, age, sex, and living conditions of the person testified about. The witness whose reputation was called into question in this case was a boy only 12 years of age, and it is entirely consistent with human experience that in all likelihood the reputation of a boy of that age would not be as clearly defined or as frequently discussed in the neighborhood as to become *421 so well known as tbe reputation of an older person. While the reputation of a witness of such tender age may not have been discussed generally by a majority of the people of the neighborhood in which he lived, the prevailing opinion of those who did discuss it may have been that his reputation for truth and veracity was bad, and there may have been a general concurrence in this opinion acquiesced in by the people of the community, although there was little discussion of it.

So that the courts have generally adopted the rule that as to knowledge of such general reputation the question must be referred largely to the conscience of the witness who testifies; that the witness must answer on his own responsibility and is then subject to cross-examination as to the source, extent and correctness of his information as to the matter to which he testifies. Whether the witness is sufficiently informed to give a' general opinion arrived at from the general concurrence in the view which he expresses, we think, is a question for the jury to determine. The fact that such witness testifies that he knows,such general reputation is a sufficient predicate to permit the expression of his opinion thereon. Such witnesses are not expert witnesses, and no question of law arises as to their competency to testify after having qualified on the subject of knowledge. The court erred, therefore, in the opinion of this court, in striking this evidence from the consideration of the jury, as it was within the sole province of the jury to determine the weight to be given to the testimony of the witness. The effect of the court’s ruling in this respect was prejudicial to the defendant in this case for the reason that the conviction is based entirely upon the testimony of the witness George Williams sought to be thus impeached.

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Bluebook (online)
1922 OK CR 18, 203 P. 902, 20 Okla. Crim. 415, 1922 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-state-oklacrimapp-1922.