Roach v. Carroll

139 S.E.2d 523, 110 Ga. App. 636, 1964 Ga. App. LEXIS 721
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 13, 1964
Docket40938
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 139 S.E.2d 523 (Roach v. Carroll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roach v. Carroll, 139 S.E.2d 523, 110 Ga. App. 636, 1964 Ga. App. LEXIS 721 (Ga. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

Felton, Chief Judge.

The special ground of the motion for a new trial assigns error on the court’s failure to give the following charge: “When a witness shall be successfully contradicted as to a material matter, his credit as to other matters shall be for the jury, but if a witness shall swear wilfully and knowingly falsely, his testimony shall be destroyed entirely unless corroborated by circumstances or other unimpeached evidence. . .” Code § 38-1806.

“Under this rule as to wilful and knowing falsity in a material matter, it has several times been held, that if a witness swears at the trial to a certain state of facts in a material matter, and he has previously sworn to the contrary in the same case, and where he admits that his testimony was false, this constitutes a wilful and knowing false swearing, and requires the jury to reject his testimony entirely, unless it be ‘corroborated by circumstances or other unimpeached evidence.’ In such a case it has been held that the judge should so charge the jury, even without a request. [Cases cited.] But before this principle of such total rejection, with a duty of the court to charge the jury thereon, will have application, it must manifestly appear, not only that the witness on one or the other occasion has sworn falsely to a material matter, but that he has done so wilfully and knowingly. The rule does not extend to situations where it is shown to be reasonably possible that the discrepancy was occasioned by ‘mistake or the failure of memory.’ Ivey v. State, 23 Ga. 676, 581; Shipper v. State, 59 Ga. 63, 65. See Robison v. State, 114 Ga. 445 (40 SE 253). In construing the decision last cited, the Court of Appeals, in Martin v. State, 53 Ga. App. 213, 216 (185 SE 387), has gone so far as to hold: ‘It would thus seem that the Supreme Court has limited the ruling in (the Stafford and Plummer decisions) to cases where the witness admits that he ‘wilfully and knowingly swore falsely’; and there *638 fore this ruling would not apply in this case, where the witness denied that she swore wilfully and knowingly falsely, but said that if she swore to a contradictory state of facts, it was because she was confused and embarrassed and did not understand thoroughly the questions that were put to her.’ To like effect, see Rumph v. State, 24 Ga. App. 338 (1, a) (100 SE 768); Spence v. State, 52 Ga. App. 383 (2), 384 (183 SE 339)." Smaha v. George, 195 Ga. 412, 418 (24 SE2d 385). The court then pointed out that . . We think it might be restricting the rule in the Stafford and Plummer cases too far to limit its application to cases where the witness admits his guilt of perjury, so as to- exclude its application where the nature and character of the testimony is such as would render the purpose to falsify plainly manifest. . . (Emphasis supplied.) The court went on to hold that, in that particular case, it was not reversible error for the judge to omit, without request, to charge the provisions of Code § 38-1806, where the witnesses involved, while admitting a discrepancy in their previous testimony with respect to an incidental question, disclaimed any intent to testify falsely and sought to explain the discrepancy as due to a failure on their part to refresh their recollection as to such matter, which was not impressed on their minds, and due to the confusion caused by the circumstances of the cross examination in their previous depositions. The facts in the instant case are materially different from those in the case just cited.

Mrs. Carroll’s testimony before lunch was to the following effect: That she had no warning at all that the defendant was going to stop his vehicle immediately ahead of her (she later testified that she saw his tail lights come on when he and the long line of cars first slowed down and again just before he skidded sideways); that she did not tell the defendant and his wife that she really didn’t see them stopping until those red lights just came right up in her face (the defendant testified that the plaintiff told him that, “I looked around and I saw the great big tail lights” and that all she saw was the big red light and the defendant’s white shirt); that “All the cars slowed down—I saw—the tail lights come on and I had stopped, and as I put it in second to start up—our car is a shift—again—we *639 had all started up again, and Mr. Roach slammed on his brakes and turned sideways on the road. . . All the cars slowed down, none of them came to a complete stop, and I slowed down to almost a stop. . . Mr. Roach made the remark to the troopers investigating, said, ‘The lady had stopped,’ he didn’t know what had happened. When I stopped like that my children were on a mattress in the back, and I have a little 11 year old girl who was riding in back of me and when she came down feet first it shoved the seat—I don’t know whether it’s something like a bucket seat—-up against the steering wheel and my wrist was caught down in the steering wheel and the steering wheel caught me across my stomach, and God knows I tried—I had stopped but evidently the lick on my stomach must have knocked—-my foot must have come up off of the brake and when it went relaxed it must have hit the gas because then is when I hit the left rear end of his car, but he had told the troopers himself. He said, ‘I wonder what happened. The lady had stopped,’ and I had stopped. The one that investigated looked for skid marks where I had maybe skidded into him, but there weren’t any skid marks or anything. . . I stopped at least 15 feet from his car, until I lost control of the car and God knows, I don’t know what happened. It happened all of a sudden . . . you start up again and stop suddenly and everything in the back, the ice chest and the children and everything and the little girl’s feet come skidding and it pushed me . . ; that when Mr. Roach skidded, after applying his brakes, she brought her car to a complete stop; that she hasn’t been able to figure out what happened yet; “Q. And you had come to a complete stop? A. Yes sir, until I was hit in the back by my children made me lose control. I had stopped . . . Q. And you are sure that when his car skidded across the road that your car came to a complete stop some 10 or 15 feet from—A. Yes sir, I am. . . . Q. How fast were you going when you hit it? A. I don’t know. I just told you that I had the car in second, and if you’re slowing down and put the car in second you can’t be going too fast when you’re just starting up. Q. Then you came to another complete stop after that? A. No sir. We all slowed down—no one stopped. The car that hit *640 the dog never even stopped. Everybody slowed down. Q. The only complete stop you made then was after you saw his car skid—A. Skidding across—when he was across the highway I did come to a complete stop, and it was after that I lost control and hit the left rear. .

Mrs. Carroll’s testimony after lunch was to the following effect: “Q. . . . Now, before you collided with the automobile being driven by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.E.2d 523, 110 Ga. App. 636, 1964 Ga. App. LEXIS 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roach-v-carroll-gactapp-1964.