State v. . Austin

13 S.E. 219, 108 N.C. 780
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 13 S.E. 219 (State v. . Austin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Austin, 13 S.E. 219, 108 N.C. 780 (N.C. 1891).

Opinion

Claek, J.:

The defendants were indicted for'fornication and adultery.

Exception 1. — One Helms, a witness for the State, testified that he met the male defendant one night about two hundred yards from the female defendant’s house, going in the direction of her house, and defendant told him he was going to Coleman Stewart’s to meet Elliott (an Alliance lecturer), and when this .matter was tried before the Alliance the defendant denied telling him so and denied meeting him. To this defendant objected. There was evidence by many witnesses of the defendant Austin making nocturnal visits to the female defendant’s house; of being seen in the room alone with her at night; of going into her room, the light being put out; and of leaving his horse hitched out at night, and going with his shoes off to her house; of walking up a stream to conceal his tracks; of being seen embracing her and the like. The evidence, therefore, of his being seen near her house after dark, going in that direction, and his saying he was going to meet an Alliance lecturer, which statement he denied on the Alliance trial, when it was shown that he did not meet the Alliance lecturer on that night, and also his denial of meeting the witness, was competent as a circumstance tending to corroborate the other evidence of his visits by night to his co-defendant.

“Every circumstance calculated to throw light on the alleged crime and aid the jury in coming to a correct conclusion is competent.” State v. Bishop, 98 N. C., 773, and cases there cited; State v. Christmas, 101 N. C., 749.

Exception 2. — The same witness stated, the defendants objecting, that at the Alliance trial (they having been on *782 trial before the local Alliance for expulsion for this offence) the defendant Austin’s wife said that she could account for her husband except that night Helms said he had met him; that her husband got on his horse that night and rode off, saying he was going to Coleman Stewart’s, and the defendant Austin had thereupon replied that he did tell his wife so, but after riding one hundred yards he turned and rode back unseen by anyone, and went into a room which was not his bed-room and which he was not in the habit of occupying, and slept till nearly day-light, when he rode off to Coleman Stewart’s. This evidence was competent as being a statement made by the defendant as to his whereabouts and doings, there being evidence that he did not get to Coleman Stewart’s till next morning. What his wife said was competent from having been made in his presence, and from being replied to by him, and as having drawn out his statement.

Exception S. — One Winchester, witness for the defence, testified that the character of the defendants was good. On cross-examination, he was asked if he would say that the character of the defendants was good at the time, notwithstanding the Alliance trial and the hung jury at the trial held in the Superior Court of Union County, and the witness answered “Yes.” On the re-direct examination, the defendant’s counsel asked the witness if he knew of his own knowledge how the hung jury stood, or how they were divided, and he answered “ No.” The defendant’s counsel then proposed to ask the witness how the current report or the general rumor was as to how the “hung jury” was divided. On objection by the State, the question was ruled out, and the defendants excepted. The law does not countenance or permit the endless ramification and the countless collateral issues which such a course of examination would introduce. It was held incompetent, on a question as to character, to prove a general report as to any particular act done by the party *783 whose character was being testified to. State v. Bullard, 100 N. C., 486. It was, therefore, certainly incompetent to show in what degree certain twelve men were rumored to have differed in opinion as to a certain act alleged to have been done by the defendants. It was only competent to show the general reputation for character — not the general reputation as to any particular act — still less the reputation how certain men thought as to the truth of a certain alleged particular act. As a test of the witness, it is competent to ask him to name persons whom he has heard say that the character of the person in question was good or bad. State v. Perkins, 66 N. C., 126. The rule extends no further. It was, therefore, incompetent for the State to ask the question as to the “hung jury.” The defendant did not object to it. He should have done so, or have asked the Court to strike it out. It was no correction of the error to extend the error still further by incompetent and irrelevant inquiries. The Court, at least, gave the defendant the same amount of license when it permitted him to show, if he could, if the witness knew how the jury stood. It appeared that he did not, and the Court properly refused to inquire as to the reputation of how the jury had stood. The witness was one out of some sixty examined in this case. He was testifying as to the good character of the defendant, and the investigation as to how far his opinion as to the general character of the defendants should be discredited by the effect which would probably be had on the public mind by the report as to how a former jury had divided in opinion as to an act of the defendant (for that is the only legal bearing and relevancy of the testimony), when he had stated he did not know how they stood, is too remote from the'issue, which was, whether the defendants, a married man and a widow, had lewdly and lasciviously bedded and cohabited together. In no part of a trial at nisi prius is the disposition “ to run rabbits ” more strongly developed than in the examination of character witnesses. *784 The Courts have always repressed it. Its indulgence beyond the well recognized legal limits can serve no good purpose. It would serve (if not repressed) to open old scandals, confuse the jury with multiplicity of issues and prolong to a needless and expensive length the trial of causes, without any compensation in the better investigation of the truth as to the real issue before the Court and jury. It is better super stare antiguas vías.

Exception 4~ — The defendants asked the Court to charge that the only direct evidence of criminal intimacy between the defendants which had been testified in this case was that of Bob Marsh and John Brooks, and if the jury should not believe this evidence, or should entertain a reasonable doubt as to the truth thereof, it would be their duty to acquit. These two witnesses had testified to finding the defendants in actual sexual intercourse. There was testimony by ojfcher witnesses of the male defendant stealthily visiting the chamber of the female by night and remaining some hours; of his going to and coming from her room by night with his shoes off; of being in a room alone with her and then extinguishing the light, and his subsequently being discovered in the act of endeavoring to escape from the room unperceived; of their riding together in a buggy after sun-down; of his kissing her, and much other evidence tending to show an immoral intimacy.

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.E. 219, 108 N.C. 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-austin-nc-1891.