State v. Campbell

30 S.C.L. 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 30 S.C.L. 124 (State v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Campbell, 30 S.C.L. 124 (S.C. Ct. App. 1844).

Opinions

Curia, per

Richardson, J.

The point of law for the court is presented by the first ground taken in the appeal of the prisoner, Daniel Campbell, to wit: — “ That the presiding judge admitted the depositions of Rosier Kelly, before the coroner, in evidence against the defendant, on proof that R. Kelly had died since the holding of the coroner’s inquest, although the defendant was not present at the examination of the said R. Kelly, and had no opportunity of cross-examination.”

The question is this. Is it indispensable, by the rules oi legal evidence, that the defendant, Daniel Campbell, [125]*125must have been present; or, at least, -had an opportunity of hearing and examining R. -Kelly, when his depositions were taken, upon the inquest holden over the body of the deceased, A. Defee, in order to render such depositions competent- evidence against Daniel Campbell, upon his trial before the jury for the murder of Defee; when the witness died, after such depositions had been taken ?

Is the right of cross-examining every witness so important as to exclude such depositions, although taken by high authority, and the witness be dead; and where the evidence would be lost to the' State ? But, notwithstanding all this, if we are to decide the question by the established rules of the common law, there could not be a dissenting voice. For, notwithstanding the death of the witness, and whatever the respectability of the court taking the depositions, the solemnity of the occasion and the weight of the testimony, such depositions are ex parte, and, therefore, utterly incompetent. / The reason is, because depositions so taken, and however true, constitute matter, as law writers express it — “inter alios acta.’-’ The prisoner was not there; the witness,, when deposing, was not confronted by him; and against such absentee, the Court of Sessions could not have examined a witness against Daniel Campbell, when on trial for the murder of Deiee, while Campbell was absent from the court.

The primary principle upon which so strict a rule of law rests, is this — no court can take the life of a man, but by the conviction of the accused, effected in the due course of law; that is, in this instance, by the trial by jury. The 9th art. sec. 2 of the State Constitution, 1 Stat. 191, and the 46th sec. of Magna Carta, 1 Stat. 88, are identical and conclusive on this point. , And one of the indispensable conditions of such due course of law- is, that prosecutions be carried on to the conviction of the accused, by witnesses confronted by him, and subjected to his personal examination. The defendant’s cross-examination expresses well the searching process and practical test furnished and intended by this rule of law; in -order, to correct any misconception of facts, to elicit truth, and justify the severe retribution awarded in cases of clear guilt.

[126]*126All common law writers on evidence lay down the three following prerequisite, as tests of all oral or viva voce testimony, in order to render it legal evidence. First. That the witness put on the stand,.upon his oath, must believe in its obligation upon him, here and hereafter, to tell the truth. Secondly. He must have taken the judicial oath prescribed by law — none other can be substituted. And, thirdly, He must be subjected, personally, to the examination of the man he accuses.

The two- former prerequisites are of the general provision of the laws, in order to invoke the religious belief, and confirm the natural veracity of the moral sense of man ; .the third, (cross-examination) is the practical test of the truth the law would elicit, and no more. This is’ the privilege of the accused, which he may, or may not, exercise at his own discretion. But the opportunity of examining every' witness, is essential to the principle of a legal conviction, in “due course of law.”

The practical good sense of such examination of witnesses, confronted by the accused, is readily understood. Any man of experience who has heard tales told by one man against his neighbor, behind his back, and again told, when plaeed face to face, and new views are suggested by the man he had accused, and possibly belied — any one that has known such occurrences, will readily conceive, from his own experience and observation, of the justice, reason, and necessity of applying, to every witness, this third test of the truth of his narration. Experience has proved that it is, of all others, the most effective, the most satisfactory, and the most indispensable test of the evidence narrated on the witness’s stand. Any one may avow the obligation, and take the judicial oath. Knavery or perjury has, perhaps, never been detected in either of these acts. As to them, the accused is a mere spectator. And it is only in the examination and cross-examination, that the knave can be detected, errors of fact exposed, or false imaginations expunged, and the whole narration of a witness reduced ,down to its measure of exact truth and legal application to the particular case before the court.

[127]*127If this strict personal examination and confronting of witnesses be considered, according to my .views, as one of the safeguards to shield the lives of men against erroneous or imaginary prejudice, or false charges, judicial opinions will, unavoidably, cleave more strongly to this privilege of the accused in every case. But, under other views of the little importance of the cross-examination, the same opinions will more readily yield to analogous decisions, respectable dicta, and convenient practice ; and suffer it to be frittered away, or at least, qualified, as a test of little accused, or subject to convenient.exceptioiwC

The comparative importance attached bykne undestand- % ing to this third common law test of may, then, very well form the pivot of opinion in the case jjj before the court. It is certainly the groun<fl ■ £i my opinion, against what I readily 'admit, «¿that the^s*^ are, in the elder English reports, analogous counfiifciEiech sions — though I think quite uncertain, as to the precise point of the absence of the accused at the taking of the depositions — held competent by the court in those cases ; and that respectable dicta and practice may be arrayed in support of the argument on the other side of the question. And, of course, there may well be two opinions. But the consideration of such authorities properly belongs to the second, and only further head of 'the argument.

For the, present, I .will only add to my .own exposition of the privileges and importance of the cross-examination, the authority of Starkie on Evidence, and refer, generally, to Russel, Roscoe and Phillips, on the same subject, who all agree, in this respect, with Starkie. I know of no disagreement among the expounders of evidence upon the importance of the cross-examination. But, while naming those four respected writers, I will notice in advance their striking agreement in. another particular ; una voce, they notice the English decisions on the question, now before this court, from their main foundation and origin in Lord Morley's case, 7 State Trials, 421, downwards. They notice them respectfully, yet obviously, as precedents, not to follow, but to deter, and to be guarded against. in the proper construction of the English Statute of 1 & 2 P. [128]*128M. upon which the present case turns. But of this hereafter.

Starkie, after discussing the other tests to which witnesses are subjected, proceeds thus, sec. 70, p.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.C.L. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-campbell-scctapp-1844.