State v. . Jim

48 N.C. 348
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 N.C. 348 (State v. . Jim) 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. . Jim, 48 N.C. 348 (N.C. 1856).

Opinion

Pearson, J.

On the trial of a slave for felony, is the mas- *349 a competent witness in behalf of the prisoner ? The question has never been decided in this State. Of course there is no case in point in the English books. Many of the slaveholding' States have statutes giving a compensation to the master, so that the question could not arise in these States, and we are not aware of a decision in any of the States ; so we are left to solve the question by a recurrence to principle.

The rule, that no one is competent as a witness in behalf of a party in whose success he has a pecuniary interest, is based on the idea, we are all so frail—so much under the influence of our own interest, that we are not to be trusted when it is at stake ; for, the love of truth, the pride of character, the obligation of an oath, the searching power of cross-examination, and the scrutiny of a jury, are not sufficient guarantees against the blighting effect of its influence.

"We are told, the Common Law is “the perfection of reason ;” it is -the wisdom, not of one man, but of many men put together. That this small estimate of the integrity of mankind should be adopted by the “ wisdom of ages ” as a foundation for a rule of evidence, is most humiliating; and it is a relief to know, that this conclusion is not an unbiased judgment upon the naked question, but has, in a great measure, been controlled and brought about by collateral circumstances. Any one who reads the “State Trials,” and the old writers upon evidence, Gilbert aiid McNally, will find that the rules of evidence were longer in being settled than any other part of the common law, and will not be surprised that Lord Mansfield, in Low v. Joliffe, 1 Wm. Black. 366, declared on a trial at bar, that “ the Court did not sit there to take its rules of evidence from Siderfin and Keble.” The civil law carried the rules df exclusion much further than pecuniary interest, excluded father and son, patron and_client, guardian and ward, &c., mutually, from giving evidence for each other. Many of the old rules of evidence “ were drawn from this quivérj” and the common law Judges unconsciously allowed the subject to be influenced by the doctrines of the civil law, and failed to discriminate between rules of evidence fit and *350 proper for a fixed tribunal, where all questions of law and fact were decided by a single Judge, and the evidence is in writing, where the oath of one man looks as good as another, and a trial by jury, where the witness gives his testimony face to face, so that the jury may “mark his manner,” and pass upon his credibility. See State v. Williams, 2 Jones’ Rep. 257; Bottoms v. Kent, ante 154; Best on the principles of evidence.

There was still another circumstance which embarrassed the subject. In early times the jury were witnesses, and gave the verdict upon their own knowledge of the facts. Of course it was then proper to exclude not only those who had pecuniary interest, but all the “kith and kin” of both parties. In the course of time this feature of jury trials was changed, and the verdict was to be rendered according to the evidence given to the jury by witnesses. This was the time for making a corresponding change in the rules of evidence ; but it is hard to get rid of old notions, particularly in the action of Courts. After much struggling, the rule which excluded as witnesses parent and child, and others whose connection raised a presumption of bias from affection and other causes, was modified so as to allow it to go their credit and not to their competency; but the exclusion from pecuniary interest was adhered to, and after many conflicts and changes, was settled in Lord Kenyon’s time within these narrow limits—the interest must be a direct, certain, legal, pecunicvnj interest in the event of the case. Best v. Baker, 3 T. R. 27; Smith v. Prager, 7 T. R. 60. Even under these restrictions it was felt that the rule was still liable to many objections ; although it excludes falsehood, in as many cases it excludes the truth. To define by a general rule the influence which interest in the event of a case, will exercise on the mind of a given individual, is beyond all human power; on some, the slightest interest will act so as to produce perjury; on others, the greatest will be powerless. There was also necessarily a degree of inconsistency and incongruity in applying it; an heir apparent is a competent witness for his father, although the whole es *351 tate be at stake, but he is incompetent if he has a pecuniary interest to the amount of one cent. It Avas impossible to fix any limit in regard to the amount; so of necessity, according to the rule, any interest, however small, Avill exclude. As a salvo to this, it is held that the witness may make himself competent by executing a release, which the party is obliged to accept, and as a further salvo, it is said time, and again, (as if the rule needed some apology,) where there is any doubt as to its application, the Court will lean to the admisibility of the evidence, and alloAv it to affect the credit and not the competency of the witness. Ry a recent statute in England, the rule of exclusion on the ground of interest is abolished, and in all cases the matter goes to the credit.

These remarks are made, not with a view of intimating that the rule is not too well established here to be abolished without the aid of the Legislature, but simply for the purpose of defining its limits and of tracing it back to its origin, so as to support the position, that it ought not to be extended to neAv cases, but be confined to cases where it has been already applied, and where the principle on which it is founded exactly fits the case.

Is there nothing in the difference between a trial where property is involved, and a trial where human life is at stake, to make a distinction in the application of this rule, so far as it relates to a witness called in behalf of the prisoner ? The idea, when a prisoner calls a witness to prove his innocence, who, it may be, is the only person on earth to whom a fact is known that will save his life, that he must be repulsed by the cold announcement, “ he is Amur master—he has an interest in saving your life, and at all events he is liable for the costs of this prosecution, and, therefore, has a pecuniary interest Avhich makes him incompetent, so he cannot be heard in your behalf,” shocks all the best feelings of our nature, and extorts, the exclamation, “ This ought not to be a rule of evidence !”

Frail as human nature may be, dollars and cents should not be weighed in the balance with life. It cannot be presumed that the “almighty dollar” is so controlling in its in *352 ■flueuce, as to overcome all other considerations. Our investigation satisfies us that the rule of exclusion, because of pecuniary interest, has not boon applied to a case like the present, and we are clearly of the opinion, that the principle of the rule is not applicable. Henderson, C. J., than whom, I will take occasion to say, there has not been a more profound thinker, or one of whom it can with more justice be said, “felix gui fotruit rerwn eognoscere causas,” since the days of Haywood,

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Related

Gatlin v. . Walton
60 N.C. 325 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1864)

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.C. 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jim-nc-1856.