State v. Laboon
This text of 92 S.E. 622 (State v. Laboon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The defendants were tried for murder, and convicted of manslaughter.
*277
These conclusions are sustained by the following authorities : Greenleaf on Evidence, secs. 372, 373:
“Under this general head of exclusion, because of insensibility to the obligation of an oath, may be ranked the case of persons infamous; that is, persons who, whatever may be their professed belief, have been guilty of those heinous crimes which men generally are not found to commit, unless when so depraved as to be unworthy of credit for truth. The basis of the rule seems to be that such a person is *278 morally too corrupt to be trusted to testify — so reckless of the distinction between truth and falsehood, and insensible to the restraining force of an oath, as to render it extremely improbable that he will speak the truth at all.
“It is a point of no small difficulty to determine .precisely the crimes which render the perpetrator thus infamous. The rule is justly stated to require that ‘the publicum judicium must be upon an offense, implying such a dereliction of moral principle as carries with it a conclusion of a total disregard to the obligation of an oath/ But the difficulty lies in the specification of those offenses. The usual and more general enumeration is treason, felony and the crimen falsi. In regard to the two former, as all treasons and almost all felonies were punishable with death, it was very natural that crimes deemed of so grave a character as to render the offender unworthy to live should be considered as rendering him unworthy of belief in a Court of justice. But the extent and meaning of the term ‘crimen falsi’ in our law is nowhere laid down with precision.”
1 Starkie on Evidence, p. 494:
“Formerly the infamy of the punishment as being characteristic of the crime, and not the nature of the crime itself, was the test of incompetency, but in modern times, immediate reference has been made to the offense itself,' since it is the crime, and not the punishment, which renders the offender unworthy of belief. By the common law, the punishment of the pillory indicated the crimen falsi, and consequently no one who had stood in the pillory could after-wards be a witness, but now a person is competent, although he has undergone that punishment for a libel, trespass or riot; and, on the other hand, when convicted of an infamous crime, he is not competent, although his punishment may have been a mere fine.”
In the case of State v. James, 15 S. C. 233, the Court had under consideration the question whether a person who had been convicted of petit larceny was a competent witness. *279 Associate Justice (afterwards Chief Justice) Mclver, in delivering the opinion of the Court, said:
“There can be no doubt that at common law a conviction of petit larceny rendered a witness incompetent to testify, * * * and we do not see how the fact that the legislature has declared the offense of petit larceny a misdemeanor and reduced the punishment can affect the question under consideration. * * * The fact that the legislature has seen fit to alter the amount and character of the punishment for this offense does not change the nature of the offense, the moral qualities of which remain the same as before. This, therefore, cannot restore the competency of a person convicted of this offense, for, as we have seen, ‘it is the crime, and not the punishment, that renders the man infamous.’ ”
Appeal dismissed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
92 S.E. 622, 107 S.C. 275, 1917 S.C. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-laboon-sc-1917.