State v. . Mazon

90 N.C. 676
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 90 N.C. 676 (State v. . Mazon) 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. . Mazon, 90 N.C. 676 (N.C. 1884).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The prisoner is charged in the bill of indictment with the murder of C. F. Lawrence, committed in the-month of June, 1882, and on his trial before the jury was found guilty.

*677 1. The first exception presented in the record is to the form of the oath taken by the witnesses, none of them repeating its •closing words and making a personal appropriation of them to himself by adding “so help me God,” and especially to the manner in which the witnesses for the state were sworn.

The oath prescribed by the statute to be administered to every ■witness in a capital trial is as follows:

“ Yon swear (or affirm) that the evidence you shall give to the ■court and jury in this trial between the state and the prisoner at 'the bar shall be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God,” Bat. Bev., eh. 77, §6, par. 34; and then the witness is directed to repeat “so help me God,” and kiss the Holy Gospels, §1.

The oath was thus taken by the witnesses of the'prisoner, except in the omission to repeat, while it was administered to those ■of the state in this changed phraseology:

“You solemnly swear the evidence that you and each of you ■shall give to the honorable court and jury against Joe Mazon, the prisoner at the bar, shall he the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God,” with the like omission.

The discrepancy in the manner of swearing the two classes •of witnesses was not observed by the judge, solicitor or prisoner’s ■counsel while the trial was in progress, nor until after the charge; the jury had retired to consider the case and make up their ver■dict. Then it was discovered by prisoner’s counsel, and the fact ■was made known to the judge and an exception thereto noted.

How this oversight occurred, and why a different oath was administered to the separate classes of witnesses when the law furnishes one form for all, is unexplained, nor does any satisfactory reason therefor occur to us. It is a singular circumstance that the regular mode of swearing one set of witnesses should have been pursued and another mode adopted for the others, and this ■not communicated by counsel until after the cause had passed into the hands of the jury.

But we are of opinion that the omission and variation do not constitute such substantial departures from the provisions of the *678 statute as to fatally infect the verdict and entitle the prisoner Ur another jury. The general assembly could not have, intended, in putting in form the different oaths to be taken by officers, public agents and others to insure the faithful performance of their respective duties, to prescribe an inflexible iron formula, admitting of no deviation in words, while the substance is preserved; hut rather to direct and point out the essential matters to be embraced in the oath.

To hold invalid an oath that did not follow the very words of the statute, might prove disastrous to the public interests. “Perjury and slander,” in the language of the supreme court of Tennessee, “could often find, in slight variances from the prescribed forms of oath, the means of escape from condign punishment which justice invokes. Undoubtedly an oath, administered substantially according to the prescribed form, will be valid, and if taken falsely the party will be guilty of perjury.”" Sharp v. Wilhite, 21 Tenn., 434.

“The legislature did not design,” says GkekN, C. J., “to prescribe the precise form of the oath, the slightest deviation from the phraseology of which would prove fatal,” State v. Daylor, 3 Zab. (N. Y.), 49.

“As to the form of the oath, when it is prescribed by statute,”' remarks Mr. Bishop, “the statute is to be construed in some sense directory only, so far at least that a departure from the words, in matter not of substance but of form merely, docs not exempt the person taking it from the pains of perjury.” 2 Bish. Cr. Law', §§862, 982.

A witness for the state was required to swear that his evidence given “against Joe Mazon, the prisonér at the bar, shall be the truth,” &o., and this the counsel interprets as imposing an obligation upon the conscience of the witness to testify truly where his testimony is adverse, which does not rest upon his conscience where it may be favorable to the prisoner. If this criticism were well founded, it would be of great force ; but in our opinion it is not warranted by the form of the oath taken.

*679 In a general sense every witness is understood to testify for the party introducing him, and the aggregate evidence offered is the evidence of such party. No distinction is drawn between such as sustains the one side or the other. The testimony is said to be for the state or for the accused, accordingly as it proceeds from witnesses produced by the one or the other.

If a witness be produced and sworn for the King, yet if that witness allege any matter in his evidence that is for the prisoner’s advantage (as many times they do) that stands as a testimony on oath for the prisoner as well as for the King.' Regularly the ICinc/s evidence is given upon oath against the prisoner, and ought not to be admitted otherwise than upon oath. 2 Hale P. C., 283, 284.

In 4 Chitty’s Criminal Law, 313, this form is given for swearing a witness for the King:

“The evidence which you and every of you shall give for our sovereign Lord, The King, against the prisoner at the bar shall bo the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God.” It cannot admit of doubt that such an oath reaches the conscience of the witness and exacts from him, form under the penalties of perjury, a disclosure of all that he knows material to the issue of the prisoner’s guilt, and comprehends just as much what mitigates or excuses the charge as what tends to establish the prisoner’s guilt.

Substantially the obligations assumed under either form of oath are the same, and perjury may be assigned in the corrupt withholding of known facts favorable to the accused in the one ease as well as in the other.

In reaching this conclusion we wish to mark our decided disapproval of the practice of departing from well established forms, and the more so, where they have been prepared and prescribed by the law-making power.

The other branch of the exception based upon the omission to repeat the words “so help me God ” by the witness is equally untenable. Indeed, the.very point is disposed of in the recent *680 case of State v. Paylor, 89 N. C., 539, and wesliould be content with a simple reference to it, but that we find the same ruling- to bave been made in the court of Queen’s Bench in The Lancaster & Carlisle Railway Co. v. Heaton, 8 Ellis & Black (92 E. C. L. Rep.), 952. In that case, the same words prescribed in the statute, “so help mo God,” were omitted, in taking the oath. Lord CaMPBELE, C. J., in answer to the objection, said Rewords, “so help me God,” were not part of the oath.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.C. 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mazon-nc-1884.