United States v. C. B. Duke, Jr.

492 F.2d 693
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 8, 1974
Docket73-1276
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 492 F.2d 693 (United States v. C. B. Duke, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. C. B. Duke, Jr., 492 F.2d 693 (5th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

GODBOLD, Circuit Judge:

The appellant was convicted of two counts of misapplication of bank funds 1 and six counts of making false entries, 2 while president of a bank in the town of Atlanta, Texas. The convictions must be reversed for improper cross-examination by the prosecution in an effort to impeach testimony concerning appellant’s reputation for honesty and integrity.

The defense put in issue the appellant’s reputation for honesty and integrity by introducing the testimony of Ransom C. Hardy, who was a resident of Atlanta and general manager of an oil, land and timber company and a director of the other bank in the town. Hardy testified to Duke’s good reputation for truth and veracity and as a peaceable and law abiding citizen. The government then advised the court that it intended to question any character (i. e., “reputation”) witness as to whether the witness had heard that defendant Duke took $7,500 from the (bank) account of George Eaves and did not return it to him. The trial judge took up the matter in chambers, where he required the Assistant United States Attorney conducting the trial to be sworn and to state the factual basis for asking the question. The basis described was that George Eaves had testified before the grand jury investigating charges against appellant Duke to the following effect. Eaves had relinquished his large safe deposit box in the bank of which Duke was president to make it available to a customer requiring a large box, and at that time Eaves had entrusted $5,400 in cash to Duke for safekeeping until another box was available. According to Prosecutor Long, Eaves told the grand jury that he and his wife asked several times for return of the money, that Duke refused to return it and admitted he had used it for his own benefit, that Duke stated to Eaves that “the money was as much his (Duke’s) as it was Mr. Eaves’, in view of the fact that he felt Mr. Eaves was concealing this money from the Internal Revenue Service.” On being cross-examined in chambers, Prosecutor Long acknowledged that he had in his file photocopies of a note from Duke to Eaves for $5,400 and a check of later date from Duke to Eaves for $5,400. Long acknowledged also that he was aware that other officers of the bank (one of them the chairman of the board) knew of the Eaves-Duke matter, and that Duke continued as president of the bank for nine months after the note was paid. Defense counsel pointed out to the court that there was a dispute whether the $5,400 was in fact a loan to Duke by Eaves. 3

After timely objections by the defense, the court permitted witness Hardy to be cross-examined by Long in the presence of the jury as follows:

Q. Mr. Ransom (sic), have you heard that Mr. C. B. Duke took $5400.-00, $5,400.00 from Mr. George *695 (Pete) Eaves and refused to pay it back?
A. I don’t know anything about that. I never heard of it.
Q. Well, have you heard that he refused to pay the money back until the Chairman of the Board, Mr. T. L. Richey, forced him to do so ?
A. I never heard anything — first I have heard it mentioned.

The same questions were later asked by the prosecution of another reputation witness, Vasco Brabham, president of a savings and loan association in Atlanta, and he answered all in the negative.

It was reversible error to permit this cross-examination of the reputation witnesses. Our concern is with a body of law that the Supreme Court in the leading case of Michelson v. United States, 335 U.S. 469, 69 S.Ct. 213, 93 L.Ed. 168 (1948), has termed “archaic, paradoxical and full of compromises and compensations by which an irrational advantage to one side is offset by a poorly reasoned counterprivilege to the other.” Id. at 486, 69 S.Ct. at 223, 93 L.Ed. at 179. The defendant may introduce evidence of his reputation (“character”), and such a witness not only may but must base his testimony upon hearsay, in effect summarizing what he has heard in the community. As a counterweight the prosecution may present contradictory witnesses as to defendant’s reputation and may subject defendant’s character witness to cross-examination as to the contents and extent of the hearsay on which he bases his conclusion, and he may be required to disclose rumors and reports that are current even though they do not affect his own conclusion. Id. at 477-479, 69 S.Ct. at 219-220, 93 L.Ed. at 174-175. The prosecution may not meet the defendant’s reputation evidence by cross-examination (or testimony of contradictory witnesses) directed to specific acts and occurrences. Evidence of reputation must be met by other evidence of reputation, else the trial degenerates into a confusing and distracting trial of innumerable collateral issues. Permitting this anomalous type of hearsay testimony is predicated upon the concept that the evidence “is not as to the personality of defendant but only as to the shadow his daily life has cast in the neighborhood.” Id. at 477, 69 S.Ct. at 219, 93 L.Ed. at 174. The prosecutor may, however, inquire into the character witness’ grounds of knowledge in order to test the underpinnings for his statement that the defendant enjoys a good reputation, that is, “to test the qualifications of the witness to bespeak the community opinion.” Id. at 483, 69 S.Ct. at 222, 93 L.Ed. at 177.

When witness A is called to support the character of B (either a witness or an accused), by testifying to his good reputation, that reputation must signify the general and unqualified consensus of opinion in the community (§§ 1610-1614 infra). Such a witness virtually asserts either (a) that the testifier has never heard any ill spoken of the other or (b) that the sum of the expressed opinion of him is favorable. Now if it appears that this sustaining witness knows of bad rumors against the other, then, in the first instance, his assertion is entirely discredited; while, in the second instance, his assertion is deficient in good grounds, according to the greater or lesser prevalence of the rumors. On this principle, then, it is proper to probe the asserted reputation by learning whether such rumors have come to the witness’ knowledge; for if they have, it is apparent that the alleged reputation is more or less a fabrication of his own mind.
It is to be noted that the inquiry is always directed to the witness’ hearing of the disparaging rumor as negativing the reputation. There must be no question as to the fact of the misconduct, or the rule against particular facts would be violated; and it is this distinction that the courts are constantly obliged to enforce ....

*696 IIIA Wigmore, Evidence (Chadbourn ed.) § 988 at p. 912. From this right to inquire into grounds of knowledge comes the “have you heard” genus of questions such as were employed in this case.

In Michelson

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Bluebook (online)
492 F.2d 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-c-b-duke-jr-ca5-1974.