White v. Commonwealth

80 Ky. 480, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 4, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 80 Ky. 480 (White v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Commonwealth, 80 Ky. 480, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 91 (Ky. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

JUDGE HINES

delivered tiie opinion of the court.

Appellant was indicted on the charge of stealing certain municipal bonds of the city of Cincinnati, in the State of Ohio, tried, convicted, and sentenced to the penitentiary for two years.

Counsel for appellant complain, first, that the court erred in refusing a continuance on account of the absence of one Straus, a resident and citizen of Cincinnati, Ohio. The affidavit for continuance shows that Straus was in the habit of visiting Lexington, Kentucky, the place where the trial was pending; that he had been, served with subpoena, and that he had promised to appear at the next term of the court, and it is alleged that appellant could secure his attendance at the succeeding term. It appears that the refusal to grant a continuance for this witness was based entirely upon the fact that he was a non-resident of the .State, no question having been made as to the materi■ality of the evidence, as there, could not be, because it is .stated in the affidavit that, at the time it is attempted to prove that the appellant sold the bonds in the city of Cin-cinnati, he was engaged in business in the presence of the witness, and at a place different from that at which it is ■attempted to prove that the sale of the bonds occurred. The materiality of this evidence is increased by the fact that Dunlap, who claims to have purchased the bonds from appellant, had never before seen him, and as appellant appears to have no marked characteristic of features, form, -or carriage by which to distinguish him from the common herd, the probabilities of a mistake in identification are much greater. Ordinarily, where the evidence, of the absent witness is material, where reasonable diligence has ;been used to secure his attendance, and there are reason[483]*483-able grounds made to appear that the presence of the witness can be had by a postponement or continuance, the postponement or continuance should be allowed. Here the materiality is unquestioned; there was no want of •diligence on the part of appellant, and upon the face of the affidavit, which is not contradicted, there appear reason.able grounds to believe that the attendance of the witness could have been had at the next term of court. Whether the witness is a resident of the state or non-resident and .absent from the state, the inquiry in either case is the same: Is the evidence material, has diligence been used to secure •his attendance, and are there reasonable grounds to believe ■that the presence of the witness will be had by a continuance? The question is not whether the court can enforce the attendance, because if that were true a continuance could not be had on account of the absence of a citizen of this state, who was at the time within the jurisdiction of another sovereignty. In neither case could coercive process be applied. The right to a continuance in either case would depend upon the probabilities of the witness -coming within or submitting himself to the jurisdiction of the court. The court erred in refusing the continuance.

Another question is made by counsel as- to the admissibility of evidence, which is the more important by reason •of its relation to the question just discussed. Appellant ■offered to prove by Vanarsdale, who was present in court, that he had for years been intimately acquainted with appellant; that at the time Dunlap testifies to having purchased the bonds of a person answering in general the personal •appearance of appellant he, Vanarsdale, was in the city of Cincinnati, and there met, at or about the time of the •alleged sale of bonds, a person, who was a stranger to him, [484]*484so strongly resembling appellant that he twice approached, the person with the intention of speaking to him, believing-at the time that he was appellant, and that he did not discover the mistake, so strong was the resemblance, until he-had approached him near enough to extend his hand for the purpose of shaking hands. We see no reason why this-evidence was not competent, in substance at least, to throw light upon the question as to whether appellant was the person who sold the-bonds to Dunlap. There maybe some objection to a portion of what counsel allege -they could prove by Vanarsdale, but the outline facts that he knew appellant well; that at the time of the sale of the bonds in Cincinnati the witness was there, and that he met a person who so strongly resembled appellant that he believed the-person to be appellant until -close inspection, are certainly competent upon the inquiry as to whether Dunlap was not mistaken as to the person from whom he purchased the bonds. When there are no marked characteristics about the accused by which he may readily be distinguished from the commonality, there are but two ways by which he may establish the fact that the accusing witness is mistaken as to identity. The one is to prove an alibi, and the other is by such proof as attempted to be introduced here.

We are also of opinion that the court erred in admitting evidence of character covering the period between the discovery of the perpetration of the offense and the time of the arrest. The discovery that the bbnds had been stolen-by some one was made on the 4th of April, and .the arrest of appellant on the charge was made on the 12th of May following. The court confined the proof of character to the date of the arrest, when it should have been limited to the time of the discovery of the commission of -the offense. [485]*485In the proof of character in aid of the presumption of innocence, it is always confined to the impression that the community may have received from the general bearing of the .accused, and it is not allowed to extend to particular acts •or conduct in special cases. The principal reason why it is not allowed to extend to particular instances of good or bad conduct is, that such evidence might raise an unlimited number of collateral issues, for which neither the accused nor the Commonwealth would come prepared, and which issues would necessarily becloud the issue of guilt or innocence in the charge under consideration. And it may be said that the rule is a good one for another reason, and that is, that the growth of character is so subtle that its existence cannot always be predicated of, or based upon, certain acts, or formulated from specific conduct to which one can point as tangible and satisfactory evidence of the conclusion at which he may have arrived. A single lapse from virtue, or a single infraction of the world’s code of honor, may blast a character, but its growth to good is slow. It is made up of numberless and infinitesimal acts, the individuality of which is lost sight of as they pass, and the aggregation alone remains as a monument to character. A growth so slow, a character so formed, ought to weigh in the consideration of the probabilities that the accused has been guilty of a specific offense which is inconsistent with it.

Mr. Wharton on Criminal Law, sec. 638, lays down the proposition, in general terms, that proof of general character subsequent to the discovery of the perpetration of the ■offense is not competent; but all the authorities cited by bim in support of the proposition do not support the conclusión. Those cited to which we have had access are cases in which the question does not necessarily arise, although [486]*486the statement'Of-'-the daw,-' a?á* índicáte'd'-by Mr.'1 Wharton,’ is-supported by the expression of iopin-ibn -'in'-the 'particular cases. ■ He'also- cites Commonwealth' v-.--'Sackétj '22' Pickering, as supporting the opposite view/but on'examination it.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ky. 480, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1882.