Richman v. State
Richman v. State
Opinion of the Court
Opinion ly
In tbis case, the plaintiff was called before the grand jury as a witness, and the following question propounded to him by the foreman: “Do you know of any person, other than yourself, being engaged in gaming at any time within two years, in the county of Muscatine?” Which question the said Eichman refused to answer, alleging that to answer it, would have a tendency to implicate himself. Whereupon the said Eich-man was ordered by the court to answer said question, and refusing to do so, was fined ten dollars for contempt, and a judgment rendered against him for that amount with leave to except to the opinion of the court in requiring him to answer said question* and to the judgment rendered against him, which facts are certified to this court by agreement for a decision.
The witness should have answered this question. An affirmative or negative reply could notin any manner have criminated him. The inquiry does not embrace all the gaming within the knowledge of the witness, but only such gaming as was known to the witness in which he was not a party. If the witness had not been excepted in the interrogatory, there would have been more propriety in his refusing to answer; as he might have been a party himself to all the games within his knowledge in the coun
' We understand from this and other decisions on this subject, that in relation to the privilege of witnesses, it is
When it is evident to the mind of the court, that the answer cannot accuse the witness, the court should require him to respond to the interrogatory. If this were not the case, it would bo in the power of the witness, when called upon to give testimony in a criminal case, to refuse to do so. If he is to be sole judge whether the answer would implicate him by thus answering, it would be impossible to elicit any testimony. Perjury could not only be committed with impunity by stating that the answer would crim-inate him, but the guilty would be screened from merited punishment. We cannot sanction a rule fraught with such dangerous consequences. The direct tendency of such a rule would be to suppress truth and prevent the administration of justice. Therefore, we think the better and safer rule to be, that of compelling tbe witness to answer when it is apjoarent to the court, that such answer would not interfere with his legal privilege. In this case, it was evident from the scope of the question, that an answer could not possibly infringe upon this right, and yet the witness makes himself the judge, and refuses the answer.
The position of the witness, furnishes a familiar illustration of the evil consequences which would result from the enforcement of such a rule as he has contended for in the argument, and a most potent reason for the distinction which we have made.
Judgment affirmed.
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