Eastburn v. Stephens
Eastburn v. Stephens
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the Court, by
THIS is an action of slander, which was brought by Stephens against Eastburn, on a charge of perjury, and in which justification was pleaded. Several errors are alleged, an founded on a bill of exceptions, in substance as follows: That the plaintiff had been sworn before arbitrators appointed by order of court; and who also deposed, that he was sworn before a justice of the Peace, as seated in the declaration; and then offered to prove by witnesses, that the said plaintiff had, before fie was sworn by said arbitrators and by said justice, made statements and assertions of facts that were different and contrary to what he had deliberately deposed
No precedent of the admission of such testimony, in a suit of this kind, has been produced; but it seems to this court, if the defendant had first proved that the plaintiff had sworn falsely, then the collateral testimony in question might have been proper to evince, or to aid in evincing, that he had wilfully and corruptly done so, or for some similar purpose. But, from the bill of exceptions, it does not appear that any direct testimony to support the charge of perjury was offered, without which, collateral testimony was certainly improper and inadmissible. So that the correctness or incorrectness of the decision of the court below, which is complained of, depended on what other evidence was or was not produced; which the defendant ought to have shown, but has not done it.—Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.