Ware v. State
Ware v. State
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff in error was convicted of the murder of John A. Ware, in the Court of Oyer and Terminer for the county of Camden. The errors are assigned upon the bill of exception returned with the record. The first exception, the only one relied on for reversal, is to the ruling of the court excluding the testimony of Samuel Champion, as to the character for truth and veracity of his wife, Mary Ann Champion, who had been examined as a witness on the part of the state.
This witness had testified that she was present at the homicide in question, and saw the defendant shoot John A. Ware, and to many other matters, to prove the issue on part of the ■state. She was the wife of Samuel Champion, but had been living separate from him for some years. The court over
The question is, whether a husband or wife, in a suit to which neither is a party, cau be asked a question for the purpose of disgracing or discrediting the testimony of the other, when the matter inquired into is not an indictable offence.
This question has been settled in this state by two decisions in the Supreme Court, in which it was carefully considered. The first was the case of Den d. Stewart v. Johnson, 3 Harr. 87. The wife, in that ease, was offered to prove that her husband had committed a fraud upon his creditors, by conveying his property so as to protect it from their executions.
Tins fraud was no crime or indictable offence, and the question considered and decided was, whether the testimony of the wife against the husband was excluded in any other case than when it charged him with an indictable offence. Three of the judges delivered opinions, and the previous decisions on the point seem to have been thoroughly examined and considered; and although the inclination of the Chief Justice was the other way, he felt constrained by the decisions to agree with the three other justices, in holding that the wife was bound to testify as to matters that might disgrace her husband, provided her evidence did not charge him with a crime or indictable offence. The courts in England bold that in cases to which he is not a party, she may testify as to facts that lend to criminate or are part of the proof required to convict him of crime, provided the act proved by her is in itself no crime, as that she may prove the first marriage with herself, it being a lawful act, for which he could not be indicted.
This decision has remained as the law of this state for more than thirty years. And in the case of The State v. Wilson and Wagner, 2 Vroom 77, the question again arose, and was considered by the Supreme Court, The opinion of the court, delivered by Chief Justice Beasley, thoroughly reviewed the whole ground, and very clearly states the result to-
The ground on which it is contended that a wife should be •excluded from giving any evidence against her husband is, that it is against the policy of the law, which aims at preserving harmony and peace between husband and wife, and therefore excludes such evidence. The cases above referred to, and the decisions on which they rest, have settled that that policy only extends to such evidence as charges crime. Bui had they not so limited the rule, I apprehend that the act of 1870, chapter fifty-three, must be held to limit the rule of ■exclusion in the same manner. That act expressly authorizes and compels husband and wife to testify against each other, except in criminal actions, and one or two other matters not affecting this question. The supposed policy of the law to preserve harmony between man and wife, by excluding theii •evidence against each other in any case except criminal cases, is changed by this act, declaring that they shall be witnesses in all other cases directly for or against each other. I do no\ think that this act should be construed further to change the rule, and to permit them in collateral suits to give evidence •charging crime or indictable offences. In criminal proceedings against either, they are still excluded. And the rule founded on the policy must be that the exclusion should still prevent either from testifying to facts directly charging the other with crime.
The case of Stapleton v. Crofts, 18 Ad. & El. 367, cited on the argument, and the case of Barbot v. Allen, 7 Eweheq. 609., referred to in that case, do not affect the question before us. They are on the question whether the last clause of section .three of The Stat. 14 and 15 Vict., ch. 99, does not, by implication, extend the provisions of section two, which allows parties to give evidence, so as to include the husband or wife of a party. This clause provides that nothing in the act shall,
The evidence offered in this case, that the reputation of his wife for truth and veracity was bad in the neighborhood, did not charge, or tend to charge her, with a criminal offence. Had he testified directly that she was, to his knowledge, an habitual and incorrigible liar, never to be believed, he would have charged her with no crime.
The act of 1855 (Nix. Dig. 227, § 45,
For reversal — The Ciiancellob, Chief Justice, Depue, Scttddeb, Van Syckel, Kennedy, Lathbop, Olden, Wales — -9.
For affirmance — Bedle, Dalbimple, Clement, Ogden. 4.
Rev., p. 284, § 89.
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