Brown & Herndon v. Williams
Brown & Herndon v. Williams
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the trial below in this case the defendant asked a witness, introduced by the plaintiffs, what credit he had seen upon the books of the plaintiffs in favor of the defendant. The plaintiffs attorney objected to the testimony, unless a copy from the books were received, showing the debits as well as the credits on the defendant’s account. The court directed the wit
The Circuit Court has the right to reject any illegal testimony when offered, or if it shall have been inadvertently put before-the jury, the court may at any time during the progress of the-cause,'-exclude.it from the jury, and direct them to disregard it. But the court has no right to exclude legal testimony; and all the proof that may have been legally heard is legal testimony?though it become such by the course of examination on the adverse side. It will not do to permit one party to make experiments to obtain testimony to which he - is not legally entitled? and when he is permitted by his adversary to do so, who thereupon presents his proof to which he becomes entitled by such course of examination, to turn round and ask for the exclusion of the whole. The proof having been placed legally before the' jury, by the manner in which the parties have brought it forward, is no more liable to be excluded afterwards, than any other legal proof in the cause; although, if objected to from the proper quarter, it may not have been admissible. But although the practice of the court in the case before us was erroneous,, yet it is impossible to afford the plaintiff a remedy by reversing this judgment and ordering a new trial. This court cannot require the defendant to pursue the same course of examination on another trial, which was adopted on the former one;, and it is manifest he would not do so. Unless, therefore, he were
This, like many other matters of practice in the courts below, is beyond the power of this court to correct, and must rest upon the sound discretion and responsibility of the Circuit Judges. Let the judgment be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.