32 Ky. 221 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1834
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
This was an action of debt upon anote. Plea, nonest factum. The evidence consisted of a single deposition, conducing to prove a material alteration in thenote, by the payee, after its delivery. The jury, after retiring
The jury are the exclusive judges of the facts. They may be told by the court, in certain cases, if they believe all the evidence they should find for this or that party, but the court has no right to tell the. jury that they should, or are bound to, believe that the evidence established any particular fact. If the court can do this, it would take from the jury their peculiar province of weighing the credibility of witnesses and the strength of their testimony. If the jury err on these points, the court may grant a new trial, and that is the only corrective. We think the bill of exceptions shews, that the Judge (inadvertently no doubt,) transcended the limits circumscribed by law, in declaring “ that it was the plainest case he had ever seen in court; the note was at first made payable in Philadelphia, and was p.r'oved to have been altered to Louisville, Ky.” The very fact
For this irregularity, amounting we think to an error-in law, we deem it right to reverse the judgment, and grant a new trial.
The plaintiff in error must recover his costs.