Appellant was charged in one indictment with embezzlement, and in two other indictments with false pretenses. All three indictments were consolidated for trial, and appellant was convicted under each.
The acts charged in the false pretense indictments involved sales to two witnesses, Jarvis and Deputy, by means of fraudulent representations, of warehouse receipts representing whiskey. The acts charged as embezzlement involved conversion by appellant of money which Jarvis turned over to him in connection with such sales. The government called an additional witness named Littlepage. It did not question her regarding the acts for which appellant was on trial. It drew from her, over objection, testimony that about two years before those acts appellant had sold her similar warehouse receipts and had made to her the same representations which he is charged with making to the complaining witnesses; viz., that appellant was a representative of Cummins Distilleries, and that the receipts would double in value in two years. The Littlepage testimony was offered on the theory that it showed appellant’s intent to defraud Jarvis and Deputy. It was apparently admitted on this ground. We think this was error.
No doubt the alleged fact that a man committed a crime on another occasion tends to show a disposition to commit similar crimes. But when the prior crime has no other relevance than that, it is inadmissible. Its tendency to create hostility, surprise, and confusion of issues is thought to outweigh its probative value. The law seeks “a convenient balance between the necessity of obtaining proof and the danger of unfair prejudice.” 8 The alleged fact that a man committed one forgery clearly increases the likelihood that he committed another forgery, but testimony to the earlier crime is not, for that reason alone, admissible. 9 We think the Littlepage testimony is within that principle. Apparently the trial judge, on reflection, reached the same conclusion, for he instructed the jury to disregard this testimony. It remains to consider whether this cured the error of admitting it.
Mrs. Littlepage was an elderly woman of weak appearance. She came to court with the aid of a crutch. She was shown to be a widow. She pictured appellant as insinuating himself into her confidence as an emissary from Colonel Breckenridge, a friend of her late husband. She testified: “I was just saving my money to bury myself * * *. Every time I could get a little more, he would come by * * Her testimony could hardly fail to create sympathy for her, and hostility to appellant, in the minds of the jury. The court’s later instruction could hardly destroy those feelings.
In the course of the trial, reference was made to other criminal acts or charges. These references alone may not have amounted to reversible error, but they aggravated the prejudice caused by the Littlepage testimony.
The judgments are reversed, and new trials awarded, in all three cases. We need not rule upon the question whether it was reversible error to consolidate the em
Reversed.
Notes
Cf. Price v. United States,
Cf. Note,
State v. Baugh,
Cf. 2 Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed. 1940) § 302 ff.
Note (1931) 29 Mich.L.Rev. 473, 480.
Laughlin v. United States,
