111 A. 861 | Conn. | 1920
This action was brought to recover damages for injuries to the plaintiff's automobile resulting from a collision with the automobile of defendants, caused by the negligent operation of their servant. The principal question at issue was as to whether the accident was due to the negligence of the driver of defendants, or of plaintiff.
The defendants produced, as a witness in chief, Monashkin, the operator of the automobile at the time of the accident, and he testified as to the occurrences at that time. In his rebuttal, plaintiff offered a record of the conviction of the witness of the crime of statutory burglary. Objection was made on the ground that the record of this crime did not tend to affect the character of the witness as to truth and veracity. The objection was overruled and the record was marked as an exhibit, and to this ruling the defendants excepted. At a subsequent point in the trial, the court stated that inasmuch as the question of the identification of the person convicted by the record introduced, with the witness, was not entirely clear, it would reverse the ruling and sustain the objection to the admission of the record. No objection upon the ground of want of adequate identification had been made by the defendants. Despite this, the exclusion of the offer already admitted was within the discretion of the court. "An error in admitting testimony can be cured by suitable directions to the jury subsequently given; . . . any other doctrine would seriously impair the value of the jury system." Gorman v. Fitts,
In withdrawing this record from the consideration of the jury, the trial judge said, among other things, that he recalled his ruling somewhat against his own better judgment, and this expression, counsel insist, discredited the court's ruling. The jury unquestionably understood the situation. They would, as it seems to us, be more apt to follow the caution of the court to disregard the evidence, withdrawn because of its reluctance to follow this course, than if the ruling had been made without this expression. Frankness on the part of the court suggesting the questionableness of its ruling, cannot be made a ground of error. Gorman v.Fitts,
But if this were otherwise, and harmful prejudice might have resulted from the admission and subsequent rejection of the evidence if originally inadmissible, we still think no harmful error was committed except in the reversal of the ruling. The record was admissible to discredit the witness. The statute of 1848 (Chap. 44) now General Statutes, § 5705, provides that "no person shall be disqualified as a witness in any action by *504
reason . . . of his conviction of crime; but such . . . conviction may be shown for the purpose of affecting his credit." This statute was intended to remove the bar of disqualification from witnesses who had been convicted of crimes known as infamous crimes, and render such persons competent witnesses, but it provided that the record of conviction might be shown "for the purpose of affecting his credit." Card v. Foot,
The infamous crimes, conviction for which might be shown for the purpose of affecting the credibility of witnesses, were those crimes which were known to our law as infamous and not merely those so known to the common law. Infamous crimes at common law were treason, felony, and the crimen falsi. Felonies are those crimes which were such by our common law or have been made such by our statutes. Fimara v. Garner,
Formulation of a rule by which infamous crimes may be designated with definiteness, has proved a source of trouble to the courts. The common-law classification of treason, felony, and the crimen falsi, does not cover the field, nor furnish the material from which to formulate a rule of precision and definiteness and one of general applicability. In their effort to evolve a satisfactory rule, courts of the United States and of the several States have adopted either the rule of the penalty, or that of the nature of the crime, for determining whether or not a crime is infamous. The courts of the United States and those of some of the States, have determined that crimes which are punishable by imprisonment in the State prison or penitentiary are infamous crimes. Other State courts have adopted the rule of ascertaining the nature of the crime, and holding those involving moral turpitude as infamous. The rule of the penalty has the merit of definiteness and consequent ease of enforcement. Under our law undoubtedly treason and all felonies are infamous crimes; and in our State every crime whose punishment must, by statute, be imprisonment in the State prison, is a felony. But in the great body of crime called misdemeanors, whose punishment may be in State prison, are found many crimes we have never regarded as infamous crimes. These crimes have no inherent quality of baseness or depravity, and hence do not involve in their commission *506
moral turpitude. They are unintentional crimes, and crimes mala prohibita. However just this rule of the penalty may prove in other jurisdictions, with us it would place within the category of infamous crimes not a few which are within the class of mala prohibita and are not inherently bad. For example, the penalty of our statute would make infamous crimes of the sale of lottery tickets; the sale or lease of implements for pool selling; the injury to police or fire alarm wires; the deprivation of rights on account of alienage, color or race. On the other hand, the rule determining infamous crimes by the nature of the crime would, unless qualified, make some crimes infamous though the maximum punishment prescribed is less, and often much less, than six months in the county jail. Logically, the quality and not the penalty of the crime should fix its classification, and crimes whose commission involves an inherent baseness and which are in conflict with those moral attributes upon which the relations of life are based are infamous. They are said to be those which involve moral turpitude. In itself this is a vague term, lacking precision. Bouvier's Law Dictionary (2 Rawle's Rev. 2247) gives the accepted legal definition of this term as "an act of baseness, vileness or depravity in the private and social duties which a man owes to his fellow men or to society in general, contrary to the accepted . . . rule of right and duty between man and man." It includes anything done contrary to justice, honesty, modesty, or good morals. It has been said to embrace all crimes within the conception of the crimen falsi and more. Holloway v.Holloway,
Satisfactory definition or explanation of this term has never yet been attained; in application the courts have been more successful, and as a whole, in those jurisdictions making this element the test, have been singularly consistent in ruling. A large list of these cases involving moral turpitude may be found in Ex parteMason,
Between these two methods of classification of infamous crimes, we think the method of ascertaining the nature of the crime is the preferable. The punishment may or it may not characterize the infamous crime. The presence or absence of this quality of moral turpitude always will characterize it. The objection of indefiniteness in this rule and consequent difficulty on the part of the trial court in its enforcement, is not a serious objection. It merely compels a ruling based upon principle, a process which the trial court customarily follows.
As we have seen, crimes whose punishment must be imprisonment in the State prison are regarded by us as necessarily infamous. And we hold that crimes whose penalty may be imprisonment in the State prison, will be held to be infamous when the nature of the crime involves moral turpitude; crimes whose penalty must be in the county jail will be infamous when the nature of the crime involves moral turpitude and the penalty may be six months or more.
Undoubtedly this limitation will exclude some crimes whose nature does involve moral turpitude, but we think the lesser crimes which do involve moral turpitude have with us never been regarded as infamous crimes. *509
In State v. Setter,
The record of conviction for statutory burglary was admissible as affecting the credibility of the witness, since statutory burglary is an infamous crime. An ingredient of this crime is the intent to commit larceny. Moral turpitude is involved in this crime. Alfele v.Wright,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.