30 Conn. 551 | Conn. | 1862
The goods for which this action was brought were found in the defendant’s possession, and with them, or, as the motion states, “ in proximity with them,” other goods
The main question in the case then was, whether the goods sued for had been stolen by the defendant or honestly obtained. Now, had it been agreed that all the goods found had been taken from the plaintiffs’ store or had come into the defendant’s possession at the same time, we suppose no doubt could have been entertained of the admissibility of the evidence objected to. But the fact that all the goods were found together was of itself persuasive evidence that they were so taken and so came to the defendant’s hands, and in the absence of all evidence to the contrary it might have been satisfactory. And then, evidence of the clandestine taking of part of the goods so found would conduce to prove that they were all taken clandestinely.
Suppose a store had been burglariously entered and robbed of an entire stock of dry goods, and that all of the goods had been found in A’s possession, but in an action for the treble value part of the goods so lost and found were by. accident omitted from the declaration; and the question being whether the goods described in the declaration were stolen by A, or honestly obtained, might not the plaintiff give evidence to identify and prove his property in the goods not sued for, in connection with evidence that those goods, at any rate, were taken at the time of the burglary and by the party who committed it, as tending to show that the goods sued for were taken by the same party by means of the same burglary ? We think he might.
Secondly. The defendant claims that a new trial should be advised because of the judge’s omission to charge the jury that
Jurors are, or ought to be, selected for their practical good sense, discrimination and sagacity, as well as for their integrity, and they are presumed capable of giving to the testimony legally laid before them the weight and force to which it is entitled, unhampered by artificial rules of law or logic, of which perhaps they may be ignorant. The relative credibility of the respective witnesses on the one side and on the other it is their peculiar province to determine. The judge may, undoubtedly, in every case make to the jury such remarks regarding the credibility of the witnesses, and the force and application of their testimony, as he may think called for by the circumstances of the case, or calculated to aid the jury in their deliberations ; and in doing so he may with propriety invite the special attention of the jury to such rules of interpretation and construction, or for the weighing of evidence, as in his opinion will conduce to a correct determination of the case submitted to them. But whether he shall do so or not is a question addressed to his discretion. And we feel justified in adding that in the case before us that discretion seems to us to have been well and wisely exercised.
Thirdly. The court did not charge the jury as the defendant’s counsel claimed, “ that this was partly a civil and partly a criminal case,” but only that it “ partook of the nature both of a civil and a criminal action; ” and that was clearly right. It is in form a civil action, and all the rules of evidence applicable in civil actions are applicable to this. Munson v. Atwood, 30 Conn., 102. But in order to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict he must prove the defendant guilty, not merely of
Upon the last question presented by the motion we think the learned judge mistook the law.
Before the passing of the act of 1848, the mode in which the credibility of a witness might be attacked was entirely settled. His general reputation for truth might be proved, but it could not be proved that he had spoken falsely, or even that he had testified falsely, in a particular instance, or that he had in fact committed any crime however infamous. Then came the statute of 1848, which provides that no person shall be disqualified as a witness by reason of his interest in the event of the suit as a party or otherwise, or by reason of his conviction of a crime, but such interest or conviction may be shown for the purpose of affecting his credit. Rev. Stat., tit. 1, § 141. The statute therefore authorizes no other mode of proving a witness unworthy of credit because of his presumed insensibility to the obligations of an oath, as evidenced by bis commission of an infamous crime, but the record of his conviction, because his conviction can be proved only by the record ; and we think the strictness of the rule is founded in the soundest reasons of justice and of policy. If the question of the witness’ guilt or innocence of crime in fact, were permitted to be tried, issues would often be so greatly multiplied that the merits of the principal cause on trial would be lost sight of, and the rights of the litigating parties sacrificed. And it would also be doing great injustice to the witness to subject him to trial for crime in a case to which he was not a party. The common law therefore determined wisely when it excluded all evidence of the criminality of a witness except the record of his conviction. And we think the court ought not to depart from this wise and salutary rule any further than the plain import of the statute requires. The statute is an enabling or remedial one, and should be construed liberally in favor of the party for whose benefit it was made. It speaks only of persons who have been convicted of, not of those who have committed, crimes, and it provides that such conviction,
We think also that the charge on this point was wrong because it required the jury to try the defendant for the crime charged in the declaration in the first instance, unaided by the defendant’s testimony, thus depriving the defendant of its benefit upon that issue absolutely, and practically upon the main issue afterwards to be decided also. For though we do not understand the judge to say that the defendant’s testimony should be laid entirely out of the case, if the jury in the first instance should find him guilty of the theft, yet we all know that that would be the practical effect of such a finding, or, at any rate, that the jury having found the defendant guilty for one purpose, could not easily be induced to find him innocent for another, even if they considered his testimony. And so the defendant would be tried by prejudiced jurors, and, in effect, be also deprived of evidence to which he was by law entitled.
If it be said that the plaintiffs’ evidence was not introduced for the purpose of impeaching or discrediting the witness, the answer is, that no distinct independent issue upon that sub
In another aspect also we think this direction wrong. In practice and upon principle, the credibility of a witness is to be attacked by impeaching testimony, only after his own testimony has been given. So that, upon the question whether he is entitled to belief or not, his own testimony, as well as the manner in which it was delivered, his personal appearance, and the probability of his story, always have and ought to have great influence. But in this case the jury were directed to lay the defendant’s testimony entirely out of view, and to decide the question of his credibility without giving to that testimony any consideration whatever.
Upon this last point therefore we think the jury were misdirected, and we advise that a new trial should be granted.