43 S.E. 506 | N.C. | 1903
This is an action brought by the plaintiff against defendant for divorce, on the ground of adultery committed with one J. T. Daniels. The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that illicit relations had existed for some time between the said parties. One of his witnesses, B. O. Rice, testified as follows: "I knew the plaintiff and defendant; have frequently seen them riding together; (26) they worked together in the field; they rode together when Hopkins (plaintiff) was away at the lighthouse, but not when he was on shore." The defendant introduced as a witness Emil Ireland, who testified: "I had a conversation with the witness, B. O. Rice, at Parkin's Point, in which he stated he did not know anything against Mrs. Hopkins." The plaintiff's counsel, on cross-examination, proposed to ask this witness "if B. O. Rice did not state in the same conversation that if Tom Daniels did not have improper relations with Mrs. Hopkins it was his own fault, and he missed a good chance." The question was objected to by the defendant, the objection was sustained by the court, and the plaintiff excepted.
We think the court erred in excluding what the plaintiff proposed to prove. The testimony of B. O. Rice, while very slight as proof of illicit intercourse between the parties, was permitted without objection to be considered by the jury in connection with the other facts and circumstances already in evidence, in order to establish the charge of adultery made against the defendant, and it was competent for this purpose. This being so, when the defendant attempted by the testimony of her witness, Emil Ireland, to contradict the plaintiff's witness, B. O. *20 Rice, it was surely competent for the plaintiff to support and strengthen the latter's evidence by showing that, in the same conversation with Emil Ireland, he had made a statement entirely consistent with his testimony at the trial. This would be so, if the statement of B. O. Rice, proposed to be elicited, had been made in a separate and distinct conversation with Emil Ireland or any one else, as it would tend to corroborate the plaintiff's witness, B. O. Rice.
The evidence was competent also upon the familiar principle that where one of the parties introduces evidence as to part of a (27) conversation, the other party is entitled to have the whole conversation detailed to the jury, as the part already in evidence may be explained and qualified by the other part of the conversation. If this was not permitted to be done, the evidence would be fragmentary and misleading, and the very truth of the matter might be suppressed. The strict enforcement of this rule is demanded in the interest of a fair and impartial trial, and that equal and exact justice may be administered.Paine v. Roberts,
The defendant's counsel, in his address to the jury, was permitted, over the objection of the plaintiff, to take the little child of the defendant in his arms and exhibit it to the jury, and, as is stated in the case, he "urged upon the jury not to find the defendant guilty as charged, because it would ruin her character and would disgrace and bastardize the child, and counsel repeatedly urged this view upon the jury"; and it is further stated that the defendant's counsel, in his address to the jury, after objection had been made by the plaintiff in apt time, "repeatedly and persistently charged that plaintiff had hired and bribed the witnesses to swear falsely in the cause, although there was no evidence to support the charge." In McLamb v. R. R.,
The rule which is so well stated in the extracts we have just made from the decisions of the Court, and which has frequently been commended to the judges for their guidance in the trial of cases, is directly applicable to the facts as they appear in this record. The plaintiff was entitled to a fair and impartial consideration of the case by the jury, and it was his unquestioned right to have all extraneous matter excluded therefrom, especially if it was calculated, as it was here, to seriously impair this right and to prejudice him in the minds of the jurors. What the counsel said about the child was nothing but an appeal to the sympathetic feelings of the jury, and was not justified in any view that we can take of the testimony. The jury had nothing to do with the consequences an adverse verdict would entail upon the defendant, nor with the effect of such a verdict upon the status of the child. This introduced into the case an immaterial issue which was calculated to divert the minds of the jury from the true and only question involved, that is, the adulterous intercourse of the defendant with her alleged paramour, and its evident tendency was to prejudice the plaintiff.
S. v. Woodruff,
The defendant's counsel was also permitted, as we have already stated, to charge "repeatedly and persistently" that the plaintiff's witnesses had been bribed by him to testify falsely in his behalf. The case on appeal was prepared by plaintiff's counsel and served upon defendant's counsel and accepted by him as correct. The judge did not settle the case upon disagreement of counsel, but the counsel themselves agreed upon it; and the counsel for the defendant thereby admits that there was no evidence of this charge made by him, and emphasized, we have no doubt, with his usual force and eloquence.
Counsel should not be permitted to comment upon matter of which there is no evidence. It tends to confuse the jurors, and, as we have *22 said in discussing a former exception, to take their minds away from the true issue being tried, and in a case like this to give play to their passions and prejudices instead of their calm and deliberate judgment in passing upon the testimony.
It has recently been held by this Court that where comments by counsel substantially like those made in this case, though not involving so grave an accusation, were permitted to be made by counsel after objection, and the court failed to interfere and stop the counsel or to properly caution the jury in the charge, a new trial will be granted for the error thus committed. S. v. Tuten,
(30) The evidence as to rumors in the neighborhood of improper relations between defendant and J. T. Daniels, which the plaintiff proposed to introduce, was properly excluded by the court, but the errors committed in the respects we have indicated entitle the plaintiff to have the issues in the case again submitted to a jury.
PER CURIAM. New trial.
Cited: S. v. Tyson,