75 N.C. 101 | N.C. | 1876
The case of Horne v. Horne,
This application does not come before us in this friendly light.
In the action for divorce,
It is not denied that a new trial may be granted where the witnesses upon whose testimony the verdict was obtained have since been convicted *87 of perjury. 4 Chit. Pr., 62; Benfield v. Petrie, 3 Doug., 24 and 27; Fordv. Yates, Tidd, 907. But in exercising the discretion to grant or refuse a new trial, the Court will distinguish between a conviction of the witness, procured by the oath of a convicted and deeply interested plaintiff, and a conviction procured by disinterested testimony.
If a party to an action, who is an incompetent witness, after his trial and conviction can thus by his own evidence break down the character and credibility of the adverse witness, and thus relieve himself of the consequences of the verdict by (103) obtaining another trial, in which the convicted witness would be disqualified or discredited, not only would a wide door be opened to perjury, but the party would obtain indirectly what he is debarred from directly, to wit, the benefit of his own evidence in his own behalf. The plaintiff, Horne, in the divorce suit, is not a competent witness in his own behalf (C. C. P., sec. 341), but after a verdict against him he can avoid the consequences and obtain another trial by convicting the witness against him of perjury, by his own oath; and upon the second trial can offer this conviction in discredit of the witness. The mischiefs which would result from such an adjudication are too great to be overlooked. How it would be had the adverse witness been convicted by disinterested evidence we are not called upon to say. As the case now stands it is clear that Horne, as a witness against Rickets, upon the indictment for perjury, had more motives to commit perjury himself than had Rickets to commit perjury in the divorce suit.
In the exercise of a sound discretion we think the motion should be denied.
PER CURIAM. Petition dismissed.
Cited: Carson v. Dellinger,
(104)