101 Ga. 559 | Ga. | 1897
Whether a witness does, or does not, know anything about a case is not necessarily a matter exclusively within the knowledge of the witness. He or she may know much that is material in a given case, without being aware of the fact; and besides, experience has shown that a witness, in mere loose conversation, will, in order to avoid being brought into court, profess ignorance, when an examination under oath would develop knowledge on his part as to the matter in controversy. The fact that the woman whose testimony the accused desired in the present case did not talk to her husband about the.matter, ought not to have led to a denial of the continuance. It is true that all women talk — more or less — whether married or single; but it by no means follows that every married woman tells- her husband all she knows. It is quite possible this particular woman may have known something which would have aided the accused in his defense, notwithstanding the fact that she had not made any communication thereof to her husband.
Judgment reversed.