32 N.C. 298 | N.C. | 1849
This is an action of trespass for an assault and battery, to which the defendant pleaded the general issue. After the jury were charged with the cause and the evidence closed, the defendant moved the court to nonsuit the plaintiff "because there was an error in one of the dates of the original writ." The court refused the motion, and very correctly. After pleading in chief, the defendant came too late to make the objection.
The plaintiff, on the trial, having produced evidence to prove the assault and battery, the defendant's counsel, on (300) his cross-examination of the witnesses, endeavored to show that the conduct of the defendant arose from momentary excitement, and not from malice or ill-will towards the plaintiff. The plaintiff then proposed to prove that, after the commencement of this suit, the defendant met him at the courthouse and offered to fight him. This evidence was objected to by the defendant's counsel, but was admitted by the court. We agree with his Honor in its competence.
It is a prominent rule of evidence that testimony shall be confined to the issue, and be material and relevant to it, and the court will carefully, as far as they can, guard the jury from hearing evidence that is not relevant, as tending to withdraw their attention from the proper inquiry before them. The rule is often of difficult application — the relevancy or irrelevancy of *222
the testimony sometimes depending on something to be proved at a future stage of the trial. In such case, if such evidence has been inadvertently admitted, the correction is with the judge, who ought to direct the jury to throw it aside in making up their verdict; and, if he has reason to believe that they have been influenced by it, to grant a new trial. But testimony which is irrelevant in chief may be rendered relevant by the course pursued by the opposite party. Thus a party cannot sustain his witness by showing that he has at other times made the same statement, until his testimony has been attacked. S.v. George,
We see no error committed by the presiding judge.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: Butts v. Screws,
(302)