107 S.W. 527 | Tex. | 1908
Certified question from the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second Supreme Judicial District as follows:
"In this case appellee recovered a verdict and judgment in the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars as damages for personal injuries sustained at a railroad crossing in one of the streets of McKinney, Texas. The evidence warranted but did not require the verdict in appellee's favor. Numerous errors have been assigned but we find no merit in any of them unless the court erred in allowing appellee on cross-examination of appellant's witness Sam Apple to prove that the witness had been charged with arson and other crimes. The testimony of this witness was material, and if the court erred in the ruling complained of it would in our opinion necessitate a reversal of the judgment. After he had testified to material facts in behalf of appellant, he was asked on cross-examination if he had ever been charged with any offense against the law, and if so, what offense, and was permitted to answer over the objection in effect that a witness could not thus be discredited, "that he had been charged with arson, burning a building, also with carrying a pistol and also with a few other frivolous things." In view of the conflict of authority on this question, we deem it advisable to certify it to your Honors for decision; that is, whether it is competent on cross-examination to impeach a witness by proving by him that he has been indicted for a felony or other crime.
"For a fuller statement of the question certified and of the circumstances attending the ruling complained of, together with the citation of authorities bearing on the question, we refer to the second and third assignments of appellant as set forth in its brief from pages thirty to thirty-nine, inclusive, and appellee's brief, pages three to seven, inclusive."
At an early date in the history of this court it was settled that "in the impeachment of a witness the inquiry should be confined to his general reputation for truth and that it should not extend to his general moral character." Boon v. Weathered,
However, it is claimed that the rule is not applicable to impeachment of a witness by cross-examination of him, and we are cited to a number of authorities to sustain that proposition, among which is Carroll v. The State, 24 S.W. Rep., 100, in which the Court of Criminal Appeals depart from the rule established by the Supreme Court both for civil and criminal cases at the time that it had jurisdiction of criminal matters. In Gulf, Colorado Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Johnson,
In Ingersol v. McWillie,
We see no reason for departing from the well established rule *338 of this court upon this subject. We therefore answer, that it was not competent on cross-examination to impeach the witness, Apple, by proving by him that he had been indicted for a felony or other crime.