79 S.E. 872 | N.C. | 1913
This action was brought to recover damages for criminal conversation with plaintiff's wife and the alienation of her affections. There was a verdict for the plaintiff, and from the judgment thereon the defendant appealed, after taking and reserving exceptions. This appeal, in one aspect of it, involves the competency of a husband to testify as a witness in his own behalf to the adultery of his wife with the defendant, she, of course, not being a party to the record. It is well known that, at common law, parties to and persons interested in the event of an action were not permitted to testify, nor could the husband or wife testify for or against each other, except in certain cases not necessary to be mentioned. But this has been changed radically by modern legislation, under the wise and skillful leadership of Pitt, Taylor, Lord Denman, and Lord Brougham, the law reformers *318 of the last century, and the results of their work (14 and 15 Vict., ch. 99; 16 and 17 Vict., ch. 83) have become a part of the statute law of this country in one form or another. It would be vain and unprofitable to attempt any discussion of the authorities in other jurisdictions in regard to the true meaning and extent of this sweeping change in the law of evidence as it existed at the common law, because the statutes are so variant in their terms and phraseology that each must be considered and weighed according to its own peculiar tenor. Close examination of the cases elsewhere has led us, therefore, to conclude that little aid in the construction of our law can be derived from them. We therefore turn to our statutes, and former decisions construing them, for a solution of the question raised by the objection of defendant (396) to the testimony of his adversary.
By Revisal, sec. 1628, "incapacity" or disqualification to testify by reason of interest or crime is removed and every person who is offered as a witness shall be "admitted to give evidence, notwithstanding such person may or shall have an interest in the matter in question, or in the event of the trial of the issue, or of the suit or other proceeding in which he is offered as a witness. This section shall not be construed to apply to witnesses to wills." Section 1629 provides that no person shall be excluded as a witness on account of interest in the event of the action. By section 1630 parties themselves, and persons in whose behalf the suit or proceeding is brought or defended, shall be competent and compellable to give evidence, according to the practice of the court, in behalf of either or any of the parties to said suit or proceeding:Provided, that the section shall not be considered to apply to any action or other proceeding instituted in consequence of adultery, or to any action for criminal conversation. Section 1636 makes husband and wife of any party to an action or proceeding competent and compellable to testify, on behalf of any party to such action or proceeding, but nothing therein contained shall render husband or wife competent or compellable to give evidence for or against each other in any criminal action or proceeding or in an action or proceeding brought in consequence of adultery, or for divorce on account of adultery, nor in any action or proceeding for or on account of criminal conversation. We have omitted so much of the sections as are irrelevant to the case.
It was early held, in Sumner v. Candler,
We rest our decision upon the broad and practical view, hitherto taken by this Court with reference to the true meaning of these statutes, so as to execute the manifest intention of the Legislature and open the doors to a certain class of evidence heretofore excluded or barred out, and relax the rigorous rules of the common law, which often worked injustice, if not oppression, by excluding the truth in deference to a mere sentiment. These sections should be construed together, as they relate to the same subject — the competency of witnesses. The trend of our decisions has been to admit the husband and wife as witnesses unless, in a legal sense, they testified "for or against each other" within the meaning of the provisos to the sections, and it has been expressly held that a husband does not testify for or against his wife if she is not a party to the record and has no legal interest in the action or its event, that is, no interest that can, by the rules of law, be affected thereby. A sentimental interest is not sufficient for the exclusion of the testimony of one of the spouses, but it must be a legal interest; and it has been further held that where one is accused of adultery with the wife, who is not a party to the record, the husband is a competent witness to prove the adultery, as neither the evidence nor the judgment can thereafter be used against her. S. v. Wiseman,
Examining the cases we have cited a little more closely, we find that inS. v. Wiseman, supra, the wife and her paramour were indicted for fornication and adultery; a nol. pros. was entered as to the wife, and the husband permitted to testify against the remaining defendant; and reference is made to Code, sec. 588 (Revisal, sec. 1636), as qualifying the husband and wife to testify, provided neither is allowed to be a witness "for or against the other" in the cases enumerated in the final clause of that section. In S. v. Guest, supra, the wife pleaded guilty and was then permitted to testify against the other defendant as to her adultery with him. In McDowell's case, supra, the defendant was charged with bastardy, and the Court held that, while the wife could not prove nonaccess, or formerly, impotency (Barringer v. Barringer,
We see, then, very clearly what this policy is, viz., to exclude husband and wife when the evidence of either will, in a legal sense, prejudice the other; and that is not the case here. Neither the testimony of plaintiff *321
nor the judgment in this action can possibly be used against the wife in a prosecution for the adultery. We believe that this single reason for the exclusion of husband and wife, only where the testimony of one will legally affect the other injuriously, permeates the entire body of law on the competency of witnesses, so far as the matrimonial relation is involved. But it has been expressly held in Barringer v. Barringer,
We need not assign reasons for the rule of exclusion at the common law, whether it was upon the ground of interest alone, when the testimony is in favor of the spouse, or marital bias, or public policy when it is against, or whether it was because they were considered as two souls in a single body (qua sunt duae animae in carne una), as Sir Edward Coke says (Coke on Littleton, 6b), for which he has been accused of striking the first false note; for need we combat the theory that it should be rendered impossible for husband and wife to speculate upon the other's dishonor, relying upon their own testimony to make or support a case? The full, final, and conclusive answer to all of this argument is, Ita lex scripta est.
In Johnson v. Allen,
(401) But Broom v. Broom,
(402) The defendant contends that there is not sufficient evidence of the alienation of the wife's affections or of the adultery with defendant, but the jury must decide as to its sufficiency to establish the *323
essential facts. If it is meant that there was no evidence to support the allegations, we think that there was some. It is not necessary to show the adultery by direct proof, but circumstances are sufficient for that purpose, if therefrom the jury can reasonably infer the guilt of the parties. S. v. Eliason,
In this case it appears, by the evidence, that defendant, a married man with a bad character, had been seen at the home of the woman, in the absence of her husband, with his hand familiarly on her person; that he went there several times, in the absence of her husband, and remained there for some hours during his visits; that the woman had gone to his store, after the hands had quit their work for the day, to see him, and left the store with him, on one occasion going out the back door; that the woman had declared that she no longer loved her husband, abandoned him and her children and refused to live with him, and there were other facts of more or less weight, tending to show their close intimacy and her infatuation. The jury have the right to conclude that the conduct of this married man and this married woman, under the circumstances, was not only very suspicious, but had all the earmarks of a guilty intercourse, when taken with the fact that the defendant refused to go upon the stand in his own behalf and explain them, for there was something requiring explanation. His failure to do so was the subject of fair comment (Goodman v. Sapp,
The consent of the wife to her own defilement is no defense to the action (21 Cyc., 1628; Yandt v. Hartvunft,
The rulings and charge of the court were, therefore, correct, and no error in the trial has been discovered by us.
No error.
Cited: Trust Co. v. Bank,
(404)