' The Quesadas (surviving wife and children of Francisco Quesada, deceased) sued the Company (Graham Ice Cream Company, a copartnership) for damages re-
Refusal of the court to permit the Quesadas to show in cross-examination of Rich, a witness for the defense, that there was then pending against him a criminal complaint and information charging him with negligent homicide for the death of Quesada is the only ground of error urged. The evidence was offered solely as showing the interest of the witness, and not for impeachment purposes. The case is ably briefed by counsel for both parties, evir dencing very thorough research upon the specific question presented.
It is conceded that the established rule in this state, which is in accord with that generally recognized in other American jurisdictions, is that in a civil suit evidence of a pending indictment, information or complaint, charging a witness with' a criminal offense, is not admissible for the purpose of impeachment. The leading case in this state is Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. of Texas v. Creason,
Adjudication seems quite rare upon the specific question presented here: whether it is permissible, upon the issue of bias of the witness, to show that a criminal charge is pending against him growing out of the transaction upon which the case is predicated, as evidencing his interest in the outcome of the case in its bearing upon the criminal charge. The point seems not to have been decided in this state. We consider briefly the authorities from other jurisdictions.
, A practically all fours case with that at bar, by the Supreme Court of Missouri, Division 2, is Holden v. Berberich,
The Supreme Court of Vermont reached a'- like conclusion in Paul v. Drown,
In Socony v. Marvin,
In Meador v. Insurance Co., 5 Cir.,
In the Kentucky case of Chesapeake & O. R. Co. v. Pittman,
None of these cases is here in point in principle, except those from Missouri and Vermont, which support the view that the evidence is not admissible. We are in accord with this view.
The basis upon which an unproved criminal charge is not admissible in a civil case to impeach a witness is stated in Coyne v. United States, 5 Cir.,
The same reasoning applies to the attempt to discredit a witness by showing that a criminal charge has been made against him growing out of the same transaction to which his testimony relates. His interest in the occurrence is always apparent from the fact of his involvement as actor therein; whether as defendant or as agent or employee of the defendant in the suit in which he testifies. The suit itself is predicated upon his own culpability; and his interest to shield himself from the charge thereof is apparent regardless of the criminal charge against him. To give additional weight to this palable interest by the introduction of a criminal charge, would, we think, unduly serve to poison the minds of the jury against the witness through purely hearsay testimony. It would also offer an incentive to the adversely interested party to make or procure the filing of a criminal' charge. Competent evidence of the facts which form the basis of the criminal charge is of course admissible, but the charge is-not proof of the facts or of the conclusions to be drawn therefrom; it is but the assertion or opinion of some one that a crime has been committed. Whatever presumption of interest may be drawn from the pendency of a criminal charge, in excess, 'of the interest to be presumed from the fact of involvement in the transaction in. which he is charged with culpability and may be subject to criminal prosecution,, though not presently charged therewith, is. outweighed by the consideration that the party offering his testimony is entitled to have it considered in the setting in which it appears as shown by the relation of the witness to the transaction and the parties, to the suit, untrammeled by the purely hearsay evidence of a pending criminal charge.
While we rest our decision upon, the holding that the evidence was not admissible, we think it proper to add that the-record warrants a fair, if not conclusive,, deduction that exclusion of the evidence was harmless. Rich and Graham, one of his employer defendants who was riding with him in the truck, were the only living eyewitnesses to the collision. Each of
The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
