delivered the opinion of the court.
The first question presented is in .respect to peremptory challenges. Section 819, Rev. Stat., after providing for challenges in capital offences, reads, “on the trial of any other felony, the defendant shall be entitled to ten and the United States to three peremptory challenges; and in all other cases, civil and criminal, each party shall be entitled to three peremptory challenges.” The contention is that the offence charged is a felony, and that, therefore, defendant was entitled to ten peremptory challenges. The Circuit Court ruled otherwise, and allowed him only three. The question then is whether the offence charged is a felony. The claim of defendant is based upon the character of the punishment, which is a fine not exс'eding $5000 nor less than $50, or imprisonment for any time not exceeding two years, or both. By § 5541, Rev. Stat., imprisonment for a period longer than one year may be in a penitentiary, and such an imprisonment, it is said, is the test of felony. It may be conceded that the present common understanding of the word departs largely from the technical meaning it had at the old common law. This departure is owing to the fact that the punishments other than death, to wit, forfeiture of the lands or goods of the offender, which formerly constituted the test of a felony, are no. longer inflicted, at least in this country, and to the further fact that in many of the States offences are by statute divided into two classes, felonies and misdemeanors, the former including all offences punishable by death or imprisonment in a penitentiary, and the latter those punishable only by fine or imprisonment in a county jail, and in other States, in which no statutory classification is prescribed, many offences punishable by imprisonment in a
There is no statutory definition of felonies in the legislation of the United States. We must, therefore, look elsewhere for the meaning of the term. Thе question was recently before us in
Bannon, and Mulkey
v.
United States,
But in this case we need not refer to the common law for a classification of the offence. Section 2865, Revised Statutes, provides that
“
if any person shall knowingly . . . smuggle, or clandestinely introduce into the United States any goods, wares, or merchandise, subject to duty by law . . . without paying or accounting for the duty . . . every such person . . . shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof shall be fined in any sum not exceeding five thousand dollars or imprisoned for аny term of time not exceeding two years, or both.” By this section smuggling is in terms declared a misdemeanor. The penalty imposed is
A second objection is that the court gave this instruction: “You should especially look to the interеst which the respective witnesses have in the suit or in its result. Where the witness has a direct personal interest in the result of the suit the temptation is strong to color, pervert, or withhold the facts. The law permits the defendant, at his own request, to testify in his own behalf. The defendant here has availed himself of this privilege. His testimony is before you and you must determine how far it is credible. The deep personal interest which he may have in the result of the suit should be considered by the jury in weighing his evidence and in determining how far or to what extent, if at all, it is worthy of credit.”
By the act of March 16, 1818, c. 3Y, 20 Stat. 30, a defendant in a criminal case may, “ at his own request but not otherwise, be a competent witness.” Under that statute it is a
On .the other hand, if he avail himself of this privilege, his credibility may be impeached, his testimony may be assailed, and is to be weighed as that of any other witness. Assuming the position of a witness, he is entitled to all its rights and protections, and is subject to all its criticisms and burdens. It is unnecessary to consider whether, when оffering himself as a witness as to one matter, he may either, at the will of the government or under the discretion of the court, be called upon to testify as to other matters. That question is not involved in this case, and we notice it simply to exclude it from the scope of our observations. The privileges and limitations to which we refer are those which inhere in the wit-mess as a witness, and which affect the testimony voluntarily given. As to that, he may be fully cross-examined. It may be assailed by contradictory testimony. Ilis credibility may be impeached, and by the same methods as are pursued in the case of any other witness. The jury properly consider his manner of testifying, the inherent probabilities of his story, the amount and character of the cpntradictor}r testimony, the nature and extent of his interest in the result of the trial, and thе impeaching evidence in determining how much of credence he is entitled to.
It is within the province of the court to call the attention of the jury to any matters which legitimately affect his' testimony and his credibility. This does not imply that the court may arbitrarily single out his testimony and denounce it as false. The fact that he is a defendant does not condemn him as unworthy of belief, but at the same time it creates аn interest greater than that of any other witness, and to that extent affects the question, of credibility. It is, therefore, a matter properly to be suggested by the court to the jury. But the limits of suggestion are'the same in respect to him as to others. It is a familiar rule that the relations of a witness to
A reference to a few authorities upon this point may not be inappropriate. In
People
v.
Cronin,
34 California, 191, 195, 204, this instruction was given: “ The defendant has offered himself as a witness on his own behalf on this trial, and in considering the weight and effect to be given his еvidence, in addition to noticing his manner and the probability of his statements taken in connection with the evidence in the cause, you should consider his relation and situation under which he gives his testimony, the
consequences
to him relating from the result of this trial, and all the
inducements
and
temptations
'which would ordinarily influence a person in his situation. You should carefully determine the amount of credibility to which his evidence is entitled; if convincing and carrying with it a belief in-its truth, act upon it; if not, you have a right to rejеct it.” This was sustained, the Supreme Court saying: “The instruction of the court in relation to the credibility of the defendant, who offered himself as a witness, was in all respects legal and proper. Ye do not agree with the- learned counsel for the defendant in holding that it is not competent for the court to single out a particular witness and charge the jury as to his credibility. On the contrary, the less abstract the mоr.e useful the charge. Jurors find but little assistance in the charge of a judge who deals only in the general and abstract propositions which he supposes to be involved in the case, and leaves the jury to apply them as best they may.” A similar
In
State
v.
Sterrett,
In
State v. Cook,
84 Missouri, 40, 46, 47, 48, the jury were instructed : “ That in determining what weight you give defendant’s testimony, you should consider that he is the party accused and on trial in this cause.” Objection was made to this on account of the word “should,” as being mandatory rather than permissive, but the objection was overruled, the appellate court saying: “ If the attitude of the accused, when he-takes the witness, stand, is in truth different from that of all other witnesses according to our laws, I am at a loss to perceive any error in the court so treating him, and in reminding the jury of such undoubted fact. This, I conceive, the court can do without subjecting itself to the criticism of singling out
In People v. Calvin, 60 Michigan, 113, 123, 124, the trial court charged the jury' as follows : “ I can’t charge you, gentlemen, that you are bоund to give the same weight to it that you are to that of a disinterested person. This man testifies as defendant,. himself- deeply interested, arid has a motive for committing perjury or perverting facts which the other witnesses have not. It does not follow, therefore, that you must give the same weight to his testimony that you do to the testimony of any other witness, whether corrobrated or uncorroborated.” And the instruction was approved by the Supreme Court, the latter saying: “It was just and proper, in view of the request, he had given in which no distinction was made between respondent’s testimony and that of any other witness, that the jury should be instructed that in weighing and determining its truth they should take into consideration the interest he must necessarily have in the result of the trial.”
In
Hirschman
v.
The People,
101 Illinois, 568, 576; this instruction was given : “ The court instructs the jury, as a matter of law, that in this State the aсcused is permitted to testify in his own behalf; that -when-he does so testify he at once becomes the same as any other witness, and his credibility is to be tested by and subjected to the same tests as are legally applied to any other witness, rind in determining the degree of credibility that shall be accorded to his testimony, the jury have a right to take into consideration the fact that he is interested in the result of this prosecution, as well as his demeanor and conduct upon the witness stand and during the trial; and the jury are to take into consideration the fact, if such is the fact, that he has been contradicted by other
A similar instruction was- sustained in
Rider
v.
The
People, 110 Illinois, 11. In
Chambers
v.
The
People, 105 Illinois, 409, the instruction was in this language: “ The court instructs the jury, for the people, that they are not bound to believe the evidence of the defendant in a criminal case, and treat it the same as the evidence of other witnesses, but the jury may take into cоnsideration the fact that he is defendant, and give his testimony such weight as, under all the circumstances, they think it entitled to.” This also was sustained.
Bulliner
v.
The
People, 95 Illinois, 394;
Bressler
v.
The
People, 117 Illinois, 422. From other States these authorities may also be noticed :
People
v. Petmecky,
Until legislation of a recent date this court has had few criminal cases' before it, and so has had little occasion to notice the limits to which a court may go in calling the attention of the jury to matters affecting the credibility of the defendant in a criminal case. In
Hicks
v.
United
States,
The import of-these authorities is that the court is not at liberty to charge the jury ’directly or indirectly that the defendant is to -be disbelieved because he is a defendant, for that -would practically take away the benefit which the law -grants when it gives him the privilege of being a witness. On the other hand, the court may, and sometimes ought, to remind the jury that interest creates a motive for false testimony ; that the greater the interest the stronger is the temptation, and that the interest of the defendant- in the result of the trial is of a character possessed by no other witness, and is therefore a matter which may seriously affect the credence that shall be given to his testimony. The court should be impartial between the government and the defendant. On behalf of the defendant it is its duty to caution the jury not to convict upon the uncorroborated testimony of an..,accomplice. Indeed, according to some authorities, it should peremptorily instruct that no verdict of guilty can be-founded on such uncorroborated testimony, and this because the induce
Tested by these rules we see in the instruction objected to nothing of which complaint can reasonably be made. In the first part it lays dоwn a general rule, applicable to all circumstances, and then in the latter part simply calls attention to the fact that the defendant has a deep personal interest in the result of the suit, and that that should be considered by the jury. There is no declaration nor intimation that the defendant has been untruthful in his testimony. There is only a reference to the jury of the matter of credibility coupled with thе declaration that interest in the result is a circumstance to be weighed in its determination. This clearly is unobjectionable.
These are the only matters which are open for consideration. It is true that error is alleged in- overruling a motion for a new trial, but such a ruling is not reviewable in this court. Neither can we take the statements made by the defendant in his motion as evidence that the matters thus stated did, in fact, occur at the trial. In order to authenticate such facts a bill of exceptions is necessary.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
