25 Fla. 112 | Fla. | 1889
The plaintiff in error was tried at the spring term’of 1886, for the murder of Henry Churchill, and convicted of manslaughter in the second degree.
The first error assigned is: “ The Court erred in overruling the objection of counsel for defendant to that part of the testimony of John Ligón as follows: ‘ Two years ago I chased defendant out of Georgia. I was Deputy Sheriff of Brooks county, in that State, at the time, and had a warrant for his arrest. He was charged with assault with intent to murder. I chased him into Madison county, and then lost track of him.’ ”
The record sent to this court shows that the plaintiff in error, at the trial, introduced evidence tending to show his good character, and it shows that the evidence of John Ligón was introduced by the State in rebuttal of the evidence so introduced by the plaintiff in error, which evidence, so admitted on cross-examination, showing or tending to show a particular act on the part of the plaintiff in error, and tending, to some extent at least, to break down the good character the plaintiff in error had shown, was illegal, and the court erred in admitting it.
The practice of allowing defendants, on trial charged with crime, to introduce evidence showing good character was first adopted in the English courts during the reign of Charles II, and the practice there was to admit such testimony only in capital eases in favorum vitce, when the evidence was circumstantial or there was a doubt as to the guilt of the accused, but never admitted when the guilt of the accused was plainly shown by the evidence, the Court, we presume, being the judge as to whether the evidence showed a plain case of guilt. The evidence in such cases,
It is not in doubtful cases only that good character is of ■weight. Wharton’s Cr. Evidence, sec. 65.
The best rule is that where illegal testimony has been admitted in a criminal case, a new trial will be granted unless it is clear that no injury has' been done to the defendant by it. Wharton Cr. P. & P., secs. 801, 802, notes 6 and 7; Wooten vs. State, 24 Fla.
The second error assigned is, the court erred in refusing to charge the jury as requested by the defendant as follows : “ If you believe from the evidence that the name •of the deceased was Churchwell, and that he was known generally by that name, the fact that a few persons may have called him Churchill does not mean under the law that he was generally known by that name. Generally known by a name means that a person is called by that name by his neighbors as often or ofteuer than by his real or baptismal name.”
The third error is: “ That the court erred in refusing to charge the jury as requested by counsel for plaintiff in error, as follows: ‘ A mistake in the name of a third person in a material allegation will be fatal to the trial, for it creates a variance between the allegation and proof.’ ”
The fourth error assigned is, the charge given at the instance of the State’s Attorney, as follows: “ A variance between the name used in the indictment of the person killed and the name proved, will be fatal, but the person killed may be called in the indictment either by his real name or the name he was called by, and it is not necessary that he should be called by the name used by every one in the community, but if lie was generally called and known by the name used in the indictment it is sufficient.”
The court may, however, have refused the said first instruction of plaintiff in error upon the ground that it assumed a state of facts that did not exist, and if upon this ground, it was properly refused. There is nothing in the evidence to show that the deceased was known by the name of Churchill by “only.a few persons.”
One witness, Ligón, swore positively that the deceased was known and called Church, Churchill, aud Church-well, aud that he was as well known by the name of Churchill as by his true name, Churchwell. Jackson, a witness for the State, stated that he was present at the preliminary examination of the accused before Justice Morey, and that the deceased seemed to be known then aud there by those who testified, as Churchill, that that wTas what witness understood the witness to call deceased. Other witnesses swore that the deceased’s true name was
The second charge requested by the plaintiff in error was properly refused, because too broad, and because it was substantial^ but a repetition of the judge’s charge, and which he was not required under the rules of practice to give. Gladden vs. State, 12 Fla., 562; Nickles vs. Gautier, 16 Fla., 76.
And now conceding that the court should have given the charges as requested by the plaintiff in error, and that there was error in refusing to give them, such error, if it existed, was cured by the charge given at the instance of the State’s Attorney and the court’s own charge. The charge given upon request of the State’s Attorney and the charge of the court upon this part of the ease, were more favorable to the accused than he was entitled to under the law, for, the rule of idem sonans was entirely ignored, which, in our opinion, was in the interest of the accused.
Now, by construing these several charges together as well as those refused as those giveu, the rulings of the court were favorable to the plaintiff in error, and he had no cause to complain thereat.
That the variance between the names Churchill and Churchwell was immaterial. See Whar. Cr. Ev. § 96; Neil vs. Commonwealth, 5, Bush (Ky.,) 363; O’Brien vs. People, 48 Barbour, 274; Lowenburg vs. People, 5 Parker’s Cr. Rept’s., 414; Walter’s vs. People, 6 Ibid, 22.
As the case will have to go back to the court below for a new trial for the error stated supra, we refrain from expressing any opinion upon the general facts therein.
Judgment reversed and new trail granted.