71 S.E. 305 | N.C. | 1911
Indictment for the slander of an innocent woman under Revisal, sec. 3640. The exceptions are to the charge of the judge. He (474) correctly defined the term "innocent woman" as used in the statute, and then charged upon the burden of proof as follows:
1. The burden of proving the charge is upon the State, and it must satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt, and if it fails to offer evidence which will establish the uttering of the slanderous words beyond a reasonable doubt, the offense is not made out; but the defendants having admitted uttering the slanderous words, proof of that fact is dispensed with, and you will find that they were uttered.
2. The law presumes that all witnesses are of good character till same is impeached, and it likewise presumes that a woman is of good character for virtue till the contrary appears; but evidence having been offered in impeachment of the character of the woman, May Liles, the court charges you that the burden is cast upon the State to prove that she is a woman innocent within the purview of the statute, and if you find that she is not an innocent and virtuous woman as explained to you above, then you will not convict, but will return a verdict of "Not guilty" as to both the defendants.
3. The court further charges you that the defendants do not have to satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt as to the truth of the slanderous language used, but only have to offer such evidence as will cause you to entertain a reasonable doubt as to their truth, because if you have a reasonable doubt as to the virtue of the prosecuting witness you cannot convict, and the court so charges you.
4. The only question for you to determine in this case is whether the statement of the defendants, that they both had criminal intercourse with the prosecuting witness, May Liles, is true; and if you have a reasonable doubt of this testimony, then you will not convict. The defendants testify that they have had intercourse with May Liles, and she denies it and offers evidence of her good character. All this you will consider, but, as stated above, the only question in the case is whether these statements of the defendants are true, and your verdict will turn upon your findings in this particular.
5. The statute was passed to protect and preserve the character of *385 innocent women, as already explained to you, and before you can (475) convict it must appear that the woman is innocent and virtuous. The court has told you where the burden of proof rests, and calls the matter again to your attention to impress is upon your minds.
6. You will consider the evidence offered by the State as to the character of the prosecuting witness, May Liles, and if you find upon the evidence and from the presumptions as explained to you, beyond a reasonable doubt, that said prosecuting witness, May Liles, is an innocent and virtuous woman, then you will return a verdict of "Guilty."
The jury returned a verdict of guilty. The defendants, after moving unsuccessfully for a new trial, appealed from the judgment rendered upon the verdict.
When the charge of the court is analyzed and its several parts compared and after giving it a fair and reasonable construction as a whole, which we are required to do in all cases, we are driven to the conclusion that the judge virtually told the jury that the burden was on the defendants to disprove the innocence of the prosecutrix. It may well be inferred from one or two sentences of the charge that his Honor thought the burden as to this ingredient of the offense was upon the State, and this was the correct view; but when he said that there was a presumption of law in favor of the innocency and virtue of the prosecutrix,until the contrary appears, he might as well have gone further and instructed the jury, in so many words, that, unless the defendants had satisfied them she was not an innocent woman, the presumption should prevail and they would find the fact accordingly. A similar charge was condemned by this Court in S. v. McDaniel,
In S. v. McDaniel, supra, Justice Ruffin thus clearly explains (477) the law as to the burden of proof in prosecutions of this kind:
"As we construe it, the offense defined consists, not in the slander of a woman by falsely charging her with incontinency, but in the attempt to destroy the reputation of an innocent woman by such means. . . . The innocency, then, of the woman who is the subject of the attempt lies at the very foundation of the offense, and constitutes its most essential element, its very sine quo non, and must of necessity be distinctly averred in the indictment. If necessary to be averred, then, under the principle declared in the cases of S. v. Woodly,
New trial. *387