105 Wash. 327 | Wash. | 1919
The defendant Braniff was convicted, by verdict and judgment rendered in the superior court for Asotin county, of the crime of grand larceny, committed by the stealing of three horses. He has appealed to this court.
It is contended by counsel for appellant that the trial court erred to his prejudice in permitting, over his objection, the sheriff of Asotin county to testify to statements made by Eoy Clark upon a former occasion, consistent with the testimony given by bim upon the trial. The purpose of the prosecuting attorney in introducing the sheriff’s testimony as to Clark’s previous statements was to sustain and corroborate Clark’s testimony given upon the trial. The facts determinative of this question may be summarized as follows: Eoy Clark and his brother, Orval, also called “Sank,” were the two confessed accomplices in the alleged commission of the crime by appellant, though appellant was charged and tried therefor separately. In making his opening statement to the jury outlining the defense, counsel for appellant stated,
“Q. Where did you first see Roy Clark? A. In Walla Walla. Q. When was that? A. In January; I don’t remember the date. Q. January of this year? A. Yes, 1917. Q. Were you present there in Walla Walla when he made his confession? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you hear him confess? A. I did. Q. You have heard the testimony he has given on the trial in this case? A. Yes, sir. . . . Q. Was the confession substantially the same as he testified to on the witness stand? A. His confession there was the same in substance as it has been given here on the witness stand.”
This plainly had reference to statements made in Clark’s confession implicating appellant in the stealing of the horses. During the cross-examination of Clark by counsel for appellant he was asked and answered as follows:
“Q. Is it not a fact, Roy, that you and Sank (the brother) and Bosley ran off the horses, and after-wards made up the scheme to throw the blame on to Tom Braniff? A. No, it is not.”
Counsel for appellant invoke the general rule as stated in the text of 10 R. C. L., page 960, as follows:
“Statements made by a witness to other persons are no exceptions to the hearsay rule. . . . Nor can evidence of what a witness has said out of court be received to fortify his testimony. It violates a first principle in the law of evidence to allow a party to be affected, either in his person or his property, by the declarations of a witness made without oath. And, besides, it can be no confirmation of what the witness has said on oath, to show that he has made similar declarations when under no such solemn obligation to speak the truth.”
That this is well settled law, subject to some few exceptions, is shown by numerous authorities, among which we note the following: Pulsifer v. Crowell, 63 Me. 22; Connor v. People, 18 Colo. 373, 33 Pac. 159, 36 Am. St. 295, 25 L. R. A. 341; Stolp v. Blair, 68 Ill.
This is conceded to he the well established rule, but counsel for the state argues that the sheriff’s testimony in this case was admissible under the exception thereto, which he states as follows:
“•—when the testimony of a witness is assailed as a recent fabrication, evidence of prior consistent statements is admissible.”
It seems that some courts have stated an exception to the rule in this somewhat general language, but in the application of such exception the great majority of the decisions show that the word “assailed,” when so used, means assailed by at least some form of impeachment of the witness testifying upon the trial. Now the only manner in which Clark’s testimony was assailed by counsel for appellant was, as claimed by counsel for the state, the statement of appellant’s counsel in making his opening statement, preliminary to the introduction of any evidence, even on behalf of the state, and his cross-examination of Clark before the sheriff testified. It was not claimed that, up to this time, or even thereafter during the trial, there was any attempt to prove in appellant’s behalf that Clark had at any time previously made statements inconsistent with, or contradictory of, his testimony given upon the trial, or that there was any attempt on the part of counsel for appellant to introduce impeaching evidence of any nature, as such, against Clark as a witness. No decision has come to our notice, and we think there is none, holding that the mere
“In the eighteenth century it was considered proper to receive such statements in corroboration, even before the witness had been discredited in any way. But this doctrine has wholly passed away; for it is clear that an untrustworthy story is not made more trustworthy by any number of repetitions of it. There must at least have been some sort of discrediting of the witness, which the consistent statements help to remove. . . .”
And after noting some exceptions to the general rule, with which we are not here concerned, he further says, at the conclusion of that section, as follows:
“It is sometimes said that this sort of evidence is admissible after impeachment of any sort, in particular, after any impeachment by cross-examination; but there is no reason for such a loose rule.”
In 5 Jones, Commentaries on Evidence, § 870, that learned author says:
“There are a few exceptional cases contrary to the great weight of authority which admit evidence of prior consistent statements to corroborate the witness, when he is attacked on cross-examination in almost any manner.”
Some contention is made that the question of the admissibility of the sheriff’s testimony is not properly before us for want of proper objections, exceptions and assignments of error. The objections and exceptions, and also the formal assignments of error, are a little involved as they appear in the record; but we think it is clear that they appear therein in such manner as to entitle appellant to have the question of the admissibility of the sheriff’s testimony reviewed here. The testimony of the sheriff relating to the testimony of Orval Clark and his previously claimed consistent statements made in his confession
Tbe judgment is reversed, and appellant awarded a new trial.
Main, C. J., Fullerton, Mount, and Holcomb, JJ., concur.