276 P. 873 | Wash. | 1929
The defendants were informed against upon three counts, all charging violation of the laws against sale or possession of intoxicating liquor, the third count alleging their possession of intoxicating liquor with intent to sell the same. The jury found defendants not guilty of the first and second counts, but found them both guilty under count three; and from a judgment entered on the verdict and a fine imposed pursuant thereto, defendants appeal.
Appellants assign error upon the refusal of the trial court to grant them a new trial because of alleged error in sustaining objections to certain questions, propounded on cross-examination by appellants' counsel to a witness testifying on behalf of respondent. This witness had been in the employ of the state as a paid investigator, and testified on behalf of the prosecution. The witness, on cross-examination, testified that he had been convicted of a crime; and on redirect examination, counsel for respondent asked the witness the nature of the crime of which he had been convicted. To this question, appellants' counsel objected, his objection being overruled.
[1, 2] The ruling of the trial court was correct. The witness having testified on cross-examination that he had been convicted of a crime, counsel for the state was entitled to ask the witness of what crime he had been convicted. The witness was, by the court, directly instructed to answer the question. In his answer he included, in addition to an answer to the question, an explanation of the circumstances as he claimed they existed. No motion was made to strike this portion *601 of the witness's answer, and as this portion of the record stands, the same is free from error.
[3] The witness having answered on cross-examination by appellants' counsel that he was a married man and that his family resided in Portland, counsel for appellants propounded to him the following question: "Did you not have sexual connection with a woman during this investigation in Spokane?" To this question, an objection was interposed by counsel for respondent, which objection was by the court sustained.
In support of their contention that this ruling of the court constitutes reversible error, appellants cite the cases of Statev. Arnold,
This question was properly decided, because no prejudice resulted, the negative answer of the defendant standing without further reference to the matter, and for the additional reason that the question was propounded on cross-examination of the accused himself, the defendant being properly subject to a more searching cross-examination than a mere witness, and, above all, because the matter was largely within the sound discretion of the trial court and no abuse of this discretion was shown.
The recent case of State v. Smith, supra, undoubtedly supports appellants' contention. In this case, it was held that the trial court had improperly sustained objections to the defendants' cross-examination of a witness for the prosecution. The defendants were being prosecuted as gamblers, and a paid investigator for the state, who testified on behalf of the prosecution, was asked, on cross-examination by defendants' counsel, if he had not maintained adulterous relations with a woman in a neighboring city. Upon the state's objection to this question being sustained, defendants' counsel asked the witness if he was not at the time of the trial, maintaining adulterous relations with a woman in the city of Seattle, to which question objection was also sustained. This court held that these rulings were erroneous and prejudicial, and reversed the judgment entered upon the verdict of the jury finding the defendants guilty.
In support of its holding that the rulings referred to constituted reversible error, several decisions of this court were cited, which we now discuss. State v. *603 Coella,
The case of State v. Jones,
The case of State v. Jackson,
In the case of Gardner v. Spalt,
The last decision cited by this court in the case of State v.Smith, supra, with the exception of State v. Arnold, supra, is that of State v. Godwin,
The importance of the question now before us has induced us to reexamine the principle laid down in the case of State v. Smith,supra, and to carefully study and compare the authorities bearing upon the question.
The well considered case of State v. Belknap,
"Courtrooms are bad enough when their proceedings are conducted under proper restrictions, and they should not be made schools for scandal. The extent to which cross-examinations will be permitted is no doubt in a large measure in the discretion of the trial court; and it is difficult to draw the line as to where legal discretion as to the admission or exclusion of such testimony commences and where it ends; but we have no hesitation in saying that sound judicial discretion was abused in this case. Whether one of the witnesses was engaged to another woman, whether the engagement was broken off, and the circumstances surrounding such engagement, were questions wholly foreign to the issues in this case. The relations of the witnesses with other women, and whether one of them had been accused of or was guilty of bastardy, falls within the same category."
Citing Wharton, Criminal Evidence (9th ed.), § 472.
The court goes on to state that the fact that a witness was not required to answer a question, but was allowed to claim his privilege, was immaterial and that *606 the cross-examination had been so conducted as to deprive the defendant of a fair and impartial trial.
In considering a somewhat similar proposition, the opinion of the supreme court of West Virginia in the case of State v.Hill,
"It may be a question merely intended to embarrass the witness, worry the witness, exposing indecent things in court, tending to corrupt morals, and answering no fairly useful purpose on the trial. It almost invariably wounds the feelings of the witness and his family. It removes the mantle of oblivion and forgiveness, by reopening the pages of years past, and exposing acts done in the infirmity of human nature amid the temptations that beset life. If this door is open wide, the witness stand will be a terror; men will suppress evidence from fear of it, to the injury of public justice; and it will threaten both the worthy and unworthy witness, and be a cross upon which attorneys too zealous in their cause will crucify witnesses to suit their own ends. It would tend to disorder in courts. Rarely, very rarely, should it be tolerated. The rule that a witness can only be impeached by evidence of general reputation as regards truth and veracity would tend to forbid on cross-examination such disgracing questions."
The court of appeals of New York in the case of La Beau v.People,
"But it is claimed that collateral evidence is allowable from the witness himself, tending to discredit and disgrace him; and that the asking of questions disparaging to the character of a witness, is a matter of right to a party on cross-examination. This is not so. The extent of the cross-examination of a witness upon matters immaterial to the issue, is in the discretion of the judge before whom the trial is conducted. Inquiries on irrelevant topics to discredit the witness, and to what extent a course of irrelevant inquiry may be pursued, are matters, in this state and in England, committed to the sound discretion of the trial court; and *607 this is the rule as regards the right of inquiry into all matters wholly collateral and immaterial to the issue. The court in which the trial is conducted may permit disparaging inquiries on matters irrelevant to the issue, where the ends of justice would seem to demand it, and may exclude them without infringing upon any legal right of the parties; and the exercise of this discretion is not the subject of review, except in cases of plain abuse and injustice."
The following authorities also support the opinion of this court in the case of State v. Belknap, supra: Great WesternTurnpike Co. v. Loomis,
A careful examination of the authorities satisfies us that the decision of this court in the case of State v. Smith, supra, was incorrect. The true rule is that the character of a witness may be shown by general reputation, and not by cross-examination as to specific acts of insinuated immorality along the line attempted to have been followed by appellants in the case at bar. A different rule applies in connection with the cross-examination of a party to an action, and cases in which courts have considered such cross-examination are not directly in point on the question now before us.
The decisions of this court cited in the case of State v.Smith, supra, were all correctly decided, and we do not wish to be understood as modifying any of the rules laid down thereby. In the case of State v. Coella, supra, the question propounded to the witness concerned her general manner of living and did not relate to any specific action on her part. Under the circumstances, the refusal of the trial court to permit the *608 witness to answer this question undoubtedly constituted error.
In prosecutions for seduction or statutory rape, as were the cases of State v. Jones and State v. Godwin, supra, it is undoubtedly the law that the prosecuting witness may be cross-examined as to her prior chastity. Such situations have no relevancy to the question now before us. The other cases cited have already been sufficiently distinguished. We are satisfied that the rule considered by this court in the case of State v.Smith, supra, was too greatly extended.
As held by the court of appeals of New York in the case of LaBeau v. People, supra, the extent of cross-examination of a witness upon matters immaterial to the direct issue being tried, or on irrelevant topics brought in for the purpose of discrediting the witness, is very largely within the sound discretion of the trial court. It is impossible to lay down any hard and fast rule which will apply in all cases. The trial court, in the exercise of a sound and discriminating discretion, and in furtherance of justice, must consider all the circumstances of the case and rule upon each question as it is presented in view of all the circumstances before him.
The supreme court of Oklahoma in the case of Litchfield v.State,
We are satisfied that, in the exercise of a sound discretion, the trial court did not err in sustaining objections to the questions propounded by appellants' counsel to the witness who was testifying on behalf of the prosecution.
We adhere to the doctrine laid down in the case of State v.Belknap, supra, and the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
MITCHELL, C.J., FULLERTON, TOLMAN, and HOLCOMB, JJ., concur. *610