39 Iowa 277 | Iowa | 1874
On the trial of the cause the appellant offered no evidence of good character. The court thereupon charged the jury as follows: “Defendant is presumed to be innocent until he is proven guilty. Defendant had the legal right to introduce testimony in support of his character, and the fact that he failed to do so is a circumstance that you may consider, with all the other testimony in the case, in determining the question of guilt.”
Appellant excepted to the giving of this instruction-, and assigns the same as error.
The law is now well settled that a party charged with the commission of a public offense may give evidence of his good character. But his character is not in issue, nor can the prosecution offer evidence of the general bad character of the accused until the defendant has offered evidence of his good character. 3 Greenlf. on Ev. §§ 25,26 and cases cited in notes; 2 Russell on crimes, 785; Commonwealth v. Hardy, 2 Mass., 317; Same v. Webster, 5 Cush., 325.
In the People v. Bodine, 1 Denio, 281, an instruction substantially the same as the one given in this case, although of
In the State v. McCallister, 24 Maine, 139, it was held that the omission of the accused to furnish evidence of his previous good character, may be called to the consideration of the jury in support of the prosecution. We find no other case, (except the overruled one of the People v. Vane, supra), which holds this doctrine. In our opinion the cases of the People v. Bodine and the State v. O'Neal, supra, are more in accord with-principle than this case. It is the settled doctrine of the cases that whenever the defendant, charged with a public offense,- chooses to call witnesses to prove his general character to be good, the prosecution may offer testimony to disprove it, but that it is not competent for the prosecution -to go into this inquiry, until the defendant has voluntarily put his character in issue. 2 Russell on Crimes, 703, 2d ed.; 1 Phill. Ev., 177, 7 Lond. ed.; Commonwealth v. Hardy, 2 Mass., 302; 3 Grnlf. Ev., § 25, and cases cited in notes. Since, therefore, the character of the accused is not in issue unless he shall put it in issue by offering evidence in support of it, and since the .prosecution cannot go into an inquiry, by the evidence of wit
Eor this error the judgment must be
Reversed.