96 A. 941 | Conn. | 1916
The assignments of error chiefly relied on are those which attack the action of the trial court in reopening the cause, during the arguments, to permit the State's witness Houghton to correct his testimony. In criminal, as well as in civil cases, the court has discretionary power to permit the cause to be reopened after arguments have commenced. The following cases were so reopened to permit proof of the venue, after counsel for the accused had claimed in argument that no such proof had been made. Pond v. State,
On the other hand, in Looney v. The People,
It thus appears that the discretion has been upheld when exercised solely to promote the ends of justice, on condition that the party in whose favor it is invoked has been fair and diligent in trying his cause in the regular way. In the present cause, the date on which these heifers calved was no part of the State's case; it was brought out on cross-examination, and as it referred to something which happened long after the crime, its supposed importance was not entirely obvious until it was made much of in the opening argument for the accused. Then the witness informed the State's Attorney that he had made a mistake and desired to correct his testimony. Assuming that the matter possessed the importance now attributed to it, we think the court was entirely justified in reopening the case upon being informed that the witness claimed to have made a mistake, and at the same time giving the accused full opportunity for testimony in rebuttal.
No principle of law was violated in permitting the witness to change his testimony at that late hour in the trial, or after his attention had been called to the consequences of his former testimony, or after he had had an opportunity to confer with other interested parties. These considerations doubtless affect the probability of his claim that he had made a mistake in his original statement. Whether he was acting in good faith in claiming to have made such a mistake was a question for the trial judge to consider in exercising his discretion, and a question for the jury to consider in weighing the testimony. It is not a question for this court.
It is quite true, as the appellant claims, that this discretionary power ought not to be exercised when the accused will be prejudiced thereby. Prejudice, in this *153 connection, means legal prejudice. It is not enough that the testimony so admitted out of its order is disadvantageous to the accused, or that by coming out of its order it assumes an importance which it might not otherwise have possessed. The accused suffered no legal prejudice in this case, for the court gave full opportunity for rebuttal and for comment upon the evidence to the jury, and no complaint is made of the charge.
A witness testified to a conversation with the accused in the course of which the witness told the accused that Lynn had a pasture "over in the Hollow." Presumably this evidence was offered for the purpose of attempting to show that the accused knew the location of Lynn's pasture. The witness was then allowed to testify, under objection and exception, that in using the word "Hollow" he had in mind Paddy Hollow, and ended by saying that he did not know himself where Lynn's pasture was.
Exception is also made to the admission of a statement by the cattle dealer, Booth, that he found no difficulty in picking out from the herd five cattle which belonged to him. The supposed significance of this testimony was in its connection with the subsequent identification of the stolen heifers by Lynn and Houghton.
We think both of these items of evidence were so immaterial as to be quite harmless.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.