74 S.E. 363 | S.C. | 1912
March 27, 1912. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Defendant was convicted of assault and battery with intent to kill, and from sentence of five years at hard labor, he appeals.
Defendant's attorney put up a witness, whose testimony took him by surprise. Thereupon, the following colloquy between defendant's attorney and the Court took place: "May it please the Court, I know that ordinarily the rules of evidence will not permit one to contradict his own witness, but the evidence of this witness is a complete surprise to me." The Court: "I don't see anything at all to indicate that his mind is prejudiced one way or the other." Mr. Dagnall: "This witness told me before I had him summoned that defendant asked his wife to get some hot supper for him; that the defendant had not abused her in any way: *162 that defendant did not have a shotgun in the road when he met the Bells; that defendant was not to blame in any way for the difficulty, and that defendant acted in self-defense all through the difficulty, and was not the aggressor in any manner, and that he did not hear the old man (meaning Bell) say a word when he left the house." The Court: "The witness looks like a very fair-minded witness is all I can say." Mr. Dagnall: "I would like to except to your Honor's ruling on the ground that the Court has invaded the province of the jury in passing upon the facts of the case, as the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witness is for the jury and not for the Court." The Court: "I am ruling this that the witness has not shown any bias one way or the other and seems to be fair, and I rule that counsel cannot contradict him." Mr. Dagnall excepts to the ruling on the ground that the credibility of the witness is for the jury and not for the Court.
The sole point made by the exceptions is that, in his remarks made in the presence of the jury, in the colloquy between counsel and the Court above quoted, the presiding Judge committed error, in that he violated that provision of the Constitution which says that "Judges shall not charge juries in respect to matters of fact." In Black v. Ry.,
The remarks of the Judge were called forth by counsel, who asked to be allowed to contradict his own witness, which is not permissible. State v. McKay,
Judgment affirmed.
Only MESSRS CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and JUSTICE WOODSparticipate in this opinion and concur.