55 S.C. 32 | S.C. | 1899
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The defendant having been convicted of rmirder, with a recommendation to mercy, and having been duly sentenced, now appeals from the judgment of the Court. We will now pass upon these grounds of appeal, eleven in number, in their order:
“6th. Because the presiding Judge erred in overruling the defendant’s objection; and holding as competent and relevant the testimony of the witness, J. H. Shell, detailing certain declarations of the deceased, in regard to the fight, made in the absence of the defendant.” This exception must be overruled, for it is founded on an unintentional oversight by the appellant of the testimony of the witness, Shell: “Witness. Mr. Murdock come to me and submitted himself.” "Mr. Johnstone. In the absence of this defendant, it is not competent, cannot bind this defendant.” "Solicitor. We are not proving statements; but we can prove whether he surrendered himself; and what — ” "The Court. You can prove what he did, but not what he said.” “Witness. He did surrender himself to me.” The “Case” for appeal discloses that the counsel for the appellant had brought out in the cross-examination of this witness, Shell, that the deceased had had, on the day before he was killed, a difficulty with two brothers of the accused, and the witness, being the intendant of the town of Peak, where both difficulties took place, was questioned very closely as to his reasons for not arresting the deceased on Saturday, when the first difficulty took place. The solicitor was anxious, therefore, to show that Murdock, the deceased, one-half hour before he was killed, had surrendered himself to the intendant for the difficulty which had occurred on Saturday. We see no error here, and the exception is overruled.
As to the nth exception, it cannot prevail, for the reasons assigned in the review of the 8th exception. .Therefore, in my opinion the judgment of this Court should be:
It is the judgment of this Court that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the cause be remanded to the Circuit Court for a new trial. But the majority of the Court think otherwise. The judgment of the Court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. While I concur in all the conclusions reached by Mr. Justice Pope in his opinion, except the last, I cannot concur in that, as I do not think there was any error of law, on the part of the Circuit Judge, in excluding the testimony of Mrs. Moss offered by the defendant, after the State had closed its testimony in reply, for the purpose of impeaching “the character and credibility of certain witnesses,” who had, for the first time, testified for the State in reply. It seems that the defendant, in offering his testimony, introduced witnesses who impeached the character of the deceased for violence, and testified “as well to individual acts of violence, within their personal knowledge and the personal knowledge of the defendant, • Charles C. Summer,” and the State, in reply, offered five witnesses to rebut that testimony. One of the witnesses offered by the State, in reply, was Willis M. Wilson, who testified only as to the good character of deceased. Another witness was Mrs. Murdock, the wife of the deceased, who denied two acts of violence, which seems to have been charged as done or threatened to her personally by her husband — one a threat to slap her jaws and the other jerking her out of bed when her child was only four days old — and she also testified as to his general kind treatment of her. Now the testimony of Mrs. Moss, which is here in question, was manifestly introduced for two purposes: ist. To assail the credit of Mrs. Murdock by showing that her testimony, denying that her husband had jerked her out of bed when her child was only four days old, was not true. 2d. To impeach the general character of Willis M. Wilson, one of the five witnesses introduced by the State, in reply, to sustain the peaceable char