31 Ind. 262 | Ind. | 1869
There was no error in the refusal of the court to grant a continuance of the cause to the appellant. No affidavit was filed by him, or on his behalf, showing any reason for a continuance. There was no statement in the affidavit of Horton that the appellant was not present at the commission of the offense charged in the information. The fact that a continuance was granted as to Horton and Stingle afforded no ground for a continuance as to the appellant. He was properly tried separately, after the cause was continued as to the others.
Overruling the motion for a new trial is assigned for error. Under this assignment it is insisted that the court erred in instructing the jury, that as the defendant had attempted to prove an alibi, his failure to account for his whereabouts during all the time of the probable commission of the offense would be a circumstance which the jury should consider against him.
In such a case, if it should be made to appear that the defense was false and feigned, and attempted to be established by false or fabricated evidence, as by the subornation of witnesses, the attempt to impose it on the court and jury would undoubtedly be a circumstance of much weight against the defendant. But if the evidence tending to prove an alibi is uncontradicted, the witnesses unimpeaehed, the facts testified to reasonable of themselves, and not disproved or contradicted, it would seem unreasonable to say that the attempt to establish the fact would be a circumstance tending to prove the defendant’s guilt, simply because the evidence adduced does not satisfactorily account for the whereabouts of the defendant during the entire pe
We have been unable to find any authority in support of so broad a. rule, except a passage in Wills on Circumstantial Evidence, p. 83, where it is said, that “an unsuccessful attempt to establish an alibi is always a circumstance of great weight against the prisoner, because a resort to that kind of 'evidence implies an admission" of the truth and relevancy of the facts alleged, and the correctness of the inference drawn from them, if they remain uncontradicted.”
Such inferences may reasonably be drawn from an attempt to fabricate an alibi by false testimony, when that fact is disclosed; but where the evidence adduced is uncontradieted, and the facts testified to are probably true, but are deemed insufficient to establish the alibi, no good reason is perceived why the failure should, of itself, be taken as a circumstance to prove the guilt of the accused, or strengthen the evidence of the prosecution. The true rule in such cases, we think, is, that the fabrication of an alibi, like the wilful introduction of false and fabricated evidence in support of any other ground .of defense, is a circumstance against the accused, to be weighed by the jury in connection with all the other evidence in the case. See Roscoe Grim. Ev. p. 17.
In the case at bar, it was testified by the prosecuting witness, that the offense charged was committed between the hours of twelve and one o’clock at night, outside of the house. The parties who committed the offense were partially disguised. The prosecuting witness testified to the identity of White in very positive terms. The general characters of the principal prosecuting witnesses were strongly impeached. The evidence given by four of the sons of White, who lived with him and slept in the same room, with that of two of the other parties accused, strongly tended to show that White was not present at the commission of the offense, but, on the contrary,'was in bed at home, in the same neighborhood, when the offense was committed.
Judgment reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.