48 Tenn. 160 | Tenn. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was commenced on the 7th of August, 1865, in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, by Alexander Haun, Jr., who sues by his next friend, Alexander Haun/ Sr., for trespass, assault and battery, and false imprisonment, against Pleasant A. Witt; and verdict and judgment were rendered at the April Term, 1868, for fifteen hundred dollars. It seems, from the evidence, that the plaintiff in error, who resided in the vicinity of Bull Gap, and was the owner of a mill, which, in the language of the witnesses, had been frequently “ robbed,” applied to Col. Giltner, then in command of the Confederate forces, to send a scout for the purpose of breaking up a band of forty or fifty white men and negroes, (“bushwhackers,” as they are styled by one of plaintiff’s witnesses,) who were encamped in the neighborhood, belonged to no regular command, and were supposed to be the persons who had pillaged the mill. The scout was sent, and the defendant in error and his brother, Henry
The principle witness against the plaintiff in error was his miller, one Bufus Brown, who, among other things, stated, that immediately after the prisoners were taken by his house, he went down to the house of plaintiff in error, who told him that “he had been the instigation of their arrest; that he thought these boys were in Kentucky, but the soldiers had them, and had hung one of them, and he had been the instigation of it.” On cross-examination, he denied that he informed the plaintiff in error that there were men hiding in the woods
It is a familiar rule that “ it is not irrelevant to in
It is not possible, owing to the frailty of human memory, as a general rule, to fix, with accuracy, the precise day or hour, when any conversation occurred, and we are of opinion that, as the attention of the witness intended to be impeached, was directed to a conversation occurring at the residence of defendant, a short time before the arrest, and as the impeaching- witness detailed conversations occurring at the place designated, within three weeks before the arrest, this was sufficient to satisfy the object of the rule, and to allow the impeached witness a reasonable opportunity for explanation; and the entire deposition should have gone to the jury, so as to enable them to weigh the evidence, and determine to which of the witnesses they would give credit. In this case, it is apparent that the evidence was material
W. C. Witt, a witness for the plaintiff below, stated that “in the spring of 1864, he had heard defendant make threats against Union men, and defendant was a rebel; and that defendant was complaining that some of his Union neighbors had been troubling him, and been there after him, and had made him run from his house after night, and the rebels were here now, and that he did not intend that they should, stay at home.” This evidence was objected to, and allowed by the Court to go to the jury “for the present;” and his Honor, in his charge, to the jury, said: “The jury can only look to any threats in proof, of the defendant, if they are satisfied such were aimed at the plaintiff, or if such threats comprehend him within their scope and meaning.” As there is evidence, in the record, tending to show that the plaintiff in error, at and before the time of the arrest of defendant and his brother, believed that they were not in the neighborhood, the evidence of W. C. Witt, if admissible at all, should have been submitted in' connection with that fact. But the witness express
Aside from these errors in the proceedings in the Court below, we feel constrained to observe, after a careful examination of the entire record, that we are not satisfied that the evidence is sufficient to support the verdict, as the case presented in it seems to rest entirely upon casual conversations — the weakest of all human testimony. See 1 Stark. Ev., 484; 1 Greenl. Ev., § 200. It was tried, moreover, on the 21st of April, 1868, when the mode of selecting juries, as then established by statute, was of such a character as to occasion general distrust in regard to the impartiality of jury trials in this State.
Reverse the judgment.