Lead Opinion
1. The evidence supported the verdict.
2. A charge to the jury, though erroneous as a principle of law when applied to certain facts, was not ground for reversal when it was not harmful or if it was beneficial to the party complaining.
We come next to investigate as to whether the assignments of error in special grounds 1 and 2 are sufficient to demand a reversal. The defendant complains of the charge of the court, as follows: "The law gives the defendant the right to make to the court and the jury just such statement in his own behalf as he deems proper, and that statement shall not be under oath. Availing himself of this right under our statute, this defendant has made a statement, and you are to give to that statement such weight and credit as you see proper and right to give to it. You may believe it or disbelieve it. You may believe it in whole or in part. You may believe it in preference to the sworn testimony in the case." The law with reference to the defendant's statement is set out in the Code, § 38-415, and provides: "In all criminal trials the prisoner shall have the right to make to the court and jury such statement in the case as he may deem proper in his defense. It shall not be under oath, and shall have such force only as the jury may think right to give it. They may believe it in preference to the sworn testimony in the case." The defendant contends that the charge of the court circumscribed the jury to the consideration of the evidence as a whole, and barred the jury from considering a *Page 441 part of the testimony and a part of the statement. We are unable to conceive how the jury could have been misled. If anything, the charge was more liberal to the defendant than the statute requires. There is no merit in this contention.
The second ground assigns error on the following charge: "Gentlemen, you are required to take the law as given you by the court and apply this to the facts in the case, as you find them to be. The law you get from the court and the facts you get from the witnesses and the defendant's statement, and to the one you apply the other and make your findings as to the truth of the case." It is complained that the vice of such a charge is to exclude from the consideration of the jury the documentary evidence in this case in the form of certain checks which were introduced, evidencing payments from the prosecutor to the defendant during the period of operation under the contract of timber cutting between them. There is no question that this assignment of error is well founded as a principle of law. See McLean v.Clark,
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and MacIntyre, J.,concur.
Addendum
The defendant contends that he did not represent the property to be his own, and that the prosecutor paid him *Page 442 nothing to apply on the purchase-price. The principle announced as to the harmless error regarding the checks applies therefore to the attachment proceeding sued out by the prosecutor, with equal if not greater force.
Rehearing denied. Broyles, C. J., and MacIntyre, J.,concur.
