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State v. Price

Supreme Court of South Carolina
Mar 1, 1916
103 S.C. 277 (S.C. 1916)

Summary

In Price, this court concluded that a district court can never instruct the jury that a witness is an accomplice as a matter of law, a conclusion this court has since rejected.

Summary of this case from State v. Swanson

Opinion

9291

March 1, 1916.

Before MEMMINGER, J., Marion, June, 1915. Reversed.

B. Frank Price, being convicted of murder, with a recommendation to mercy, appeals. The facts are stated in the opinion.

Messrs. A.F. Woods, L.D. Lide and H.S. McCandlish, for appellant, submit: As to examination of witness: 72 S.C. 194. Competency of evidence: 71 S.C. 136; Jones Ev., sec. 300; Greenleaf Ev., sec. 101; 10 L.R.A. (N.S.) 335, 339; 85 S.W. 191; 29 S.W. 871; 34 N.E. 731. Charge on facts: 47 S.C. 513; 85 S.C. 265; 31 S.C. 235; 53 S.C. 150; 15 S.C. 39; 28 S.C. 225; 100 S.C. 248; 102 S.C. 255. Provocation: 50 S.C. 423; 34 S.C. 129; 6. S.W. 544.

Messrs. Solicitor Gasque, Mullins Hughes and O. Hoyt McMillan, for the respondent, cite: As to res gestae: 13 S.C. 459; 68 S.C. 304; 68 S.C. 276; 56 S.C. 369; 68 S.C. 304. Charge: 47 S.C. 523; 86 S.C. 17.


March 1, 1916. The opinion of the Court was delivered by


The defendant was indicted for murder, and was tried before his Honor, Judge Memminger, and a jury, at the June term of Court, 1915, for Marion county, and was found guilty of murder with recommendation to mercy. After verdict was rendered a motion for a new trial and arrest of judgment was made and overruled by the Court and sentence pronounced. Defendant appeals and asks reversal.

The first exception imputes error to the presiding Judge in the exclusion of certain testimony and is as follows: 1. Because his Honor erred, it is respectfully submitted, in refusing to permit the defendant to testify as to communications made to him by his wife immediately before on shortly before the fatal encounter, and in holding that it was incompetent for the defendant to tell what his wife told him before the killing, in that such testimony was competent as tending to show the attitude of the deceased toward the defendant, and the state of mind of the defendant shortly before the fatal encounter, and the absence of malice, and was so closely connected with the fatal encounter in time and circumstances as to be fairly regarded as a part of the res gestae, and because his Honor also erred, it is respectfully submitted, in overruling defendant's motion for a new trial, on the same ground. This exception must be sustained.

His Honor held that it was incompetent for witness to testify to what his wife told him immediately before or shortly before the fatal encounter. His Honor did not even ascertain what the witness expected to prove — this he could have done by having the jury to retire, or by calling up the defendant's counsel and solicitor to his desk, if he thought the jury should not hear it, and allowed the question asked and objection made, and announced his ruling. As it is, this Court is in the dark as to the nature of the evidence. If it was in the nature of a threat or anything that went to show mental attitude of the deceased to the defendant it would have been competent. Where a witness is not allowed to testify and the Court has no information as to what his testimony would have been, it is a reversible error if the excluded testimony would have been competent in any view of the case. Here the evidence excluded might have been incompetent, and if this Court knew that it was incompetent it would so rule; but we do not know what it was, and if in any view of the case it was competent, then the exclusion of it is reversible error. It might have been that the deceased had made threats against the defendant; if that was the case, then it would have been clearly competent. Without knowing what the witness would have testified to, the Court must assume it was competent in some aspects of the case; the refusal to allow it to come out and by this to ascertain whether it was competent or incompetent was error. This exception is sustained.

It is unnecessary to consider all of the other exceptions in the case. Some of them, however, impute error to the presiding Judge in that portion of charge made to the jury after they had been in their room all night and were unable to agree on their verdict. A mere reading of this portion of his Honor's charge is sufficient to show that he invaded the province of the jury and violated the constitutional inhibition in charging upon the facts, and we desire to say in this connection that in the trial of a case of this sort it is unsafe, if not a dangerous thing, to tell a jury what another jury in another county in another case has done. No two cases are exactly alike, and the safer and saner practice is for the presiding Judge to declare the law, and let the jury find the facts in each particular case applying it to the law as laid down by the Court.

Judgment reversed. New trial granted.


Summaries of

State v. Price

Supreme Court of South Carolina
Mar 1, 1916
103 S.C. 277 (S.C. 1916)

In Price, this court concluded that a district court can never instruct the jury that a witness is an accomplice as a matter of law, a conclusion this court has since rejected.

Summary of this case from State v. Swanson

In State v. Price, 103 S.C. 277, 88 S.E. 295, the Court said that, as there are almost always material differences in the facts of different cases, the safer practice is to try each case upon its own facts, under proper instructions as to the law, without reference to the facts of any other case or the verdict thereon.

Summary of this case from State v. Tapp
Case details for

State v. Price

Case Details

Full title:STATE v. PRICE

Court:Supreme Court of South Carolina

Date published: Mar 1, 1916

Citations

103 S.C. 277 (S.C. 1916)
88 S.E. 295

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