Evidence of the reputation of a man for truth and veracity in
the neighborhood of his home is equally competent to affect his
credibility as a witness whether it is founded upon dispassionate
judgment, or upon warm admiration for constant truthfulness, or
natural indignation at habitual falsehood, and whether his
neighbors are virtuous or immoral in their own lives. Such
considerations may affect the weight, bit do not touch the
competency, of the evidence offered to impeach or to support his
testimony.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an indictment charging John Brown, in separate counts,
with the murders, by shooting, of Thomas Whitehead and of Joseph
Poorboy, on December 8, 1891, at the Cherokee Nation, in the Indian
Territory. Two successive convictions upon this indictment were set
aside, and new trials ordered, because of erroneous rulings and
instructions of the court below, as stated in the opinions of this
Court reported in
150 U. S. 150 U.S.
93, and in
159 U. S. 159 U.S.
100.
At the third trial the government introduced evidence tending to
show that the defendant, being nineteen years of age, and one
Hampton, being seventeen years old, participated in the killing of
Whitehead and Poorboy in a shooting affray about nine or ten
o'clock at night on December 8, 1891; that the defendant and
Whitehead were white men, and Poorboy and Hampton were Cherokee
Indians, and that Hampton had since been killed in resisting
arrest. The defendant was acquitted
Page 164 U. S. 222
by the jury of the murder of Poorboy, but was again convicted
and sentenced upon the count for the killing of Whitehead, and sued
out this writ of error.
At this trial, Sam Manus, being called as a witness for the
government, testified that on the night of the killing, the
defendant and Hampton came into his house and said they had killed
Whitehead and his comrade, and taken their firearms and three
silver dollars (all they had) from Whitehead's pocket, and showed
the witness the arms and money. Manus further testified that he had
himself been convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary for twelve
months for resisting an officer.
Witnesses called by the defendant testified that the reputation
of Sam Manus for truth and veracity was bad among the people of the
neighborhood where he lived. Other witnesses, called in rebuttal,
testified that his reputation for truth and veracity was good.
The court instructed the jury that if
"the parties, or either one of them, was robbed of property or
money after being killed, that becomes a potential fact in the
case, to show that there was a willful purpose upon the part of
those who may have done the killing,"
and that
"if these parties were killed for the purpose of robbery, the
very fact of the robbery shows a state of general malevolence, a
general wickedness of purpose, and a general design to do wrong,
that is of a doubly criminal character in showing the existence of
this element of the crime of murder."
The defendant excepted to these instructions.
The court further instructed the jury as follows:
"One of the principal witnesses in this case is Mr. Sam Manus.
He comes before you and swears to inculpatory statements made by
the defendant as to the robbery. He swears to you as to the
statement of the defendant that he got three dollars in silver. He
swears to you in reference to a statement made by the defendant as
to taking the firearms of these men who were killed. That shows a
robbery, if true. Efforts have been made and brought to bear here
to break down his evidence -- to destroy his evidence before you --
by impeaching his general character for truth. It is necessary, in
the interest of
Page 164 U. S. 223
truth, and in the interest of justice, and in the interest of
the enforcement of the law in this jurisdiction, that I should give
you an admonition, and the one I am now about to give you: that is
a proper way to attack a witness. It is a proper way to destroy his
evidence. But it must amount to proof of a certain character. It
must show a certain condition. It is a method that is easily
resorted to, that is often resorted to. I cite these conditions
because I have a right to, on account of their notoriety -- on
account of its being common knowledge before you and before this
court that under the law I can take judicial notice of. I say it is
a method easily resorted to, often resorted to in this jurisdiction
and resorted to as often when it is based upon fraud, upon perjury,
and upon subornation of perjury. It is a method of attack that lets
in personal spite, neighborhood grievances, personal animosity,
personal bickering, and the personal feelings of people. It opens
wide the door for the admission of all these things, that, if
properly considered, go to cloud the judgment of men; but in many
of these cases, unfortunately, they are the very seeds from which
spring the judgment of the witness as to the general character of
the witness who comes before you. Now that is not the source of
general character. Animosity, the feeling of hatred, nor of
neighborhood bickering, that may produce a feeling of animosity
against a man, is not the source from which impeachment by proof of
general bad character is to come. It must come to you as the
opinion of the people in the neighborhood where the man is known,
and that opinion must be founded upon a state that is
dispassionate; must grow out of the dispassionate judgment of men
who are honest men and good men, and able and competent to make up
a judgment of that kind. It is not the judgment of the bad people,
the criminal element, the man of crime, that is to fasten upon a
man and blacken his name. That is not the state of case that would
show you that he has general bad character. That is not the
condition that must come to you when the attack is made to be
effective, but it must come to you as an honest reflection of the
opinion of the people generally in the neighborhood where the man
lives and is known. "
Page 164 U. S. 224
The defendant at the time of the delivery of the charge, and
before the jury retired, as appears by the bill of exceptions
allowed by the presiding judge, alleged exceptions "to all the
remarks of the court in reference to the impeachment of the witness
Sam Manus," and "to that part of the charge in regard to the
evidence of Sam Manus," and thereby distinctly and sufficiently
excepted to the instruction just quoted.
There was conflicting testimony in the case as to what took
place in the affray when Whitehead and Poorboy were killed, and the
government much relied on subsequent admissions by the defendant as
testified to by Sam Manus. His character for truth and veracity was
therefore an important element to be considered by the jury who
were to decide the guilt or innocence of the accused.
The jury were indeed instructed, in terms of themselves
unobjectionable, that the general character of a person must come
to the jury "as the opinion of the people in the neighborhood where
the man is known," and again, in equivalent phrase, that it must
come to them "as an honest reflection of the opinion of the people
generally in the neighborhood where the person lives and is
known."
Those general statements, however, were materially qualified by
the intervening definition that
"that opinion must be founded upon a state that is
dispassionate; must grow out of the dispassionate judgment of men
who are honest men and good men, and able and competent to make up
a judgment of that kind,"
and "not the judgment of bad people, the criminal element, the
man of crime."
The jury were thus plainly told not only that reputation could
not grow out of the opinion of criminal or bad men, but that it
could only grow out of the dispassionate judgment of men who were
honest and good, and competent to form such a judgment. And this,
as appears throughout the instruction upon the subject, was
declared to be a necessary condition of the admissibility of the
impeaching testimony.
The instruction given was too narrow and restrictive. Evidence
of the reputation of a man for truth and veracity in the
Page 164 U. S. 225
neighborhood of his home is equally competent to affect his
credibility as a witness whether it is founded upon dispassionate
judgment, or upon warm admiration for constant truthfulness, or
natural indignation at habitual falsehood, and whether his
neighbors are virtuous or immoral in their own lives. Such
considerations may affect the weight, but do not touch the
competency, of the evidence offered to impeach or to support his
testimony.
The instruction in question is pervaded by an error analogous to
that for which the judgment was reversed in
Smith v. United
States, 161 U. S. 85.
As the error in this respect requires the verdict to be set
aside, it would be superfluous to pass upon the many other
questions of law presented by the bill of exceptions and by the
assignments of error, some of which would require grave
consideration were it necessary to decide them in the form in which
they are presented by this record.
Judgment reversed and case remanded, with directions to set
aside the verdict and to order a new trial.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER (with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE BROWN and
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM), dissenting.
I dissent: First. Because after three juries (thirty-six jurors)
have agreed in finding a defendant guilty of the crime charged, and
such finding has each time been approved by the trial judge, the
judgment based upon the last verdict ought not to be disturbed
unless it is manifest that the verdict is against the truth of the
case, or that the court grossly and prejudicially erred on the
trial.
Second. Because the testimony in this case discloses an
outrageous crime, showing that this defendant, in connection with
another party (that other party already convicted of one murder,
and a fugitive from justice), in the night-time called from their
slumbers two officers of the law, and shot them down without
provocation. Justice and the protection of society unite in saying
that it is high time such a crime was punished.
Third. Because no sufficient exception was taken. The
Page 164 U. S. 226
entire charge of the court fills about thirty-seven closely
printed pages of the record. If reprinted here, it would make
nearly seventy-five pages of this volume. With the exception of two
or three short instructions at the close, it does not consist of
separate instructions, but is one continuous charge. This charge
was excepted to, as appears from the record, in this way:
"Defendant John Brown excepts to those parts of the charge of
the court to the jury at the time of the delivery thereof, as
follows, to-wit: first, to that part of the charge relating to what
the court says as to evidence that 'cannot be bullied or bribed,'
as to the 'fruits of the crime, the taking of the money,' etc.;
second, as to the definition and illustrations of 'willfully.'"
And so on through a series of twenty-five or thirty
specifications, covering therewith the entire charge. The
seventeenth is as follows: "Defendant excepts to all the remarks of
the court in reference to the impeachment of the witness Sam
Manus," and again, "also excepts to that part of the charge in
regard to the evidence of Sam Manus." And in this way only was
objection made or exception taken to the charge, or any part of it.
Now there is about a page referring to the testimony of Sam Manus.
On this page are stated certain rules of law, which it is conceded
are correct, and it is only a portion of the language used in
reference to the testimony of Sam Manus that the court considers
objectionable. I have always understood that the purpose of an
objection and exception was to call the attention of the trial
court to the particular words or phrases complained of, in order
that it might have an opportunity to consider, and, if need be,
correct, the alleged error. The decision in this case seems to
entirely ignore this purpose, and to make the noting of an
objection and exception simply a request to the appellate court to
search through the several pages of a charge for any sentence or
sentences which its critical eye may disapprove of. For all
practical purposes, a single exception might just as well have been
taken to the entire charge.
Fourth. Because this part of the charge is, as a whole,
unobjectionable. The testimony referred to was admitted, and
therefore held to be competent. The rule of law in reference to
impeachment was correctly stated, and the objectionable
Page 164 U. S. 227
matter was prefaced by a declaration of the court that it gives
a matter of admonition. That admonition was just and sound.
Reputation is the general judgment of the community in respect to
the witness whose reputation is challenged, and is not made up by
the flippant talk of a few outlaws.
For these reasons I dissent.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM concur in this
dissent.