Section 5438 of the Revised Statutes (codified from the Act of
March 2, 1863, c. 67, 12 Stat. 696) is wider in its scope than
§ 4746 (codified from the Act of March 3, 1873, c. 234, 17
Stat. 575), and its provisions were not repealed by the latter
act.
On the trial of a person accused of the commission of crime, he
may, without offering himself as a witness, call witnesses to show
that his character was such as to make it unlikely that he would be
guilty of the crime charged, and such evidence is proper for the
consideration of the jury in determining whether there is a
reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused.
At the March term, 1895, in the District Court of the United
States for the Southern District of Iowa, Avington A. Edgington was
tried and found guilty of the crime of making a false deposition,
on April 13, 1894, in aid of a fraudulent pension claim on behalf
of his mother, Jennie M. Edgington, claiming to be the widow of
Francis M. Edgington.
The indictment was based on section 5438 of the Revised Statutes
of the United States, and it was claimed on behalf of
Page 164 U. S. 362
the defendant that that section had been repealed by the
subsequent enactment of section 4746 of the Revised Statutes, and
was no longer in force at the time the indictment was found. The
motion to direct a verdict of not guilty for that reason was
overruled, to which action of the court an exception was taken.
Exceptions were also taken to the action of the court in excluding
testimony as to the defendant's general reputation for truth and
veracity, and to the instruction to the jury upon the testimony as
to the good character of the defendant.
On April 30, 1895, judgment was pronounced against the defendant
that he pay a fine of $1,500 and the costs, and that he stand
committed to jail until said fine and costs should be paid. A writ
of error was prayed for and allowed.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 5438 of the Revised Statutes makes it penal to make or
cause to be made, for the purpose of obtaining or aiding to obtain
payment or approval of any claim against the United States, any
false deposition knowing the same to contain any fraudulent or
fictitious statement, and such offense is made punishable by
imprisonment at hard labor for not less than one nor more than five
years, or by fine of not less than $1,000 nor more than $5,000. The
statute which was carried into this section of the Revised Statutes
was enacted March 2, 1863, c. 67, 12 Stat. 696.
Section 4746 is based on a statute passed March 3, 1873, c. 234,
§ 33, 17 Stat. 566, 575, and provides a penalty of a fine not
exceeding five hundred dollars or of imprisonment for
Page 164 U. S. 363
a term not exceeding three years, or of both, for every person
who knowingly or willfully in any wise procures the making or
presentation of any false or fraudulent affidavit concerning any
claim for pension, or payment thereof, or pertaining to any other
matter within the jurisdiction of the commissioner of pensions.
We are unable to accept the contention that the latter section
is to be deemed a repeal of the former. Undoubtedly there is some
ground that is common to both. Thus, the procuring or causing to be
made a false deposition or affidavit in promoting a fraudulent
pension claim is made an offense by both statutes. But the earlier
statute is wider in its scope, because not restricted to fraudulent
pension claims nor to merely procuring a false affidavit to be
made. We think the offense charged in the present indictment, of
making a false deposition in aid of a fraudulent pension claim, is
properly within section 5438, and not within section 4746, which is
in terms applicable only to the offense of procuring another person
to commit the offense.
We are constrained to sustain the assignments which complain of
the exclusion of testimony offered to show defendant's general
reputation for truth and veracity. It is not necessary to cite
authorities to show that, in criminal prosecutions, the accused
will be allowed to call witnesses to show that his character was
such as would make it unlikely that he would be guilty of the
particular crime with which he is charged. And as here the
defendant was charged with a species of the
crimen falsi,
the rejected evidence was material and competent. This indeed is
conceded in the brief for the government, but it is argued that, as
the learned judge, in overruling the offer of the evidence,
observed that the testimony might "become proper later on," he was
merely passing on the order of proof, his discretion in respect to
which is not reversible. It is possible, as suggested, that the
judge thought that such evidence should not be offered until it
appeared that the defendant had himself testified. But this would
show a misconception of the reason why the evidence was competent.
It was not intended to give weight to the defendant's personal
Page 164 U. S. 364
testimony in the case, but to establish a general character
inconsistent with guilt of the crime with which he stood charged,
and the evidence was admissible whether or not the defendant
himself testified. When testimony, competent and material, has been
offered and erroneously rejected, the error is not cured by a
conjecture that, if offered at a subsequent period in the trial,
the evidence might have been admitted. It should also be observed
that when a subsequent offer to the same effect was made, the judge
rejected it without qualification.
There was likewise error in that portion of the charge in which
the judge instructed the jury as to the effect that they should
give to the testimony showing the defendant's good character.
It is proper to give the judge's own language:
"Some testimony has been given you touching the good character
of the defendant. When a man is charged with crime, the courts of
the United States permit this question of good character to be
introduced to go to the jury. The theory, as I view it, is a wise
one. If a man, in the community where he lives, by his incoming and
outgoing among his neighbors, has built up in the years of his
life, be they comparatively few or many, a character among them for
good morals, which includes the uprightness and excellency of our
general citizenship, it is right that the jury should know that
fact. It is of value to them, in conflicting cases, in determining
points in the case, and yet, gentlemen, I have to say to you that
evidence of good character is no defense against crime actually
proven. If the defendant in this case is proven guilty of crime
charged, any good character borne by him in his community is no
defense. It must not change your verdict, for the experience of
mankind, of all of us, teaches us that men reputed to be of good
moral character in a community -- unfortunately, sometimes, we find
they are sadly different from that which they are reputed to be,
and that they are committers of crime. Yet the good character goes
to the jury with special force wherever the commission of the crime
is doubtful. If your mind hesitates on any
Page 164 U. S. 365
point as to the guilt of this defendant, then you have the right
and should consider the testimony given as to his good character,
and it becomes, as I have suggested, or may be, of great importance
in the minds of the jury in the matters of doubt."
To this portion of the charge, the defendant's counsel took
exception in the following terms:
"We except to that part of the charge in stating the effect of
good character, the defendant claiming that it should not be forced
only in doubtful cases, but should be considered by the jury, in
connection with all of the evidence, as to whether or not, on all
the evidence, there is a reasonable doubt."
Some criticism is offered to the exception as made to the whole
paragraph, and thus coming within cited cases to the effect that
exceptions are not well taken to an entire charge, or to large
portions of a charge, if the instructions complained of are, as to
some of them, sound. There is a reasonable rule that if the entire
charge is excepted to, or a series of propositions contained in it
is excepted to in gross, the exception cannot be sustained if there
were a distinct proposition or instruction given that was sound.
Waiving the question as to how far this rule is justly applicable
to the case of a charge in a criminal case, we are of opinion that,
in the present instance, the criticism is not well founded. The
paragraph of the charge excepted to does not contain instructions
on separate and distinct propositions, some of which are sound and
others not so. The subject treated of in the paragraph is the
single one of the proper effect to be given by the jury to the
evidence of the defendant's good character. A fair understanding of
the meaning of the instruction cannot be reached without reading
and weighing the entire paragraph. There would have been more room
for just criticism had the defendant taken exceptions to sentences
or phrases detached from their connection.
If formally correct, was the exception in question substantially
well taken? Was the charge, in the particular complained of, a
correct exposition of the law?
It is impossible, we think, to read the charge, without
perceiving
Page 164 U. S. 366
that the leading thought in the mind of the learned judge was
that evidence of good character could only be considered if the
rest of the evidence created a doubt of defendant's guilt. He
stated that such evidence "is of value in conflicting cases," and
that, if the mind of the jury "hesitates on any point as to the
guilt of the defendant, then you have the right and should consider
the testimony given as to his good character."
Whatever may have been said in some of the earlier cases, to the
effect that evidence of the good character of the defendant is not
to be considered unless the other evidence leaves the mind in
doubt, the decided weight of authority now is that good character,
when considered in connection with the other evidence in the case,
may generate a reasonable doubt. The circumstances may be such that
an established reputation for good character, if it is relevant to
the issue, would alone create a reasonable doubt, although, without
it, the other evidence would be convincing.
Jupitz v. People, 34 Ill. 516, was a case where the
defendant was indicted for having received goods knowing them to
have been stolen, and his counsel requested the trial judge to
instruct the jury that the evidence of the good character of the
defendant for honesty should have great weight in determining as to
his guilt or innocence. This was qualified by the court by the
addition of these words "if the jury believe there is any doubt of
his guilt." His was held to be error, and the Supreme Court of
Illinois used the following language:
"The instruction, as asked, may be objectionable on account of
the epithet 'great,' but as that was not the ground of the
qualification, but on the ground, as is inferable, that the court
did not consider evidence of good character of any weight except in
a doubtful case. The more modern decisions go to the extent that in
all criminal cases, whether the case is doubtful or not, evidence
of good character is admissible on the part of the prisoner. . . .
We can hardly imagine a case where evidence of a good character was
a more important element of defense than this, and in the
language
Page 164 U. S. 367
of the instruction was entitled to great weight. Proof of
uniform good character should raise a doubt of guilty knowledge,
and the prisoner would be entitled to the benefit of that doubt.
Proof of this kind may sometimes be the only mode by which an
innocent man can repel the presumption arising from the possession
of stolen goods. It is not proof of innocence, although it may be
sufficient to raise a doubt of guilt. The court seemed to think it
was entitled to no weight unless, taking the language used in its
most favorable aspect, there was doubt of his guilt. A strong
prima facie case was made out by the prosecution, but it
was not conclusive. If the court had told the jury that his good
character should be taken into consideration by them, and was
entitled to much weight, a reasonable doubt of the prisoner's guilt
might have been raised which would have resulted in his
acquittal."
Similar conclusions were reached in
Commonwealth v.
Leonard, 140 Mass. 470;
Heine v. Commonwealth, 91
Penn.St. 145;
Remsen v. People, 43 N.Y. 6;
People v.
Garbutt, 17 Mich. 28; Wharton on Criminal Law, vol. 1, §
636.
We find no errors disclosed by the other assignments.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause
remanded with directions to set aside the verdict and award a new
trial.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER concurred in the judgment. MR. JUSTICE BROWN
dissented.