* Headnotes 1. Criminal Law, 16 C.J., Section 2014; 2. Criminal Law, 16 C.J., Section 2414; Instructing jury as to testimony of accomplice, 14 R.C.L., p. 734. This is an appeal from a conviction of larceny. The indictment is against the two appellants and Buster Lewis. The appellants requested, and were granted, a severance, but when the case came on for trial, it was proceeded with against the appellants, but not against Lewis. One of the assignments of error complains of the trial of these appellants together instead of separately, but the record discloses no objection thereto; consequently no complaint thereat can be here made.
The appellants were convicted on the uncorroborated testimony of Lewis who testified for the state that he and the appellants together committed the crime, and another *Page 642 complaint of the appellants is that the court refused to charge the jury that the testimony of Lewis should be viewed with great care and caution.
"At common law the judge was entitled and bound to assist the jury, before their retirement, with an expression of his opinion (in no way binding them to follow it) upon the weight of the evidence. This utterance was made the medium of many useful general suggestions based on experience. The benefit of this experience was thus obtained for them, without any attempt to fetter their judgment by inflexible dogmas unfitted for invariable application as rules of law. One of these general hints was that about accomplices' testimony. But in this country the orthodox function of the judge to assist the jury on matters of fact was . . . (except in a few jurisdictions) eradicated from our system. The judge was forbidden to contribute to the jury's aid any expression of opinion upon the weight of evidence in a given case." 3 Wigmore on Evidence, section 2056, at page 2747; section 793, Code of 1906 (Hemingway's Code, section 577).
The custom of cautioning juries with reference to the weight to be given to the testimony of an accomplice rests at common law upon a rule of practice (Cheatham v. State, 67 Miss. 335, 7 So. 204, 19 Am. St. Rep. 310; Commonwealth v. Phelps,192 Mass. 591, 78 N.E. 741), but in a number of jurisdictions in this country it has been by statute elevated into a rule of law by which, notwithstanding a statute which expressly prohibits the trial judge from charging on the weight of the evidence, he is required to caution the jury with reference to the testimony of an accomplice. 3 Wigmore on Evidence, section 1056. We have no such statute in this state.
In a line of cases beginning somewhat early in its history, and ending with Dedeaux v. State, 125 Miss. 326, 87 So. 664, in all of which the court seems to have left out of view the statute which now appears as section 793, Code of 1906 (Hemingway's Code, section 577), this court held that it is proper to charge the jury that the testimony *Page 643 of an accomplice should be viewed with care and caution. InGreen v. State, 55 Miss. 454, a death sentence was reversed because of the refusal of the trial court to give such an instruction, but in Cheatham v. State, 67 Miss. 335, 7 So. 204, 19 Am. St. Rep. 310, the court declined to reverse a similar case for the refusal to grant such an instruction (the one referred to therein as No. 23), and held that "the practice of giving such instructions or advice to the jury, . . . rests in the discretion of the presiding judge and his refusal so to do is not assignable as error," and, while Green's case was not referred to therein, it was necessarily overruled thereby. Cheatham's case was followed in Brown v. State, 72 Miss. 990, 18 So. 431, and in Watkins v. State, 134 Miss. 211, 98 So. 537, in which the court was dealing with a question analogous to, though not identical with, the one here under consideration. It was also cited with approval in Wilson v. State, 71 Miss. 880, 16 So. 304, in which the court held that, while it was proper to instruct the jury to view the testimony of an accomplice with care and caution, the language in which the instruction should be couched rests in the discretion of the court. We do not understand that the court intended in either Wilson's or Dedeaux's case to modify the rule announced in Cheatham's case, although both of them could have been disposed of by applying the rule that the refusal or modification of cautionary instructions cannot be assigned as error.
Affirmed.