Ex parte Beville

Parkhill, J.

Upon petition to one of the Justices, a writ of Habeas Corpus was granted returnable before this court.

The petitioner was adjudged guilty of contempt of court by the Judge of the Fifth Judicial Circuit for refusing to obey an order of that court to testify before the *172grand jury of Sumter County against her husband, who was charged with the murder of Bruno P. Harder and Francis Harder, as to matters not involving marital confidence and as to a crime not committed upon her person.

In such a case, at common law, the wife could not be a witness for or against her husband. McGill v. McGill, 19 Fla. 341; Storrs v. Storrs, 23 Fla. 274, 2 South. Rep. 368; Schnabel v. Betts, 23 Fla. 178, 1 South Rep. 692; Moore v. State, 45 Tex. Cr. 234, 2 Ann. Cas. 878, note 881;

Let us see, then, whether and to what extent this common law rule has been altered by statute here.

In 1874 the legislature enacted Chapter 1983, providing that no person offered as a witness shall be excluded by reason of his interest in the event of the proceeding or because he is a party thereto. This act has remained in force to this day, becoming known as section 24, p. 518, McClellan’s Digest, then section 1095, Revised Statutes of 1892, and now known as section 1505 General Statutes of 1906. It went to the competency of witnesses as affected by interest-, and, under its provisions, if a husband was a party he was not disqualified from testifying as to his own interest, even though his wife were a party, but he could not testify as to her interest if she was a party or interested in the result; and if a wife was a party interested in the result she could testify as to her own interest, but it did not extend to her any competency in excess of that given to a husband. Williams v. Jacksonville, T. & K. W. Ry. Co., 26 Fla. 533, 8 South. Rep. 446; Haworth v. Norris, 28 Fla. 763, 10 South. Rep. 18. In other words, this statute did not change or alter the common law rule of incompetency of the husband or wife to testify for or against each other, as this court decided in McGill v. McGill, 19 Fla. 341, because, as there said, this exclusion was not on the ground of pecuniary or property interest solely, but upon grounds of public policy for the *173protection of the married relation; or, as it was later expressed in Everett v. State, 33 Fla. 661, text 673, the relation of husband and wife was always an additional disability to testify for or against each other in any case, and the removal of the disability of interest would not of itself permit them to testify for or against each other. So later on in 1879, in Chapter 3124, the law making power of this State provided that in the trial of civil actions in the State, married women shall not be excluded as witnesses in cases wherein their husbands are parties and allowed to testify. “The act of 1879, however,” said this court, in Haworth v. Norris, supra, “did extend to her additional competency; it says that whenever the husband is a party and allowed to testify the wife shall not be excluded as a witness. The purpose of this act was to remove the common law disability as wife which at the time of its enactment remained unaffected by prior legislation; so wherever the husband was a party to a suit, and its character was such that his interest therein or connection with the suit would, under the act of 1874, not disqualify him from testifying as to his interest, his wife ceased by virtue of the act of 1879, to be disqualified as wife, on the ground of public policy, from testifying as to his interests. * * * The act of 1879 does not in any manner affect the competency or incompetency of the husband as a witness.” The court cited Schnabel v. Betts, supra, where it was said, the evidence of the husband in favor of his wife was properly excluded because, while the statute authorized the wife to be a witness in a case where her husband was a party, it did not change the common law rule which denied to the husband the right to testify for or against his wife in a civil suit against her.

So, then, after this court had said that the act of 1879 did not in any manner affect the competency or incompetency of the husband as a witness, the legislature *174amended that act by chapter 4029, acts of 1891, to read as follows: “That in trials of civil action in this State, neither the husband nor the wife shall be excluded as witnesses, where either the said husband or wife is an interested party to the suit pending”’ this provision becoming known as section 1502 of the General Statutes of 1906; And this court, in Everett v. State, 33 Fla. 661, 15 South. Rep. 543, declared that “the act of 1891, Chapter 4029, removes the disability of husband and wife to testify in civil cases to an extent far beyond both the act of 1879 and the provisions of section 1094 of the Revised Statutes as adopted. They shall not be excluded under the act mentioned, as witnesses in civil actions, where either is an interested party to the suit pending, and the right to testify here given is not dependent upon the fact that either does testify or is allowed to testify, but where either is a party to the suit pending.”

At last, after what would seem to be a patient, persistent and intelligent effort to correct the omissions and defects pointed out each time by this court in the legislation on this subject, the legislature accomplished its purpose to alter the common law rule prevailing in civil cases, whereby, upon grounds of pubUe policy, not on the ground of interest in the suit, the husband and the wife could not be witnesses for or against each other.

In 1892, as section 2863 of the Revised Statutes, the legislature further enacted: “The provisions of law relating to the competency of witnesses in civil cases shall obtain also in criminal cases;” and this court, in Everett v. State, supra, construed these statutory provisions and said, “the rule as to competency of husband and wife to testify for or against each other in civil cases, as well as to the competency of witnesses in other civil cases, will apply also to criminal trials.” “From this,” the court said, “it follows that the Circuit Judge did not err in *175permitting Mrs. Everett to testify in the case. It may be observed that the relation of husband and wife was always an additional disability to testify for or against each other in any case, and that the removal of the disability of interest would not of itself permit them to testify for or against each other.” Mrs. Everett was the wife of the defendant who was on trial for murder, and we find on page 664 of 33 Fla., “After the testimony for the State in chief had been introduced, and the defendants had made voluntary statements in their behalf to the jury, Mrs. Ellen Everett, wife of the defendant William H. Everett, was called as a witness on the part of the State to testify in rebuttal of the statement made by her husband. An objection was made by defendant that she was not a competent witness, and this objection being overruled and exception was duly noted.”

In Walker and Walker v. State, 34 Fla. 167, 16 South. Rep. 80, the third assignment of error referred to the ruling of the court excluding testimony of Phyllis Walker, offered by the defendants. They were indicted for murder. The witness, was the wife of the defendant Kenneth Walker. The State Attorney this time objected and the court excluded her testimony. “In so doing,” said this court, speaking through the Chief Justice, “it clearly acted upon the presumption that a wife in a criminal case' cannot testify for or against her husband. According to a recent decision of this court (Everett v. State, 33 Fla. 661, 15 South. Rep. 543) this was error, and she should have been permitted to testify.”

In Mercer v. State, 40 Fla. 216, 24 South. Rep. 154, this court again affirmed the previous construction placed upon Chapter 4029, Acts of 1891, and § 2863 Eevised Statutes, now § 3919 General Statutes, saying through the Chief Justice: “In construing these statutes and their bearing upon each other this court, in the case of Everett *176v. State, 33 Fla. 661, 15 South. Rep. 513, and again in Walker v. State, 31 Fla. 167, 16 South. Rep. 80, held, in substance, that their joint effect was to abrogate the old common law rule as to the competency of witnesses that forbade either the husband or wife to testify at all in any case, either civil or criminal, where either of them was an interested party; that they made both the husband and wife competent witnesses to testify for or against each other in all cases, civil or criminal, where either of them was an interested party.” See also, Adams v. State, 28 Fla. 511, 10 South. Rep. 106. We think these cases disposed of this proceeding in habeas corpus adversely to the petitioner herein. Such has been the holding in this State since the decision in the Everett case at the January Term of this court in 1892. This rule has prevailed here unchanged, in civil as well as criminal cases, for about fifteen years, although eight sessions of the legislature have convened within that period of time.

Although we regard this question as no longer an open one in- this State, we will consider the argument made now in support of the contention that the petitioner may not be compelled to testify against her husband.

It is contended that at common law there was a privilege of husband and wife of not testifying against each other, as distinguished from the disqualification to testify for each other, and that the effect of our statute is to abolish the disqualification only and the privilege still remains. This contention finds strong support in the statement of Mr. Wigmore, in § 2227, vol. 3 of his great work on evidence, that the privilege existed before the disqualification, citing Bent v. Allot, Cary 135, decided in 1580, as the first explicit ruling, and saying that the privilege was recognized more than once in the next century. In the year of 1781, however, Lord Mansfield declared, in Bentley v. Cooke. 3 Doug. (Eng.) 322: “There *177never has been an instance in a civil or criminal case where the husband or wife has been permitted to be a witness for or against each other, except in case of necessity, and that necessity is not a general necessity, as where no other witness can be had, but a particular necessity, as where, for instance the wife would otherwise be exposed without remedy to personal injury.” In Windhams v. Chetwynd, 1 Burr. 424, Lord Mansfield again said: “In matter of evidence, husband and wife are considered as one, and cannot be witnesses, the one for the other.”

In 1 Blackstone 443, speaking of the competency of husband and wife as witnesses at common law, the great commentator says: “In trials of any sort, they are not allowed to be evidence for or against each other; partly because it is impossible their testimony should be indifferent; but principally because of the union of the person ; and therefore if they were admitted to be witnesses for each other, they would contradict one maxim of the law, nemo in propria causa testis esse debit; and if against each other, they would contradict another maxim, nemo tenetur seipsum acensare. But where the offense is directly against the person of the wife, this rule has usually been dispensed with.”

And so the editors of that great work, The Ency. of Ev., vol. 6, p. 849, 850, state that the common law made no apparent distinction between the incompetency of one spouse to testify for or against the other as a matter of disability and the incompetency as a matter of privilege, citing Bentley v. Cooke, supra; but that many of the statutes, though perhaps not in so many words, do in effect make such a distinction. With these statutes and the cases arising under them we have no concern. The common law as it existed in England prior to 1776 is in force in this State by statute.

*178It may be that a few early decisions seem to recognize the privilege; but, in order to be binding upon us as evidence of what the common law is the English decisions rendered prior to the War of the Revolution must be clear and unequivocal. Myers v. Hodges, 53 Fla. 197, text 205, 44 South. Rep. 357; 6 Amer. & Eng. Ency. Law (2nd ed.) 279.

The well recognized common-law rule that neither husband nor wife could be a witness for or against each other would seem to be inconsistent with the idea that the wife’s testimony on her husband’s behalf is treated as receivable, while it is his privilege to keep her from testifying against him and her’s to refrain from doing so. How could the common law regard the testimony of husband or wife criminating the other consort as detrimental to the public welfare, excluding such testimony as being disqualified or incompetent, and at the same time regard such testimony as detrimental to the parties only and exempt it as being privileged — thereby making it optional with the spouse to divulge it? Is there not a clear inconsistency in the idea that this testimony may be detrimental to the public welfare and incompetent, and the other idea that this testimony may be detrimental to the parties and privileged to be divulged? We think so.

It may be that, in the formative period of this doctrine, the testimony of husband or wife against the other was considered detrimental to the parties only and exempt as privileged. But certain it is, the common law finally came to regard such testimony as detrimental to the public welfare also, and excluded it as being incompetent and disqualified. Then the privilege disappeared or became merged in the doctrine of disqualification, giving rise to the well recognized rule of the common law, that neither husband nor wife can testify for or against the other, with certain exceptions not important here. The *179privilege then, becoming merged in the doctrine of disqualification, the statute that removed the disqualification removed the privilege also.

However that may be, assuming that the common law rule of exclusion was based both upon the idea of privilege and the idea of disqualification also, and that it were possible for them to travel together, it is perfectly clear that both the privilege and the disqualification have been abolished in this State by statute.

We must consider how this has been brought about in civil cases, for section 3919 of the General Statutes provides : “The provisions of law relating to the competency of witnesses and evidence in civil cases shall obtain also in criminal cases, except in cases otherwise provided by law.”

The statute removing interest as a disqualification does not remove the objections on the ground of public policy to a wife’s testifying against her husband when he is a party, as we have seen in Haworth v. Norris, supra, and Everett v. State, supra. The provisions of Chapter 1029, Acts of 1891, section 1502, General Statutes of 1906, however, go to the objections to a spouse testifying for or against the other on the ground of public policy, and abolish both the privilege, if it existed, and the disqualification of the husband and wife to testify for or against the other in the following words: “That in trials of civil actions in this State, neither the husband nor the wife shall be excluded as witnesses, where either the said husband or wife is an interested party to the suit pending.’’

Why was the word “excluded” used by the lawmakers in the enactment of this statute? Clearly, it was because that word appears in the statement of the common-law rule thus: “The common law excluded the husband and wife as witnesses in any case, civil or criminal, in which either was a party.” And so, when the Legislature deter*180mined to change this common-law rule in civil cases, it provided: “That in trials of civil actions in this State, neither the husband nor the wife shall be excluded as witnesses, where either the said husband or wife is an interested party to the suit pending.”

Next, what is the meaning of the word “excluded,” or what does the statute mean by providing that neither the husband nor the wife shall be excluded as witnesses?

Assuming that, at common law, in addition to the disqualification of husband and wife to testify for each other, their testimony against each other was privileged, the effect of this statute upon the disqualification or privilege of'husband and wife as witnesses in civil cases would be this: Suppose in a civil suit against the husband the wife to be called as a witness for her husband. If the plaintiff object on the ground that at common law she was disqualified and excluded, the statute answers that she cannot now be excluded, and the wife is permitted to testify. If, on the other hand, the wife is called as a witness against her husband, and he and she object and ask that she be excluded as a witness because at common law it was her privilege not to testify against her husband, the statute again answers that she cannot be excluded on that ground, there being nothing in the statute to restrict the exclusion on any particular ground, and, under our compulsory process for witnesses, she may be compelled to testify against her husband. In other words, our statute applies both to the privilege if there be one, and to the disqualification, because it provides broadly that neither the husband nor the wife shall be excluded as witnesses. It does not provide that neither the husband nor the wife shall be disqualified as witnesses. It is not thus directed at the disqualification of husband and wife as distinguished from a privilege; and the effect of the statute is not to exclude husband and wife as wit*181nesses upon any ground, whether called privilege or disqualification, but it places them upon the same footing as other witnesses; and, as the provisions of law relative to the competency of witnesses and evidence in civil cases are made to obtain also in criminal cases, (§3919, General Statutes,) the husband and wife may testify and may be compelled to testify for or against the other, in criminal and civil cases, to any fact the knowledge of which was acquired by them independently of their marriage relation. Mercer v. State, 40 Fla. 216, 24 South. Rep. 154, S. C. 74 Am. St. Rep. 135; case note, State v. Woodrow, 2 L. R. A. (U. S.) 862; 3 Wigmore on Ev. § 2245, p. 3067.

The disqualification or privilege, so called, of husband and wife as witnesses at common law must not be confounded with the doctrine of confidential or marital communications. Our statute is aimed at objections to husband and wife as mtnesses — not to the matter of their testimony; and the change of the common-law rule by making one spouse a competent witness against the other does not affect the rule against disclosure of marital communications. 10 Ency. of Ev. p. 168; Gee v. Scott, 48 Tex. 510, 26 Am. Rep. 331; Robinson v. Chadwick, 22 Ch. St. 527; Wigmore, Ev. § 2334, (2).

The progress of legislation on this subject in New Hampshire and the judicial construction thereof will be found very much in point.

In Clements v. Marston, 52 N. H. 21, text 36, the court said: “At common law, a party to a cause could not testify, on the ground that he was interested. Any person not a party, if interested in the result of the suit, was excluded as a witness on the ground of interest. Wives were excluded, — 1st, on the ground of interest, they being interested wherever their husband were; and 2nd, upon the ground of public policy, that it was not expedient to place husband and wife in a position that might lead *182to dissensions and strife between them, or that might encourage perjury. Hence, wives were not allowed to testify for or against their husbands when they were parties to civil proceedings, and for the same reason, both were excluded when either was a party in a criminal case.” Then, pointing out the first inroad made upon this system in the State, the court traces the legislative changes therein, saying that “in the acts of 1869, Chapter 23, respondents were allowed to testify; by the act of 1871, Chapter 38, the disqualification of infamy is removed, and the wife is made a competent witness in all criminal cases where the respondent is allowed to testify; and this act is applied to pending suits, and made to take effect from its passage. In criminal cases, then, it would seem that the wife is made a competent witness in all cases; for it is not in those cases where the husband, being respondent,,requests or elects to testify, that she is made competent, but in all cases where he is allowed to testify ■ — -which, by the act of 1869, is in all cases; and the wife being made a competent witness in all criminal cases, she may be called to testify for or against her husband in all cases where he is accused of crime.

“Thus it appears that the present policy of our legislation on this subject is to make the husband and wife competent witnesses for or against each other, just as though they were strangers, in no way connected, except in the single case where the court can see that such testimony would lead to a violation of marital confidence. Applying that principle, and there would seem to be no good reason why the wife should not have testified in the case before ns.

“They are to be allotoed or compelled to testify for or against each other in all cases, just like persons in no way related to each other, with this single exception; and this violation of marital confidence must be something con-*183tided by one to the other, simply and specially as husband or wife, and not what would be communicated to any other person under the same circumstances.”

The case of State v. McCord, 8 Kan. 232, is instructive. There the defendant was indicted for murder, and the court, speaking through Kingman, C. J., said: “On the trial Sarah McCord, the wife of appellant was offered as a witness on the part of the State, and avowed her willingness to testify on the trial. The appellant objected to her as an incompetent witness. The objection was overruled, and the witness permitted to testify. The propriety of this ruling must be determined by the late statute on' this subject. Laws 1871, p. 280, Ch. 118, § 1. This section provides that no person shall be incompetent to testify in a criminal case ‘by reason of being the husband or wife of the accused,’ and contains this provision, ‘That no person on trial or examination, nor wife or husband of such person, shall be acquired to testify except as a witness on behalf of the person on trial or examination.’

“The body of the section makes the husband or wife of the accused a competent witness in all cases. The proviso is a limitation, not on the competency of the witness, but on the power of the court to compel such witness to testify. When by the body of the section the witness was made competent, then if that stood alone all the measures that the law gives to courts could be resorted to to enforce the witness to testify. By the proviso, this power is limited; and this is all the proviso attempts to do * * * *

“The sanctity and inviolability of the marriage relation is appealed to, and to preserve them, the court is urged to give the statute a construction which we have seen it will not bear. The argument is one addressed more properly to the legislature than the court. If the law is open to the objections urged, it should be repealed; but this *184should be done by the legislature, and not by judicial construction.” Remembering that our statute does not contain the proviso to be found in the Kansas statute, the applicability of the court’s holding is apparent.

It follows that the order whereby the petitioner was required to testify herein was a lawful one, and that the court may resort to all measures given by the law to compel obedience thereto. Having given petitioner an opportunity to be heard, the court had the inherent right to punish, as for a contempt, a violation of its order to maintain its dignity, authority and efficiency in the proper administration of the law. Ex parte Edwards, 11 Fla. 174; Ex parte Ed. Senior, Jr., 37 Fla. 1, 19 South. Rep. 652, S. C. 32 L. R. A. 133.

The petitioner will be remanded to the custody of the Sheriff of Sumter County.

Order to be entered accordingly.

Taylor, Cockrell and Hocker, JJ., concur.